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What is Robert Jonckheere's occupation?
[ "astronomer" ]
occupation
Robert Jonckhèere
980,948
62
[ { "id": "28001507", "title": "Robert Jonckhèere", "text": " The son of a wealthy Belgian textile industrialist, Robert Jonckheere developed early in life an enthusiasm for astronomy. At age 12, he began to travel in England to learn the language and the textile industry. He attended secondary school at the lycée of Tourcoing and attended college at Notre Dame des Victoires de Roubaix. With his family fortune, he built a private observatory on the roof of the family home in 1905 and became a member of l'société astronomique de France. In 1907, he found a site for a new observatory on a hill 20 meters above the surrounding land, which is now in the city of Hem near Lille. Construction started in December 1907 and ended with the installation of the telescope under the dome in 1909.", "score": "1.7188349" }, { "id": "28001508", "title": "Robert Jonckhèere", "text": " Jonckheere's observatory was not totally devoted to astronomy. The building complex had several offices, a residential house, a library, and a weather station.", "score": "1.7043955" }, { "id": "6586299", "title": "Aimable Robert Jonckheere", "text": " Jonckheere was born in Hem, near Lille in France, in a house attached to an observatory. His father was Robert Jonckhèere, a French astronomer known for discovering 3350 double stars. Jonckheere took a first class degree in psychology with statistics in 1949 and a PhD in 1956, both from UCL.", "score": "1.7019576" }, { "id": "28770999", "title": "Michiel Jonckheere", "text": " Michiel Jonckheere (born 3 January 1990) is a Belgian footballer who currently plays for Kortrijk in the Belgian Pro League.", "score": "1.6742166" }, { "id": "28001509", "title": "Robert Jonckhèere", "text": " During World War I, Robert Jonckheere with his wife and children took refuge in England. During this period, the Royal Observatory, Greenwich allowed him to continue his study of double stars and published a catalogue presenting his results. For this catalogue, l'Académie des Sciences awarded him the Prix Lalande for 1917. In order to support his family, Jonckheere worked in the optical department of the Royal Arsenal in Woolwich. After the end of the war, he returned to France to find the family business in ruins. In 1920, he took over the business from his father but the 1920s were bad times for the business and the observatory. In 1929, Jonckhèere sold the telescope and equipment to the University of Lille for use by the Observatory of Lille.", "score": "1.6508136" }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:French statisticians", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Flemish literature", "text": "Flemish literature\n\nFlemish literature is literature from Flanders, historically a region comprising parts of present-day Belgium, France and the Netherlands. Until the early 19th century, this literature was regarded as an integral part of Dutch literature. After Belgium became independent from the Netherlands in 1830, the term Flemish literature acquired a narrower meaning and refers to the Dutch-language literature produced in Belgium. It remains a part of Dutch-language literature.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Kragujevac massacre", "text": "Kragujevac massacre\n\nThe Kragujevac massacre was the mass murder of between 2,778 and 2,794 mostly Serb men and boys in Kragujevac by German soldiers on 21 October 1941. It occurred in the German-occupied territory of Serbia during World War II, and came as a reprisal for insurgent attacks in the Gornji Milanovac district that resulted in the deaths of ten German soldiers and the wounding of 26 others. The number of hostages to be shot was calculated as a ratio of 100 hostages executed for every German soldier killed and 50 hostages executed for every German soldier wounded, a formula devised by Adolf Hitler with the intent of suppressing anti-Nazi resistance in Eastern Europe.\n\nAfter a punitive operation was conducted in the surrounding villages, during which over 400 males were shot and four villages burned down, another 70 male Jews and communists who had been arrested in Kragujevac were killed. Simultaneously, males between the ages of 16 and 60, including high school students, were assembled by German troops and local collaborators, and the victims were selected from amongst them. The selected males were then marched to fields outside the city, shot with heavy machine guns, and their bodies buried in mass graves. Contemporary German military records indicate that 2,300 hostages were shot. After the war, inflated estimates ranged as high as 7,000 deaths, but German and Serbian scholars have now agreed on the figure of nearly 2,800 killed, including 144 high school students. As well as Serbs, massacre victims included Jews, Romani people, Muslims, Macedonians, Slovenes, and members of other nationalities.\n\nSeveral senior German military officials were tried and convicted for their involvement in the reprisal shootings at the Nuremberg trials and the subsequent Nuremberg trials. The massacre had a profound effect on the course of the war in Yugoslavia. It exacerbated tensions between the two guerrilla movements, the communist-led Partisans and the royalist, Serbian nationalist Chetniks, and convinced Chetnik leader Draža Mihailović that further attacks against the Germans would only result in more Serb civilian deaths. The Germans soon found mass executions of Serbs to be ineffectual and counterproductive, as they tended to drive the population into the arms of insurgents. The ratio of 100 executions for one soldier killed and 50 executions for one soldier wounded was reduced by half in February 1943, and removed altogether later in the year. The massacre is commemorated by the October in Kragujevac Memorial Park and the co-located 21 October Museum, and has been the subject of several poems and feature films. The anniversary of the massacre is commemorated annually in Serbia as the Day of Remembrance of the Serbian Victims of World War II.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ostend", "text": "Ostend\n\nOstend (, ; ; ; ) is a coastal city and municipality, located in the province of West Flanders in the Flemish Region of Belgium. It comprises the boroughs of Mariakerke, Raversijde, Stene and Zandvoorde, and the city of Ostend proper – the largest on the Belgian coast.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "1520s", "text": "1520s\n\nThe 1520s decade ran from January 1, 1520, to December 31, 1529.\n", "score": null }, { "id": "28001510", "title": "Robert Jonckhèere", "text": " In spite of his achievements, Jonckhèere was unable to obtain employment as a researcher at the Observatory of Lille. In 1929, having sold land and building of his old installation at Hem, he left for Marseille. At Marseille, Robert Jonckhèere was allowed to do research by the staff at the Observatory of Marseille but he had to do various odd jobs for a living. It was not until 1942 that he passed the entrance examination for the CNRS, enabling him to have the title Maître de Recherche and employment as a professional astronomer at the Observatory of Marseille. He continued his discoveries of double stars by using the telescope of Léon Foucault with its 80 centimeter mirror. Jonckhèere received the Prix Becquerel of l'Académie des Sciences in 1943. He became chief editor of the Journal des Observateurs, a journal which published French astronomical research. He retired in 1962.", "score": "1.6136248" }, { "id": "28001506", "title": "Robert Jonckhèere", "text": " Robert Jonckheere (25 July 1888, Roubaix – 27 June 1974, Marseille) was a French astronomer. He is known for his discovery of more than 3350 double stars. A. R. Jonckheere, psychologist and statistician at University College London, was his son.", "score": "1.6102307" }, { "id": "6586298", "title": "Aimable Robert Jonckheere", "text": " Aimable Robert Jonckheere, commonly known by friends and colleagues as \"Jonck\", was a psychologist and statistician at University College London (UCL). He is probably best known for his work in nonparametric statistics, where he has a test named after him: Jonckheere's trend test.", "score": "1.5988228" }, { "id": "15147693", "title": "Karel Jonckheere", "text": " He began his professional career as a clerk in Ostend. In 1929, he began his teaching career, first at Gembloux High School, then in 1930, in Nieuwpoort and finally in 1944 in Ghent.", "score": "1.5919335" }, { "id": "15147691", "title": "Karel Jonckheere", "text": " Karel Jonckheere as Carolus Joannes Baptista Jonckheere (Ostend, 9 April 1906 – Rijmenam, 13 December 1993) was a Flemish writer and critic. Widely traveled, he was inspired by his journeys for his poems and novels.", "score": "1.5878593" }, { "id": "6586300", "title": "Aimable Robert Jonckheere", "text": " Jonckheere is probably best known for his work in nonparametric statistics, approaches which make fewer assumptions about the theoretical distribution of the data than parametric statistics. In this field he developed what is now known as Jonckheere's trend test, a method which is implemented in SPSS, a statistical package favoured by social scientists, and R, widely used by statisticians. He published little; however, he influenced many people's ideas and work, with traces of conversations and advice throughout UCL and beyond. Jonckheere visited and left his mark at the International Centre for Genetic Epistemology in Geneva, where Jean Piaget forbade him from leaving unless he could find an equally able replacement. Jonckheere coauthored a book with Piaget and Benoit Mandelbrot on mental development. Other people Jonck worked with or was associated with include J. B. S. Haldane, A. J. Ayer, ", "score": "1.5701087" }, { "id": "15147692", "title": "Karel Jonckheere", "text": " Karel Jonckheere was born in Ostend in the fishing district, Kamiel Jonckheere and Victorine de Clercq. He went to school at the Royal Athenaeum in Ostend, where he attended the science high school (human sciences). Then he went to Ghent and attended the Reichstageable Normal School to become a teacher for secondary education in Germanic languages.", "score": "1.5446463" }, { "id": "5550022", "title": "Pierre Jonckheer", "text": " Pierre Jonckheer (born 5 May 1951) is a Belgian economist and politician, member of the Belgian French-speaking Green party, Ecolo. He grew up in Wallonia and Brussels and studied Economics at the University of Louvain (UCLouvain). During his studies he became an activist in student movements linked to the \"Third World\" as well as the left radical political movement. He graduated in 1974 and became an assistant professor in the department of Economics of the Catholic University of Louvain. He then worked closely with different NGOs and in 1982 spent 3 months in Sri Lanka where he discovered the dismal working conditions of the Tamils. From 1984 to 1991, Pierre Jonckheer worked as a researcher, for OSE then became its director (European Social Observatory). In 1986 he joined Ecolo and in December 1991 he became provincial senator and in 1995, led the Ecolo list for the Senate. During his 8 years as senator, he specialised in European politics. In 1999, he was elected to the European Parliament and was re-elected in 2004. In 2008, he co-founded the Green European Foundation (GEF).", "score": "1.510714" }, { "id": "15147694", "title": "Karel Jonckheere", "text": " In 1945, he was secretary of the Belgian Minister of the Interior and the same year, director of Veurne State High School. In 1946 he was appointed inspector of public libraries. In 1953, he became an official at the Ministry of National Education and Culture.", "score": "1.507662" }, { "id": "30268237", "title": "Jonckheere", "text": " Jonckheere was a Belgian motor coach and bus builder, founded in 1881 by Henri Jonckheere in Roeselare.", "score": "1.5014133" }, { "id": "15147701", "title": "Karel Jonckheere", "text": "Karel Jonckheere ; poems ", "score": "1.5004491" }, { "id": "27530704", "title": "Robert van der Kroft", "text": " Robert van der Kroft (born Haarlem, 1 April 1952) is a Dutch cartoonist, musician and disc jockey. He has been drawing the longstanding Sjors & Sjimmie comic strip since 1977, and Claire since 1988. Beside his work for other comics and commercial work, he co-founded the Dutch comics magazines De Vrije Balloen in 1975 and Zone 5300 in 1994. More recently he has been promoting the Cross Comix Festival in Rotterdam since 2016.", "score": "1.4727393" }, { "id": "28001512", "title": "Robert Jonckhèere", "text": "Thorel JC (1999) Robert Jonckheere, un Roubaisien astronome à Hem, l'Observatoire de Hem puis de Lille ou Une passion pour les étoiles doubles ; Thorel JC (2005) Robert jonckheere and double stars (Robert jonckheere et les étoiles doubles. qu'en est-il des mesures?), Observations et Travaux, 61, pages 26–33 ", "score": "1.4692132" }, { "id": "6642766", "title": "Jan Robert Leegte", "text": " Jan Robert Leegte (1973) is a Dutch artist who lives and works in Amsterdam. He is one of the first Dutch artists who makes art on and for the internet since the nineties. Nowadays, he makes art both on the internet, in the form of websites as in offline media, like prints, sculptures and projections. A recurring theme in his work is the sculptural materiality of interfaces and computer programs, like the graphic design of cursors, menu and scroll bars.", "score": "1.4618263" }, { "id": "12962075", "title": "Robert C. Rore", "text": " Robert C. Rore (born 1954 in Salzberg, Berchtesgaden, Germany) is a German artist and illustrator.", "score": "1.4606838" } ]
What is Arafan Camara's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Arafan Camara
2,175,983
83
[ { "id": "14860834", "title": "Arafan Camara", "text": " General Arafan Camara (1948 &ndash; 6 January 2008) was a politician and military official in Guinea. Camara was named Defense Minister on 28 March 2007 after mass protests forced a new government. He was dismissed as minister on 12 May 2007 after soldiers rioted concerning better working conditions and the re-instatement of sacked military leaders. He was replaced by retired Army General Bailo Diallo. He died on 6 January 2008 at the age of 60.", "score": "1.7320371" }, { "id": "16247484", "title": "Gilberto Câmara", "text": " Gilberto Câmara (born 29 March 1956) is a Brazilian computer scientist and is currently serving as the Secretariat Director for the Group on Earth Observations (GEO). He is a former director of Brazil's National Institute for Space Research (INPE) (from 2006 to 2013). He was head of INPE's Image Processing Division from 1991 to 1996 and Director for Earth Observation from 2001 to 2005. He is a researcher in the areas of Geographical Information Science, Spatial Databases, Spatial Analysis and Environmental Modelling. Gilberto is the principal investigator on the area of Spatial Databases and Spatial Environmental Models in the GEOMA research network for Environmental Modelling of ", "score": "1.485553" }, { "id": "16305028", "title": "Javier Cámara", "text": " He was born in Albelda de Iregua, La Rioja. He later moved to Madrid and graduated from the Dramatic Art School. He worked as an usher at the Figaro Theatre in Madrid.", "score": "1.4508138" }, { "id": "4752066", "title": "Malamine Camara", "text": " Camara was born in the Senegalese interior, though his exact date and place of birth are not known. His ethnicity has been described as Soninke, but a French contemporary described Camara as having \"a mix of Moor and Berber blood\" and notes that he spoke the Toucouleur language. Camara was recruited as a laptot or colonial soldier, probably in the early 1870s. In Dakar, January 1880, he volunteered to join an expedition led by Franco-Italian explorer Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza from the coast of Gabon to the Congo River. The mission included 11 other West African soldiers, 4 Gabonese interpreters, and 4 Frenchmen including Brazza. Camara quickly proved his worth on ", "score": "1.4370246" }, { "id": "442550", "title": "Juan Cámara", "text": " Juan del Carmen Cámara Mesa (born 13 February 1994) is a Spanish professional footballer who plays as a winger for Azerbaijani club Sabah FC on loan from Jagiellonia Białystok.", "score": "1.4349597" }, { "id": null, "title": "Susu people", "text": "Susu people\n\nThe Susu people are a Mande-speaking ethnic group living primarily in Guinea and Northwestern Sierra Leone, particularly in Kambia District. Influential in Guinea, smaller communities of Susu people are also found in the neighboring Guinea-Bissau and Senegal.\n\nThe Susu are a patrilineal society, predominantly Muslim, who favor endogamous cross-cousin marriages with polygynous households.\n\nThe Susu people are also referred to as Soosoo, Sossoé, Sosoe, Sosso, Soso, Sousou, Susso, Sussu, or Soussou.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Irrfan Khan", "text": "Irrfan Khan\n\nIrrfan Khan () (born Sahabzade Irfan Ali Khan; 7 January 196729 April 2020), also known simply as Irrfan, was an Indian actor who worked in Indian cinema as well as British and American films. Widely regarded as one of the finest actors in Indian cinema, Khan's career spanned over 30 years and earned him numerous accolades, including a National Film Award, an Asian Film Award, and six Filmfare Awards. In 2011, he was awarded the Padma Shri, India's fourth highest civilian honour. In 2021, he was posthumously awarded the Filmfare Lifetime Achievement Award.\n\nKhan made his film debut with a small role in \"Salaam Bombay!\" (1988), which was followed by years of struggle. He acted in a few Film and Television Institute of India student films such as \"Reconnaissance\" (1990), which was directed by Sandeep Chattopadhyay. After starring in the British film \"The Warrior\" (2001), he had his breakthrough with starring roles in the dramas \"Haasil\" (2003) and \"Maqbool\" (2004). He went on to gain critical acclaim for his roles in \"The Namesake\" (2006) for which he was nominated for the Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Male, \"Life in a... Metro\" (2007), and \"Paan Singh Tomar\" (2011). For portraying the title character in the last of these, he won the National Film Award for Best Actor. Further success came for his starring roles in \"The Lunchbox\" (2013), \"Piku\" (2015), and \"Talvar\" (2015) and he had supporting roles in the Hollywood films \"The Amazing Spider-Man\" (2012), \"Life of Pi\" (2012), \"Jurassic World\" (2015), and \"Inferno\" (2016). His other notable roles were in \"Slumdog Millionaire\" (2008), \"New York\" (2009), \"Haider\" (2014), and \"Gunday\" (2014), and the television series \"In Treatment\" (2010). His highest-grossing Hindi film release came with the comedy-drama \"Hindi Medium\" (2017), and his final film appearance was in its sequel \"Angrezi Medium\" (2020), both of which won him the Filmfare Award for Best Actor in 2018 and 2021. He made his single appearance in Telugu cinema in Sainikudu.\n\nAs of 2017, his films had grossed () at the worldwide box office. and died on 29 April 2020, at 53 years old, due to a colon infection caused by the disease.<ref name=\"death\" /> Khan was described by Peter Bradshaw of \"The Guardian\" as \"a distinguished and charismatic star in Hindi and English-language movies whose hardworking career was an enormously valuable bridge between South Asian and Hollywood cinema\".<ref name=\"guardian\" />", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Surongo", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Gangubai Kathiawadi", "text": "Gangubai Kathiawadi\n\nGangubai Kathiawadi is a 2022 Indian Hindi-language biographical crime drama film directed by Sanjay Leela Bhansali and produced by Bhansali and Jayantilal Gada. The film stars Alia Bhatt as the titular character with Ajay Devgn, Shantanu Maheshwari, Vijay Raaz, Indira Tiwari, Seema Pahwa and Varun Kapoor in pivotal roles.\n\nThe film is loosely based on the true story of Ganga Jagjivandas Kathiawadi, popularly known as Gangubai Kothewali, whose life was documented in the book \"Mafia Queens of Mumbai\" written by S. Hussain Zaidi. The film depicts the rise of a simple girl from Kathiawad who had no choice but to embrace the ways of destiny and swing it in her favour. \"Gangubai Kathiawadi\" premiered at the 72nd Berlin International Film Festival on 16 February 2022, and was released in theatres on 25 February 2022.\n\n\"Gangubai Kathiawadi\" received critical acclaim for its production value and Bhatt's performance. In its theatrical run the film grossed 153.69 core at the domestic box office and 209.77 globally emerging as a commercial success. Numerous publications listed \"Gangubai Kathiawadi\" and Bhatt's performance in the film on various year-end best films and performances lists of 2022,", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ashraf Marwan", "text": "Ashraf Marwan\n\nAshraf Marwan (‎, 2 February 1944 – 27 June 2007) was an Egyptian billionaire, who worked as a spy for Israeli Mossad. \n\nEgyptian officials claim he was a double agent who also worked for them.\n\nFrom 1969, Marwan worked at the Presidential Office, first under Gamal Abdel Nasser and then as a close aide to his successor, President Anwar Sadat. In 2002, it became known that Marwan was recruited by Egyptian Intelligence and may have fed the Israeli Mossad with misleading information during the period leading up to the 1973 Arab-Israeli War.", "score": null }, { "id": "7881185", "title": "Babacar Camara", "text": " Babacar Camara (born October 15, 1981) is a Senegalese professional basketball player for Titánicos de León in Mexico.", "score": "1.4329071" }, { "id": "4752065", "title": "Malamine Camara", "text": " Malamine Camara was a Senegalese sergeant in the French colonial army, and a key figure in the extension of French colonial rule in the Congo Basin.", "score": "1.4259553" }, { "id": "1370253", "title": "Salif Camara Jönsson", "text": " Salif Camara Jönsson (born 9 September 1983) is a Swedish footballer who plays for Trelleborgs FF as a forward.", "score": "1.4096628" }, { "id": "32027705", "title": "Hélder Câmara", "text": " did not oppose violent tactics: \"And I respect a lot priests with rifles on their shoulders; I never said that to use weapons against an oppressor is immoral or anti-Christian. But that's not my choice, not my road, not my way to apply the Gospels\". Câmara identified himself as a socialist and not as a Marxist, and while disagreeing with Marxism, had Marxist sympathies. In the Fallaci interview he stated, \"My socialism is special, its a socialism that respects the human person and goes back to the Gospels. My socialism it is justice.\" He said, concerning Marx, that while he disagreed with his conclusions, he agreed with his analysis of the capitalist society.", "score": "1.4065213" }, { "id": "6875158", "title": "Kandia Camara", "text": " Camara earned a degree in English from the University of Abidjan and an Advanced Studies Certificate in Education from Lancaster University in England. Camara is a professional high-level handball player and a two-time champion of  Côte d'Ivoire in 1974 and 1980 and won the African Cup of Champion Clubs in 1981 with ASC Bouaké. From 1983 to 1986, she taught English at the Modern College, de Cocody and at Treich-la-Plène College. She worked as a specialist English teacher at the Abidjan professional hotel school from 1986 to 2002. She was a member of the national office of the National Union of Secondary Teachers of Côte d'Ivoire (SYNESCI) from 1987 to 1991 and a member of the Association of Women Teachers of ", "score": "1.402878" }, { "id": "4039772", "title": "Camara (social enterprise)", "text": " Camara is a social enterprise that sends refurbished computers and provides digital literacy training to schools and other educational institutions in Ethiopia, Kenya, Zambia, Lesotho, Tanzania and Ireland.", "score": "1.4011879" }, { "id": "3371655", "title": "Lanfia Camara", "text": " Born in Conakry, Camara moved to Belgium at age 18. He had played in Guinea's youth national teams, but began playing in the Belgian provincial leagues with Tempo Overijse. Eventually, he joined Brussels side White Star Woluwe F.C. and helped them gain promotion to the Belgian Second Division. In the summer of 2013, he signed for local rivals and fellow Second Division side FC Brussels. Since August 2014 he plays for Belgian second division club KRC Mechelen", "score": "1.3994365" }, { "id": "16079610", "title": "Alsény Camara (footballer, born 1996)", "text": " Alsény Camara (born 1 June 1996) is a Guinean international footballer who plays for Horoya AC, as a right back.", "score": "1.3939035" }, { "id": "13923714", "title": "António Câmara", "text": " António Câmara is a professor at the Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia da Universidade Nova de Lisboa and has been a Visiting Professor at both Cornell University (1988–89) and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1998–99). He was a Senior Consultant to the Expo '98 project and Senior Advisor to the National Geographical Information System (Sistema Nacional de Informação Geográfica). He was a member of the engineering team which studied and evaluated the Alqueva Dam's environmental impact. He has been YDreams CEO and founder since the company was created in June 2000. In 2006, Câmara was awarded with the Pessoa. Câmara was awarded a licentiate degree in civil engineering from the Instituto Superior Técnico (University of Lisbon) and a doctorate degree from the Virginia Tech. He was a tennis player during his youth and was part of the under-18 and under-21 national tennis teams.", "score": "1.3910956" }, { "id": "8146125", "title": "Hassoun", "text": "Hassoun Camara (born 1986), French footballer ", "score": "1.3908119" }, { "id": "15714650", "title": "Zoumana Camara", "text": " Zoumana Camara (born 3 April 1979) is a French former professional footballer who played as a centre-back. He is the manager of Paris Saint-Germain U19. After starting out at Saint-Étienne, he went on to amass Ligue 1 totals of 344 matches and six goals over 15 seasons, representing mainly in the competition Paris Saint-Germain and winning eight major titles with that club. He also had a brief spell in England with Leeds United. Camara appeared for France at the 2001 Confederations Cup.", "score": "1.3859723" }, { "id": "6220399", "title": "Txema Salvans", "text": " few photographs of female sex workers in Catalonia, he adopted the Cambo Wide large format film camera (usually used for architecture, landscape and automotive photography), and a hi-viz jacket. \"To ensure the women continued to work in his presence, Salvans disguised himself as a topographer, someone who uses a camera to survey the lay of the land\", \"working with an assistant holding a surveyor's pole\". He has said \"Then, simply what I did was to approach the girls to say 'Look, I'll be around here for a while near my van.'\" He has said \"I am not interested in the morphological characteristics of people but in their interaction with space; the context\". The project took six ", "score": "1.3856881" }, { "id": "3371654", "title": "Lanfia Camara", "text": " Lanfia Camara (born 3 October 1986) is a Guinean football defender who plays in Belgium for FC Ganshoren.", "score": "1.3831903" }, { "id": "30620480", "title": "M'Balia Camara", "text": " Born in Posséah in the Dubréka Prefecture, Camara was from a peasant family. Early in life she became active in the Democratic Party of Guinea(DPG) and Rassemblement Démocratique Africain, alongside her husband, Thierno Camara. She also became the leader of the women's section of the DPG. The couple lived in Tondon, where she oversaw the work of the party's local committee of women. Local chief Almamy David Sylla was opposed to the actions of the RDA, and in February 1955 came to the village of Bembaya to collect taxes, after he had already collected taxes. A conflict broke out, and Sylla broke into the Camaras' house; M'Balia was there, heavily pregnant. Sylla attacked her with his sabre, cutting her open. She ", "score": "1.3828292" }, { "id": "15406055", "title": "Sirina Camara", "text": " Sirina Camara (born 12 April 1991) is a French footballer who plays for S.League club Home United as a defender. Camara can play either as a left-back or centre-back. Prior to playing for Home United, Camara has also played for Étoile and Young Lions in the S.League.", "score": "1.3805728" } ]
What is George Lewis's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
George Lewis (politician)
4,218,380
68
[ { "id": "26215196", "title": "George Lewis (footballer, born 1913)", "text": " Lewis spent the 1947–48 season back in the Third Division South with Brighton & Hove Albion before joining Dartford, where he remained until 1952, when he took up a position as groundsman.", "score": "1.7580492" }, { "id": "10448415", "title": "George Lewis (footballer, born 2000)", "text": " .", "score": "1.6559834" }, { "id": "10448411", "title": "George Lewis (footballer, born 2000)", "text": " George Lewis Igaba-Ishimwe Maniraguha (born 16 June 2000) is a professional footballer who plays as a forward for club Arsenal.", "score": "1.6123273" }, { "id": "10448412", "title": "George Lewis (footballer, born 2000)", "text": " Born in Kigali, Rwanda, Lewis moved to Tanzania at the age of one. He then moved to Norway the age of four, starting his career at local side Stakkevollan IF, before moving to Tromsdalen, and later Tromsø in 2015. He mostly played for the reserve teams of both clubs, notably notching 32 goals in 35 appearances over three seasons for Tromsdalen's reserve team.", "score": "1.6105621" }, { "id": "1622881", "title": "George Robert Lewis", "text": " Attribution", "score": "1.6041276" }, { "id": null, "title": "George Lewis (clarinetist)", "text": "George Lewis (clarinetist)\n\nGeorge Lewis (born Joseph Louis Francois Zenon; July 13, 1900 – December 31, 1968) was an American jazz clarinetist who achieved his highest profile in the later decades of his life.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "George E. Lewis", "text": "George E. Lewis\n\nGeorge Emanuel Lewis (born July 14, 1952) is an American composer, performer, and scholar of experimental music. He has been a member of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM) since 1971, when he joined the organization at the age of 19. He is renowned for his work as an improvising trombonist and considered a pioneer of computer music, which he began pursuing in the late 1970s; in the 1980s he created Voyager, an improvising software he has used in interactive performances. and his book \"A Power Stronger Than Itself: The AACM and American Experimental Music\" received the American Book Award.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Twin Shadow", "text": "Twin Shadow\n\nGeorge William Lewis Jr. (born March 30, 1983), better known by his stage name Twin Shadow, is a Dominican-American singer, songwriter, record producer, and actor based in Los Angeles.\nHe has released five studio albums to date: \"Forget\" (2010), \"Confess\" (2012), \"Eclipse\" (2015), \"Caer\" (2018), and \"Twin Shadow\" (2021).", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "George Lewis Scott", "text": "George Lewis Scott\n\nGeorge Lewis Scott (1708–1780) was a mathematician and literary figure who was tutor to the future George III from 1751 to 1755. A friend of the historian Edward Gibbon, the poet James Thomson and other members of the Georgian era literary world, he was described as 'perhaps the most accomplished of all amateur mathematicians who never gave their works to the world'.\n\nHe was married for a short time to the writer Sarah Scott but they separated after less than a year. His younger brother Caroline Frederick Scott was an army officer, who gained a reputation for brutality in the aftermath of the \n1745 Jacobite Rising.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "SG Lewis", "text": "SG Lewis\n\nSamuel George Lewis (born 9 July 1994) is an English singer-songwriter, musician and record producer. He is mostly known for collaborating with many artists from Tove Lo, Dua Lipa, Victoria Monét, Jessie Ware, JP Cooper, Raye and Ray BLK to Bruno Major, Frances, Clairo and LANY.", "score": null }, { "id": "30301073", "title": "George E. Lewis", "text": " George Emanuel Lewis (born July 14, 1952) is an American composer, performer, and scholar of experimental music. He has been a member of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM) since 1971, when he joined the organization at the age of 19. He is renowned for his work as an improvising trombonist and considered a pioneer of computer music, which he began pursuing in the late 1970s; in the 1980s he created Voyager, an improvising software he has used in interactive performances. Lewis's many honors include a MacArthur Fellowship and a Guggenheim Fellowship, and his book A Power Stronger Than Itself: The AACM and American Experimental Music received the American Book Award. Lewis is the Edwin H. Case Professor of American Music, Composition & Historical Musicology at Columbia University.", "score": "1.6005778" }, { "id": "2982202", "title": "George Lewis (rugby)", "text": " George Lewis (9 August 1897 – death unknown) was a Welsh rugby union and professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1920s and 1930s. He played club level rugby union (RU) for Pontypool RFC, as a centre, i.e. number 12 or 13, and representative level rugby league (RL) for Wales and Monmouthshire, and at club level for St. Helens, as a, i.e. number 1, 3 or 4, 6, or 7.", "score": "1.5895267" }, { "id": "32729150", "title": "George Lewis (rugby league)", "text": " George Lewis was a professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s. He played at club level for Castleford, and Featherstone Rovers (Heritage № 237) (World War II guest), as a, i.e. number 1.", "score": "1.5887918" }, { "id": "10448414", "title": "George Lewis (footballer, born 2000)", "text": " Eligible to represent both Rwanda and Norway, Lewis has stated that he is Norwegian, having grown up in Tromsø.", "score": "1.5859771" }, { "id": "26215192", "title": "George Lewis (footballer, born 1913)", "text": " Thomas George Lewis (20 October 1913 – 6 August 1981) was a Welsh footballer who played as a centre-forward for Watford in the late 1930s, before joining Southampton for a brief period after World War II.", "score": "1.5803967" }, { "id": "1622878", "title": "George Robert Lewis", "text": " George Robert Lewis (1782–1871) was a versatile English painter of landscapes and portraits.", "score": "1.57716" }, { "id": "10448413", "title": "George Lewis (footballer, born 2000)", "text": " Lewis went on trial with English Premier League side Arsenal in March 2020, having previously trained with local side Solihull United, as well as Bournemouth and Ipswich Town. Lewis joined Arsenal in August 2020, signing a professional contract after being released by Fram Larvik. He reportedly signed a two year deal with the North London club. The move was seen as a surprise, as Lewis had only played in the Norwegian second and third divisions, and has no youth international caps. He scored in his first appearance for Arsenal's under-21 side, in a 2–1 win over Ipswich Town in the EFL Trophy.", "score": "1.5715075" }, { "id": "3843918", "title": "John Lewis (footballer, born 1954)", "text": " John George Lewis (born 9 May 1954) is an English former professional footballer who played in the Football League as a midfielder. He also played non-league football for clubs including Romford, Walthamstow Avenue and Tilbury. He represented England at youth level.", "score": "1.5634989" }, { "id": "900282", "title": "George Lewis (priest)", "text": " George Lewis was an 18th-century Anglican priest in Ireland. Lewis was educated at Queens' College, Cambridge. He was Archdeacon of Meath from 1723 until his death in 1730.", "score": "1.553246" }, { "id": "26215194", "title": "George Lewis (footballer, born 1913)", "text": " In July 1946, he joined Second Division Southampton for a \"four figure fee\". Described as a \"well-built centre-forward\" with a \"never-say-die\" attitude, Lewis enjoyed a fine first season at The Dell, despite problems at the start of the season with a hamstring injury. He made his debut on 3 October 1946, taking over from the injured Doug McGibbon, in a 2–4 defeat at Swansea. After a run of five games, in which he only found the net once, he was replaced by the fit again McGibbon. He regained the number 9 shirt in December when McGibbon was sold to Fulham and went on to score ", "score": "1.5496391" }, { "id": "28040639", "title": "George F. Lewis", "text": " George F. Lewis (June 7, 1828 – May 30, 1890) was a nineteenth-century American journalist and proprietor of several newspapers. He helped in the printing of the first time news of presidential election results were published. He was involved in determining there was copper ore in Michigan to be mined. He was also mayor of Saginaw, Michigan.", "score": "1.543005" }, { "id": "15293598", "title": "G. Craige Lewis", "text": " George Craige Lewis (born July 19, 1969) is a Christian pastor of Adamant Believers Council in North Richland Hills, Texas, who also travels the world with his EX Ministries that includes speaking against hip-hop culture.", "score": "1.5348986" }, { "id": "2982209", "title": "George Lewis (rugby)", "text": " George Lewis was the brother of the rugby union footballer for Pontypool RFC, and the rugby league for St. Helens; Stanley \"Stan\" Lewis.", "score": "1.534625" }, { "id": "11300036", "title": "Charles George Lewis", "text": " Charles George Lewis (13 June 1808 &ndash; 16 June 1880) was a British printmaker.", "score": "1.5340832" }, { "id": "1622879", "title": "George Robert Lewis", "text": " The younger brother of Frederick Christian Lewis and of Charles Lewis the bookbinder, he was born in London on 27 March 1782. He studied under Henry Fuseli in the schools of the Royal Academy, and worked on both nature and antiquities. Lewis sent landscapes to the exhibitions of 1805–7; he at that time lived with his brother Frederick at Enfield, and worked for him on John Chamberlaine's Original Designs of the most celebrated Masters and William Young Ottley's Italian School of Design, for both of which he made aquatint plates. In 1813, he toured North Wales with John Linnell. In 1818, he accompanied Thomas Frognall Dibdin, to make drawings, on a continental journey, and his illustrations to the Bibliographical and Picturesque Tour through France and Germany were published in 1821. From 1820 to 1859, Lewis exhibited portraits, landscapes, and figure subjects at the Royal Academy, the British Institution, the Suffolk Street Gallery, and the Oil and Water-colour Society. He died at Hampstead on 15 May 1871.", "score": "1.5317433" } ]
What is Louis O'Dea's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Louis O'Dea
5,022,237
52
[ { "id": "2756389", "title": "Louis O'Dea", "text": " Louis Edward O'Dea (died 19 February 1955) was an Irish politician and solicitor. He was first elected to Dáil Éireann as a Sinn Féin Teachta Dála (TD) for the Galway constituency at the 1923 general election. He did not take his seat in the Dáil due to Sinn Féin's abstentionist policy. He did not contest June 1927 general election. In 1944 as a member of Fianna Fáil, he was elected to the 5th Seanad on the Cultural and Educational Panel.", "score": "1.64802" }, { "id": "5691977", "title": "Denis O'Dea", "text": " Denis O'Dea (26 April 1905 – 5 November 1978) was an Irish stage and film actor. He was born in Dublin and attended Synge Street CBS. When very young he and his mother Kathleen (from County Kerry) moved in with her sister, who kept a boarding house at 54 South Richmond Street. He worked in insurance until taking up acting. O'Dea was a leading member of Dublin's Abbey Theatre where he had a great acting career from 1929 to 1953; a list of his performances can be found in the Abbey archives. He also appeared in numerous plays by Irish playwright Teresa Deevy, some of which toured New York and England. His work led to a number of notable film roles, including two ", "score": "1.4196502" }, { "id": "7947012", "title": "Louis DaPron", "text": " Louis Francis DaPron (February 13, 1913, in Indiana &ndash; July 21, 1987, in Agoura, California) was an American dancer, choreographer and dance instructor. He worked often with tap dancer Donald O'Connor.", "score": "1.4007812" }, { "id": "7926549", "title": "O'Dea", "text": "Addison O'Dea – Documentary filmmaker ; Ann O'Dea – Irish journalist and businesswoman ; Ben O'Dea – New Zealand beach volleyball player ; Bob (Robert John) O'Dea – New Zealand rugby union player ; Brian O'Dea – Canadian smuggler and author ; Chris O'Dea – American documentary filmmaker. ; Cornelius (Connor) O'Dea, Bishop of Limerick (Appointed 1400; resigned 1426). ; Danny O'Dea – British actor ; Darrell O'Dea – Canadian musician and recording engineer ; Darren O'Dea – Soccer manager and retired Irish footballer. ; Denis O'Dea – Actor and father of Donnacha, below. ; Donnacha O'Dea – Olympic swimmer and professional poker player. ; Ebony O'Dea – Australian rules football player ; Edward John O'Dea (1856–1932), Bishop of dioceses Nesqually and ", "score": "1.3967128" }, { "id": "12671234", "title": "Louis O'Neill (politician)", "text": " Louis O'Neill (April 25, 1925 – October 23, 2018) was a Canadian university professor, writer, priest and politician. O'Neill was a member of the National Assembly of Quebec from 1976–1981 and held two cabinet posts.", "score": "1.3880401" }, { "id": null, "title": "Willie O'Dea", "text": "Willie O'Dea\n\nWillie O'Dea ( ; born 1 November 1952) is an Irish Fianna Fáil politician who has been a Teachta Dála (TD) for the Limerick City constituency since 2011, and previously from 1982 to 2011 for the Limerick East constituency. He has served as Minister for Defence from 2004 to 2010, and was a Minister of State in different departments from 1992 to 1994, and again from 1997 to 2004.\n\nHe resigned as Minister for Defence due to a controversy over a defamation case.<ref name=IT_20100218/>", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ken O'Dea", "text": "Ken O'Dea\n\nJames Kenneth O'Dea (March 16, 1913 – December 17, 1985) was an American professional baseball player. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a catcher for the Chicago Cubs (1935–38), New York Giants (1939–41), St. Louis Cardinals (1942–46), and Boston Braves (1946).\n\nO'Dea had the misfortune of playing on the same teams alongside some of the best catchers in the National League, which limited his playing time. Although he played most of his 12-year MLB career as a backup catcher, O'Dea was considered one of the best defensive catchers in the major leagues prior to World War II.<ref name=\"Backstop: a history of the catcher and a sabermetric ranking of 50 all-time greats\"/>", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Taylor Mays", "text": "Taylor Mays\n\nTaylor Mays (born February 7, 1988) is a former American football safety. He won Washington state titles in track in both the 100-meter dash and 200-meter dash as a high school sophomore, before leaving track and field to dedicate himself to football. He played college football at USC, and was a three-time All-American. He was drafted by the San Francisco 49ers in the second round of the 2010 NFL Draft and also played in the NFL for the Cincinnati Bengals and Oakland Raiders, playing in 66 regular season NFL games.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Field goal", "text": "Field goal\n\nA field goal (FG) is a means of scoring in gridiron football. To score a field goal, the team in possession of the ball must place kick, or drop kick, the ball through the goal, i.e., between the uprights and over the crossbar. The entire ball must pass through the vertical plane of the goal, which is the area above the crossbar and between the uprights or, if above the uprights, between their outside edges. American football requires that a field goal must only come during a play from scrimmage (except in the case of a fair catch kick) while Canadian football retains open field kicks and thus field goals may be scored at any time from anywhere on the field and by any player. The vast majority of field goals, in both codes, are place kicked. Drop kicked field goals were common in the early days of gridiron football but are almost never done in modern times. In most leagues, a successful field goal awards three points (a notable exception is six-man football in which, due to the small number of players available to stop the opposing team from blocking the kick, a field goal is worth four points).\n\nA field goal may also be scored through a fair catch kick, but this is extremely rare. Since a field goal is worth only three points, as opposed to a touchdown, which is worth six points, it is usually only attempted in specific situations (see Strategy).\n\nThe goal structure consists of a horizontal crossbar suspended above the ground, with two vertical goalposts apart extending vertically from each end of the crossbar. In American football, the goals are centered on each end line; in Canadian football, they are centered on each goal line.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of -gate scandals and controversies", "text": "List of -gate scandals and controversies\n\nThis is a list of scandals or controversies whose names include a \"-gate\" suffix, by analogy with the Watergate scandal, as well as other incidents to which the suffix has (often facetiously) been applied. This list also includes controversies that are widely referred to with a \"-gate\" suffix, but may be referred to by another more common name (such as the New Orleans Saints bounty scandal, known as \"Bountygate\"). Use of the \"-gate\" suffix has spread beyond American English to many other countries and languages.", "score": null }, { "id": "2042584", "title": "Darren O'Dea", "text": " Darren O'Dea (born 4 February 1987) is an Irish retired professional football player, who is currently the manager of Celtic under-18s. O'Dea has played as a centre back for clubs in Scotland, England, Canada, Ukraine and India, and represented the Republic of Ireland internationally. O'Dea began his career on the youth team of Celtic, with whom he played from 2006 to 2012. During his time on Celtic, he was loaned to Reading, Ipswich Town and Leeds United. While playing for Leeds, O'Dea won the Ireland Young International Player of the Year Award. For more first-team opportunities he switched clubs and countries, joining Toronto FC of Major League ", "score": "1.3867407" }, { "id": "12432112", "title": "John R. O'Dea", "text": " John Roche O'Dea (April 17, 1915 &ndash; 1998) was a business owner and politician in Newfoundland. He represented St. John's South from 1959 to 1962 in the Newfoundland House of Assembly as a member of the United Newfoundland Party.", "score": "1.3752272" }, { "id": "10174625", "title": "Paul O'Dea (hurler)", "text": " Paul O'Dea (born 1996) is an Irish hurler who plays for Dublin Senior Championship club Na Fianna and at inter-county level with the Dublin senior hurling team. He usually lines out at wing-back.", "score": "1.3747898" }, { "id": "28686343", "title": "Patrick Louis", "text": " Patrick Louis (born 22 October 1955, Vitry-le-François) is a French politician who served as a Member of the European Parliament for the south-east of France. He is a member of the Movement for France, which is part of the Independence and Democracy group, and sat on the European Parliament's Committee on Transport and Tourism. He was also a substitute for the Committee on International Trade and a member of the delegations for relations with the Gulf States, including Yemen, for relations with the Mashreq countries, and to the ACP-EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly.", "score": "1.3724315" }, { "id": "29655328", "title": "Donnacha O'Dea", "text": " Donnacha \"The Don\" O'Dea (born 30 August 1948) is an Irish professional poker player. In his youth, he was a swimmer, and represented Ireland in the 1968 Olympics. He was also the first Irish swimmer to swim 100m in less than one minute. His parents were actors Denis O'Dea and Siobhán McKenna.", "score": "1.361274" }, { "id": "32657314", "title": "Ernest Charles O'Dea", "text": " O'Dea was born in Armidale in 1889 and moved to Sydney with his family as a child.", "score": "1.3582382" }, { "id": "28327465", "title": "Willie O'Dea", "text": " O'Dea was born in Limerick in 1952, but he was raised in Kilteely, County Limerick. He was educated at the Patrician Brothers College in Ballyfin, County Laois, and University College Dublin where he studied law. He qualified as a barrister at King's Inns, Dublin and as an accountant from the Institute of Certified Accountants. He worked as both a barrister and as an accountant before embarking on a career in politics. He also lectured in the law faculties of both University College Dublin and the National Institute of Higher Education, Limerick (now the University of Limerick). As a lecturer, he taught future cabinet colleague and Taoiseach Brian Cowen. O'Dea is married to Geraldine Kennedy. He writes regularly for the Sunday Independent and occasionally for other national newspapers.", "score": "1.3564457" }, { "id": "32657313", "title": "Ernest Charles O'Dea", "text": " Ernest Charles O'Dea (19 February 1889 – 21 November 1976) was an Australian trade union official, Labor Party politician, Lord Mayor of Sydney and Member of the New South Wales Parliament.", "score": "1.3426917" }, { "id": "10372424", "title": "Ah Louis", "text": " On Wong (1840 – December 16, 1936), more commonly known as Ah Louis, was a Chinese American banker, labor contractor, farmer, and shopkeeper in San Luis Obispo, California, during the late 19th and early 20th century. His Ah Louis Store building is on the National Register of Historic Places. Ah Louis was a central figure in the development of the Central Coast of California, serving as an organizer of Chinese laborers during the construction of the Pacific Coast Railway's Avila—Port Harford spur and the tunnels through Cuesta Grade over the Santa Lucia Range.", "score": "1.3327447" }, { "id": "28327470", "title": "Willie O'Dea", "text": " O'Dea is highly identified with his native Limerick. Three main issues have dominated his recent pronouncements on Limerick: Shannon Airport, Dell and gangland crime. In August 2007, he broke ranks with cabinet colleagues to speak out against Aer Lingus's decision to cease London Heathrow Airport flights from Shannon. In December 2008, O'Dea and Tánaiste Mary Coughlan flew to Dell's Corporate HQ in Texas, in a last-ditch and ultimately futile attempt to stop the closure of Dell's manufacturing plant in Raheen, Limerick. Manufacturing was moved to Poland, with the loss of about two thirds of the jobs at Dell's Limerick operation. The ", "score": "1.3242693" }, { "id": "25521860", "title": "Louis Cullen", "text": " Louis Michael Cullen (born 1932) is an Irish diplomat, academic, historian, author and Japanologist. He is Professor of Modern Irish History at Trinity College in Dublin. Nicholas Canny has described him as \"the most prolific, most wide-ranging, and the most enterprising historian of his generation in Ireland.\"", "score": "1.3200536" }, { "id": "7926551", "title": "O'Dea", "text": " Luke O'Dea – Australian soccer player ; Mark O'Dea – British television presenter ; Michael O'Dea (Irish politician) – Irish Senator from 1922 to 1925. ; Michael O'Dea (Australian politician) ; Mick O'Dea – Irish painter ; Pat O'Dea – Australian and American football player and coach. ; Patrick O'Dea – New Zealand public servant ; Paul O'Dea – American professional basketball player. ; Stephanie O'Dea – American food writer and blogger ; Steve O'Dea – Australian rugby league football player ; Terry O'Dea – Australian darts player ; Thomas O'Dea (1858–1923), Bishop of Clonfert, Galway, and Kilmacduagh. ; Tom O'Dea – American attorney and Connecticut state politician ; Trent O'Dea – Australian volleyball player ; Willie O'Dea – Irish politician. ", "score": "1.3179139" }, { "id": "10957852", "title": "Louis O'Neill", "text": " Louis O’Neill attended Hunter College High School in Manhattan and earned a bachelor's degree with Distinction from Stanford University, where he was Co-Captain of the Stanford Cycling Team, leading it to 3rd place in National Competition. Later he completed a master's degree at Stanford's Center for Russian and East European Studies and graduated cum laude from the Harvard Law School.", "score": "1.315423" }, { "id": "7926550", "title": "O'Dea", "text": " ; Ernest Charles O'Dea – Australian politician and union official ; Fabian O'Dea – Former Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland, Canada. ; Jane Skiles O'Dea – US Navy officer ; Jim O'Dea – Australian rules football player ; Jimmy O'Dea – Actor, comedian. ; John O'Dea – Union Army soldier during the American civil war ; John R. O'Dea – Canadian businessman and politician ; Jonathan O'Dea – Australian politician ; Judith O'Dea – Hollywood actress. ; Ken O'Dea – American baseball player ; Kevin O'Dea – American football coach. ; Larry O'Dea – Australian wrestler and promoter ; Louis O'Dea – Irish politician elected to Dáil Éireann and Seanad Éireann between 1923 and 1944. ; Luke O'Dea – Irish rugby player. ", "score": "1.3111968" }, { "id": "10972965", "title": "Pat O'Dea", "text": " O'Dea was born in Kilmore, Victoria, Australia to an Irish-born father and a Victorian-born mother. He was the third child of seven children. As a child he attended Christian Brothers College and Xavier College. As a 16-year-old he received a bronze medallion from the Royal Humane Society of Australasia for rescuing a woman at Mordialloc beach.", "score": "1.3105953" } ]
What is Derek Ingram Hill's occupation?
[ "priest", "reverend", "priestess" ]
occupation
Derek Ingram Hill
3,900,281
54
[ { "id": "26469408", "title": "Derek Ingram Hill", "text": " Canon Derek Ingram Hill (11 September 1912 – 20 October 2003) was an Anglican priest, notable as a pastor, administrator and historian, active mainly in the south-east of England and particularly in the city of Canterbury and its cathedral.", "score": "1.9229007" }, { "id": "26469409", "title": "Derek Ingram Hill", "text": " Derek Ingram Hill was born in Wimbledon, London but moved to Margate in 1916 for health reasons. At the age of 11, he was sent to The King's School, Canterbury, where he first formed a strong attachment to the cathedral and its pattern of worship and wrote a short guide to it. He then went to Trinity College, Oxford, to study modern history. At Trinity he developed a wider interest in the medieval churches of England. He visited every cathedral in the country by bicycle and wrote a study of the stained glass of Oxford. Moving to Wells Theological College to study for ordination, he again wrote a study of stained glass in local churches.", "score": "1.9102368" }, { "id": "26469410", "title": "Derek Ingram Hill", "text": " Ingram Hill was ordained in 1935 and became curate at Buckland-in-Dover. This facilitated his developing interest in the cathedrals and abbeys of northern France, which he explored each summer, as usual by bicycle. However, he also built a growing reputation for his parish work, moving to a further curacy at St Andrew's, Croydon, in 1939, and later taking over as priest-in-charge and then vicar at Holy Innocents, South Norwood. This was at a time of constant danger during the London Blitz, but he made a great success of Holy Innocents, where he ministered for 14 years. Ingram Hill was invited to return to Canterbury by Archbishop Geoffrey ", "score": "1.7578619" }, { "id": "26469413", "title": "Derek Ingram Hill", "text": " In 1964, while still at St Gregory's, Ingram Hill was appointed a member of the college of Six Preachers – originally a body charged by Archbishop Thomas Cranmer with preaching against Roman Catholicism, but by this time an honorific appointment, allowing the holder to sit with the Dean and Canons in cathedral services. He was made an Honorary Canon of the Cathedral in 1970. In 1976 Archbishop Donald Coggan appointed Ingram Hill a Canon Residentiary, a full-time member of the Cathedral Chapter. He held this position until his retirement in 1983. He was noted for his enthusiasm in promoting community interest in the cathedral itself and the churches of the surrounding city and countryside, as well as his punctilious ", "score": "1.7039937" }, { "id": "26469416", "title": "Derek Ingram Hill", "text": " Derek Ingram Hill was married to Violet, who died in 1998. They had a daughter, who died in 2002, and a son.", "score": "1.6915712" }, { "id": null, "title": "Francis James Holland", "text": "Francis James Holland\n\nFrancis James Holland,(20 January 1828 – 27 January 1907) was a canon in the Church of England.\n\nHe was born in St. George, Middlesex, a son of Sir Henry Holland and Margaret Emma Caldwell. He went to Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge in 1846, graduating BA in 1850 and MA in 1853. Ordained in 1851, he was appointed vicar of St Dunstan's, Canterbury (1853–1861) and then minister at the Quebec Chapel, Marylebone (Middlesex) (1861–1883). He was also a Six Preacher (1859–1882) at Canterbury Cathedral and subsequently Canon Residentiary (1882–1907). He was sometime chaplain to Queen Victoria and honorary chaplain to King Edward VII.\n\nIn around 1880 he established a trust fund for two independent girls schools in London (see Francis Holland School for more information).\n\nHis career is also covered by the \"Barchester Chronicles\" by Clive Dewey published in London in 1991.\n\nHe married Mary Sybilla Lyall in 1855. She was a sister of Alfred Comyn Lyall and later converted to Catholicism. They had four sons (one of whom died young), and two daughters.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Kerry Ingram", "text": "Kerry Ingram\n\nKerry Danielle Ingram (born 26 May 1999) is an English actress, known for her roles as Shireen Baratheon in the HBO series \"Game of Thrones\" and Rebecca 'Becky' Sidebottom in the Netflix series \"Free Rein\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Tyreek Hill", "text": "Tyreek Hill\n\nTyreek Hill (born March 1, 1994) is an American football wide receiver for the Miami Dolphins of the National Football League (NFL). Hill was drafted by the Kansas City Chiefs in the fifth round of the 2016 NFL Draft. He played college football at Garden City Community College, Oklahoma State, and West Alabama.\n\nHill was primarily a return specialist as a rookie but has transitioned to strictly playing wide receiver. Following his rookie year, he received the nickname \"Cheetah\" in reference to his speed. He has been selected to seven Pro Bowls in his seven years in the league, won a Super Bowl title in Super Bowl LIV, and was named to the NFL 2010s All-Decade Team as a punt returner.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Still Game characters", "text": "List of Still Game characters\n\n\"Still Game\" is a Scottish sitcom series, following the lives of a group of pensioners who live in Craiglang, a fictional area of Glasgow. The show was created by and stars Ford Kiernan and Greg Hemphill, and first aired on BBC One Scotland on 6 September 2002.\n\nThe main characters are Jack Jarvis and Victor McDade, two lifelong friends who are neighbours in Osprey Heights, a block of flats. They like to visit their local pub together where their friends Winston Ingram, Tam Mullen and Eric often hang about. Other main characters include: Boabby the barman, Navid Harrid, owner of the local corner shop, and Jack and Victor's nosy neighbour Isa Drennan.\n\nMany of the main characters' relatives make recurring appearances in the show such as; Navid's wife Meena, Tam's wife Frances and Isa's ex-husband Harry. Jack's daughter and Victor's son John make few appearances in the show, but have major plot roles in the few episodes they do appear in. Other recurring characters include: Chris the Postie, Stevie the Bookie and several other pub-goers.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Parade All-America Boys Basketball Team", "text": "Parade All-America Boys Basketball Team\n\nThe \"Parade\" All-America Boys Basketball Team was an annual selection by \"Parade\" that nationally honored the top high school boys' basketball players in the United States. It was part of the \"Parade\" All-American series that originated with boys basketball before branching to other sports. Started by the Sunday magazine in 1957, it had been the longest ongoing selection of high school basketball All-Americans in the country at the time of its final selections in 2015. Many of the honorees went on to star as college and professional basketball players.\n\nAt its onset, the selections were handled by a New York-based public relations firm, Publicity Enterprises, which was led by Haskell Cohen, who was a former sportswriter as well as the publicity director for the NBA at the time (1950–1969). The first All-America team in 1957 consisted of three five-player teams, and the first-team selections appeared on television on \"The Steve Allen Show\". The following year, 20 players were selected and participated in the first annual \"Parade\" All-American high school game. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, known then as Lew Alcindor, became the first sophomore in 1963 to be named a \"Parade\" All-American. Fifteen years later, Earl Jones became the next sophomore to earn first-team honors, and subsequently joined Abdul-Jabbar as the first two players to be named to the first team on three occasions. \"It was a real thrill for me to make it on the \"Parade\" list early, when I was just a sophomore. The recognition is a great thing for kids to shoot for,\" said Abdul-Jabbar as part of the announcement for the 2000 team.\n\nStarting in 2011, the selections were compiled in conjunction with \"Sporting News\" and their writer, Brian McLaughlin. Candidates also began to be limited to players in their senior year. McLaughlin described the selections as mostly Division I college-bound players that had a stellar senior year in high school. Additionally, \"Parade\" differentiated itself from most other All-American teams by not focusing solely on a player's standing among college recruiters. For example, some selectors might choose top recruits that had been injured much of their senior year. \"Parade\" discontinued its boys' basketball All-America selections after 2015.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "26469415", "title": "Derek Ingram Hill", "text": " Ingram Hill's scholarly work and enthusiasms persisted after retirement, and he continued to worship regularly at the cathedral until near his death. He was able to expand his interest in music, in particular the cantatas of Johann Sebastian Bach. In 1998 the King's School commissioned John Ward to paint his portrait, which won the BP Portrait Award at the National Portrait Gallery.", "score": "1.6750051" }, { "id": "26469412", "title": "Derek Ingram Hill", "text": " (now Canterbury Christ Church University). Ingram Hill initiated a series of changes in use of church buildings, with St Alphege's itself ultimately becoming the Canterbury Environment Centre. This work led him into membership of the Redundant Churches (now the Churches Conservation Trust), a charity which takes responsibility for Anglican churches no longer required for worship. He pursued his historical and conservation interests further through the Kent Archaeological Society and the Friends of Kent Churches. He was also a member of the General Synod of the Church of England for nearly a decade, from 1965 until 1974 and, for a time, the archbishop's adviser to diocesan schools.", "score": "1.6101224" }, { "id": "26524752", "title": "Derek Hill (painter)", "text": " He first worked as a theatre designer in Leningrad in the 1930s, and later as an historian. In the Second World War he registered as a conscientious objector and worked on a farm. His long association with Ireland began when he visited Glenveagh Castle, County Donegal to paint the portrait of the Irish-American art collector, Henry McIlhenny, whose grandfather had emigrated to the United States from the nearby village of Milford, and who subsequently made a fortune from his patent gas meter. Hill began to enjoy increased success as a portrait painter from the 1960s; his subjects including many notable ", "score": "1.5888855" }, { "id": "26524751", "title": "Derek Hill (painter)", "text": " Hill was born at Southampton, in Hampshire, the son of a wealthy sugar trader.", "score": "1.5785528" }, { "id": "26650132", "title": "Ethan Ingram", "text": " Ethan John Ingram (born 16 April 2003) is an English professsional footballer who plays as a defender for club West Bromwich Albion and the England national under-18 team.", "score": "1.5637779" }, { "id": "2921191", "title": "Derek Hill (baseball)", "text": " Derek Jerome Hill (born December 30, 1995) is an American professional baseball center fielder for the Detroit Tigers of Major League Baseball (MLB). Hill was drafted by the Tigers in the first round of the 2014 MLB draft, and he made his MLB debut in 2020.", "score": "1.5561767" }, { "id": "26469414", "title": "Derek Ingram Hill", "text": " of all aspects of cathedral worship. He produced a number of studies and guidebooks in this period, including Christ's Glorious Church (1976), a popular guide to the cathedral, the New Bell's Guide to Canterbury Cathedral (1986), a more substantial work, and The Six Preachers of Canterbury Cathedral (1982), a history of the college. His work extended to radio broadcasts and interviews. However, he was perhaps best known for his constant work in welcoming visiting parties, initiating them into the mysteries of the cathedral, often by torch-light. His knowledge and commitment were recognised on retirement by the award of an honorary doctorate of divinity by the University of Kent and the granting of the freedom of the city of Canterbury.", "score": "1.5454097" }, { "id": "26524757", "title": "Derek Hill (painter)", "text": " Derek Hill had a great love of Rome and was the Director of Fine Arts at the British School at Rome (BSR) for about five years during the 1950s. During his lively two tenures, he encouraged resident art scholars, which included Anthony Fry and John Bratby, to travel throughout Italy, whilst, in the academy itself, Hill fostered a jovial, creative atmosphere. In 1989, shortly before Hill's death, he established a charitable trust which provides annual bursaries for the Derek Hill Foundation Scholarship residencies at the BSR. The scholarship is granted through an open, competitive selection of British and Irish artists in the fields of drawing and painting, providing a stipend and three months full-board in one of the Edwin Austin Abbey studios. Winners of the award have included Emma Stibbon RA and David O'Kane.", "score": "1.545147" }, { "id": "7494756", "title": "Greg Hill (cricketer)", "text": " Gregory Russell Hill (born 13 September 1972) is a former English cricketer. Hill was a right-handed batsman who bowled right-arm off break. He was born at Canterbury, Kent. Hill made a single Minor Counties Championship appearance for Devon in 1992 against Herefordshire. Hill also represented the county in a single List A match against Kent in the 1992 NatWest Trophy. In 2000, he made first represented the Worcestershire Cricket Board in List A cricket against the Kent Cricket Board in the 2000 NatWest Trophy. From 2000 to 2003, he represented the Board in 5 List A matches, the last of which came against Worcestershire in the 2003 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy. In his total of 6 List A matches, he scored 167 runs at a batting average of 41.75, with a single half century high score of 56*. In the field he took 4 catches.", "score": "1.5379837" }, { "id": "11220023", "title": "Alvin Ingram", "text": " Alvin John Ingram was born on March 31, 1914, to Alvin Hill and Margaret (Gallagher) Ingram and raised in Jackson, Tennessee. His father, Alvin Hill, was a railroad conductor, who worked for the Illinois Central Railroad Hill was a direct descendant of John Buchanan, who saved the town of Nashborough (present-day Nashville) from an Indian attack. He attended Union University in Jackson, TN from 1932 to 1933 than received his Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Tennessee-Knoxville in 1939, for his MD degree (1939) and Master of Science in Orthopaedic Surgery (1948) Ingram attended the University of Tennessee, Memphis. After two fellowships at Campbell, he joined the staff in 1947 as a pediatric surgeon being promoted to chief of staff from 1969 to 1976, retiring in 1983.", "score": "1.5198077" }, { "id": "26524750", "title": "Derek Hill (painter)", "text": " Arthur Derek Hill, CBE, HRHA (6 December 1916 – 30 July 2000) was an English portrait and landscape painter, long resident in Ireland.", "score": "1.5185297" }, { "id": "25854811", "title": "Matthew Hill", "text": " Hill was born in Fort Wayne, Indiana, the eldest son of Evangelical Methodist Church of America Rev. Dr. Kenneth C. Hill and Janet Hill, and grew up in northeast Tennessee, while attending public, private, and home schools at different times as a student. Hill graduated from Tri-Cities Christian High School and then went on to earn an Associate degree from Northeast State Technical Community College during 2001. Hill later completed a Bachelor of Science degree in Mass Communication from East Tennessee State University. Hill participated in the April 17, 1999 Bristol protest rally coordinated with International Action Center international protests against the U.S. military intervention during the Kosovo War. Hill married registered dental hygienist Amanda Nadine Jenkins in 2003. At the time of his first campaign ", "score": "1.5150933" }, { "id": "26469411", "title": "Derek Ingram Hill", "text": " in 1957, to take up the post of Vicar of St Gregory's. From there he moved a short distance in 1965 to become Rector of St Peter and St Alphege and Master of the Hospital of St. Thomas the Martyr, Eastbridge. In 1972 his work was extended to St Mildred with St Mary de Castro, the oldest church within the city walls, which had to be restored after a fire. In common with most English cities, Canterbury was undergoing a process of suburban growth, greatly intensified by the rapid development of the centre as a tourist attraction and the growth of the University and teacher training ", "score": "1.5125511" }, { "id": "2921192", "title": "Derek Hill (baseball)", "text": " Hill grew up in Des Moines, Iowa with his mother and spent his summers with his father in Northern California, where he played baseball for select teams. In 2011, he moved to Sacramento and attended Elk Grove High School in Elk Grove, California. He batted an even .500 (47-for-94) in his senior season, with 11 doubles, seven triples 30 runs batted in (RBI) and 29 stolen bases.", "score": "1.4996606" }, { "id": "15347766", "title": "Derek Hill (gridiron football)", "text": " Derek Keith Hill (November 4, 1967 – January 21, 2012) was an American football wide receiver who played two seasons with the Pittsburgh Steelers of the National Football League (NFL). He was drafted by the Steelers in the third round of the 1989 NFL Draft. Hill played college football at the University of Arizona and attended Carson High School in Carson, California. He was also a member of the Toronto Argonauts, Shreveport Pirates, Amsterdam Admirals, Scottish Claymores and Anaheim Piranhas.", "score": "1.4935052" } ]
What is Sebaki Devi Das Tatma's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Sebaki Devi Das Tatma
5,713,334
26
[ { "id": "29931531", "title": "Sebaki Devi Das Tatma", "text": " Sebaki Devi Das Tatma (सबकी देवी दास तात्मा) is a Nepalese politician, belonging to the Madhesi Janadhikar Forum. During the campaigns of MJF for Madhesi autonomy, Tatma took parts in rallies of the movement. Following the 2008 Constituent Assembly election, she was selected by MJF from the Proportional Representation quota to represent the party in the assembly. Prior to becoming a Constituent Assembly member, the 32-year-old Tatma worked as a domestic servant. She has four children.", "score": "2.1240914" }, { "id": "5342829", "title": "Laila Tyabji", "text": " group base of over 700 artisan groups, collectively comprising over 1 lakh craftspeople. Under the aegis of Dastkar, Tyabji has worked with Self-Employed Women's Association of India (SEWA), a similar non-governmental organization founded by renowned Gandhian, Ela Bhatt, URMUL, Sandur Kushal Kala Kendra, Rangsutra, SASHA, Berozgar Mahila Kalyan Samiti, and many others. Other major DASTKAR projects are in Kashmir for the social reestablishment of the victims of terrorism, in Ranthambore, for the rehabilitation of the people who were evacuated for the National Park and in Bellary for the revival of the dying art of Lambani embroidery. She is associated with ", "score": "1.5478795" }, { "id": "7358047", "title": "Indumati Babuji Patankar", "text": " working in women's organizations, toiling peoples' movements including agricultural laborers' movement, and social work. She is the core leader Stree Mukti Sangharsh Chalwal with several other rural women fighting against violence and for survival and livelihoods. Through this work she led the struggle of parityakta (abandoned/deserted) women. This movement of parityakta women for ration cards, alimony, and recognition of their rights has gone on since 1988 in Satara, Sangli and Kolhapur districts. This was one of her special contributions. After her son Bharat Patankar became a full-time activist in the movement, she has been supporting him morally and economically, along with his wife Gail Omvedt, and has taken leading role and part in every activity of Shramik Mutki Dal.", "score": "1.5250974" }, { "id": "12689172", "title": "Pushpalata Das", "text": " Born on 27 March 1915 to Rameswar Saikia and Swarnalata in North Lakhimpur in Assam, Das did her schooling at Panbazar Girls High School. She started her political activities from school days and was the secretary of an organization by name, Mukti Sangha. In 1931, she and her comrades organized a protest against the hanging of the revolutionary, Bhagat Singh by the British Raj and was expelled from school. She continued her studies as a private student and passed the matriculation examination in 1934, after which she joined Benaras Hindu University to complete her intermediate course. Later, she graduated from Andhra University and secured post-graduate degree from the same university in 1938. Subsequently, she enrolled herself for studies in Law at Earle Law College, Guwahati where continued her student politics; she was the secretary of the college union in 1940. It was during this time, Gandhiji called for Individual Satyagraha, as a part of civil disobedience movement and as a precursor to the Quit India Movement which would be launched two years later, and Das participated in the movement. She was incarcerated which effectively cut short her law studies.", "score": "1.5202692" }, { "id": "7358043", "title": "Indumati Babuji Patankar", "text": " In 1942, Indutai left her parental home at the age of 16 and joined the 1942 Independence movement against the British rule, organizing women and spreading the Rashtra Seva Dal. She gradually started taking part in the underground movement of the prati sarkar by 1943, carrying arms (pistols and revolvers) to the fighters. She married Krantivir Babuji Patankar on 1 January 1946, with whom she had fallen in love during her work with the 'Prati Sarkar'. Both were leading activists in the 'Prati Sarkar' or the parallel government movement that was part of the India's independence movement in the Satara District in the ", "score": "1.4974658" }, { "id": null, "title": "Tattama", "text": "Tattama\n\nThe Tattama are Hindu caste found in the state of Bihar in India.", "score": null }, { "id": "18590642", "title": "Kshetrimayum Ongbi Thouranisabi Devi", "text": "formal training. Later, she trained Ras Leela at Govindaji Nartanalaya (Government of Manipur Dance College) from the age of 10, passing the degrees, \"visharad\" and \"acharya\" and also trained under gurus such as Maishnam Amubi Singh, Amudon Sharma, H. Tomba, A. Tomba Singh, Lourembam Tombi Devi and R. K. Tomalsana before starting to perform professionally. She has performed at many art festivals in India and other countries such as Canada, West Germany, London, Dubai and USA. Thouranisabi Devi is associated with Jawaharlal Nehru Manipur Dance Academy and has directed one of its ballet productions, \"Radha Sati\". She taught at the", "score": "1.4752353" }, { "id": "14636514", "title": "Sehba Hussain", "text": "her responsibilities as Country Representative Bhutan, Chief of Health Section, UNICEF India and Chief Upper India Office responsible for Bihar and Uttar Pradesh and State Representative, U.P. She co-founded SEWA, Lucknow, along with Runa Banerjee in 1984, which has been involved in organising women engaged in chikankari industry. It was given the 2006 Best Practices Award by UN-HABITAT. In 2000, she became a founding member of BETI Foundation, established in Lucknow and working in the areas of Bahraich, Balrampur, Barabanki, Gonda, Kheri, Lalitpur, Lucknow, Shravasti, Sitapur. She was a member of the National Advisory Council during the tenure of 2005-2008.", "score": "1.4585066" }, { "id": "14636515", "title": "Sehba Hussain", "text": "She is also a member of the executive committee of the National Mission for the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, for universalization of elementary education in India. Sehba Hussain Sehba Hussain is an Indian social activist. She is the co-founder and honorary treasurer of Self-Employed Women's Association (SEWA) in Lucknow. and founding Board member and Executive Director of Lucknow-based, BETI (Better Education Through Innovation) Foundation, established in 2000. Sehba Hussain was born in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh. She did her post graduate studies from University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, as a Fulbright Scholar, and also did her Masters in Medical & Psychiatric Social Work", "score": "1.455064" }, { "id": "16230170", "title": "Saba Dewan", "text": "and protests were subsequently held in Delhi, Kolkata, Mumbai, Hyderabad, Thiruvananthapuram, Bhopal and Bengaluru. Saba Dewan Saba Dewan is an Indian documentary film maker based in New Delhi. Her films are based on sexuality, gender, identity, communalism and culture. Her notable works include \"Dharmayuddha\" (Holy War, 1989), \"Nasoor\" (Festering Wound, 1991), \"Khel\" (The Play, 1994), \"Barf\" (Snow, 1997) and \"Sita's Family\" (2001). She is best known for her trilogy on stigmatized female performers, \"Delhi-Mumbai-Delhi\" (2006), \"Naach\" (The Dance, 2008) and \"The Other Song\" (2009). Saba was born and brought up in New Delhi. She finished her schooling in 1982 and", "score": "1.4515395" }, { "id": "27702225", "title": "Shamita Das Dasgupta", "text": " Shamita Das Dasgupta (Bengali : শমীতা দাশ দাশগুপ্ত, born 1949) is an Asian Indian scholar and activist. A social activist since early 1970s, she co-founded Manavi in 1985. It is the first organization of its kind that focuses on violence against South Asian women in the United States. A part-time teacher and full-time community worker, she has written extensively in the areas of ethnicity, gender, immigration, and violence against women. Her books include: A Patchwork Shawl: Chronicles of South Asian Women in America, Body Evidence: Intimate Violence Against South Asian Women in America, Globalization and Transnational Surrogacy in India: Outsourcing Life and Mothers for Sale: Women in Kolkata’s Sex Trade.", "score": "1.4917603" }, { "id": "11849964", "title": "Amalprava Das", "text": " the British run Cotton College citing patriotic reasons. In 1934 Das had an opportunity to interact with Mahatma Gandhi when the leader of the Indian freedom movement stayed at her house during a visit to Guwahati. This meeting is reported to have influenced her and guided her in her future endeavors. She established Maitri Ashram (later renamed as Kasturba Ashram) in a property owned by her father in Sarania Hills which was later donated to Kasturba Memorial Trust. Under the aegis of the ashram, she organized training for the womenfolk of the village in cottage industries so that they might become financially self-reliant. She also founded several institutions such as Gram Sevika Vidyalaya, Kasturba Kalyan Kendra, Gauhati Katai Mandal, Guwahati Yubak Sevadal and Assam Go-Seva Samiti. When ", "score": "1.4806587" }, { "id": "8072576", "title": "Tista Das", "text": " Tista is an actor and community based counsellor by profession and has quite a few films and various television roles and appearances to her credit. She has also worked as research assistant in Calcutta for Rooprekha Chowdhury. a University of California, Berkeley fellow on a research project on the life style of trans-sexuals and their acceptance in society. She acted in Sohini Dasgupta's, documentary I Couldn't Be Your Son, Mom - \"It is the story of a courageous young person who denies the life she has been given,” says Buddhadeb Dasgupta who has produced the 20- minute documentary directed by Sohini Dasgupta. She played a role in Subrata Dutta’s 45-minute film The Third ", "score": "1.4627235" }, { "id": "715888", "title": "Sehba Hussain", "text": " Sehba Hussain is an Indian social activist. She is the co-founder and honorary treasurer of Self-Employed Women's Association (SEWA) in Lucknow. and founding board member and executive director of Lucknow-based, BETI (Better Education Through Innovation) Foundation, established in 2000.", "score": "1.4578633" }, { "id": "30589439", "title": "Rajmohini Devi", "text": " of a cult movement with a following of over 80,000 people and was later converted into a non governmental organization, under the name, Bapu Dharma Sabha Adivasi Seva Mandal. The organization functions through several ashrams set up in the states of Chhattisgarh, Bihar and Uttar Pradesh. The Government of India awarded Devi the fourth highest civilian award of Padma Shri in 1989. Her life has been documented in a book, Samajik Kranti ki Agradoot Rajmohini Devi, written by Seema Sudhir Jindal and published by Chhattisgarh State Hindi Granth Academy in 2013. A Research station, Raj Mohini Devi College of Agriculture and Research Station, housed at Indira Gandhi Agricultural University and a government girls' college, Rajmohini Devi PG Girls College, in Ambikapur, are named her.", "score": "1.4525458" }, { "id": "14506820", "title": "Dastkar", "text": " Dastkar started working started with 15 crafts groups in 1981, and 30 years later it is associated 350 craft groups across India. Over the years, Dastkar has worked in women empowerment in rural areas, where it has been involved in developing self-reliant artisan groups. In 2005, Tyabji became a founder-member of All India Artisans and Craft Workers Welfare Association (AIACA), along with Pritam Singh (Anokhi), Ritu Kumar, Madhukar Khera and Fabindia. She was awarded the Padma Shri by the Government of India in 2012.", "score": "1.4492311" }, { "id": "12703902", "title": "Asha Devi Aryanayakam", "text": " children. It was during this time, she was influenced by Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi and she, along with her husband, joined him in Sevagram in Wardha. Initially she worked at the Marwadi Vidyalaya but later took up the ideals of Nai Talim and worked at Hindustani Talimi Sangh. The Government of India honoured her in 1954, with the award of Padma Shri, the fourth highest Indian civilian award for her contributions to the society, placing her among the first recipients of the award. Asha Devi Aranyakam published two works, The Teacher: Gandhi and Shanti-Sena: die indische Friedenswehr, both related Mahatma Gandhi. She died in 1972.", "score": "1.4450727" }, { "id": "27625304", "title": "Ramadevi Choudhury", "text": " After the Independence of India in 1947, Rama Devi dedicated herself to the cause of Bhoodan and Gramdan movement of Acharya Vinoba Bhave. In 1952 she along with her husband she travelled on foot about 4000 kilometres across the state to propagate the message of giving land and wealth to the landless and poor. From 1928, Rama Devi stayed in the Alaka Ashram at Jagatsingpur. She helped set up the Utkal Khadi Mandal and also established a Teachers’ Training Centre and Balwadi at Ramchandrapur. In 1950 she set up a Tribal Welfare Centre at Dumburugeda. During the 1951 famine she and Malati worked in famine relief in Koraput. She worked to aid soldiers affected by the Indo-Chinese War of 1962. During the Emergency she protested by bringing out her own newspaper along with Harekrushna Mahatab and Nilamani Routray. The Gram Sevak Press, was banned by the government and was arrested along with other leaders from Orissa like Nabakrushna Choudhuri, Harekrushna Mahatab, Manmohan Chowdhury, Smt. Annapurna Moharana, Jaykrushana Mohanty, and others. She established a primary school, Shishu Vihar and a cancer hospital at Cuttack.", "score": "1.4418322" }, { "id": "10915497", "title": "Bibi Amtus Salam", "text": " During 1947-48, she worked on the evacuation and rehabilitation of thousands of women kidnapped during the melee that followed Partition. Here she was assisted by Lajjawati Hooja, a member of the Congress and the All-India Women's Congress and Salam made several trips to Pakistan to help with the evacuation of refugees. She established the Kasturba Seva Mandir and settled down in Rajpura where she worked on the resettlement of Hindu migrants from Bahawalpur. When the Government of India began constructing a township at Rajpura for the rehabilitation of refugees, she was involved in the work there along with the Hindustani Talimi Sangh who worked on the education of the children in the refugee camps. In the 1980s, Amtus Salam served as a permanent invitee on the All India Committee on Jail Reforms. She died in September 1985.", "score": "1.4410179" }, { "id": "10856608", "title": "Chandraprabha Saikiani", "text": " marriage, polygamy and the discrimination of women at the temples and to take up issues like women's education and self-employment. Her efforts were reported in getting the Hayagriva Madhava Temple, Hajo, near Guwahati opened to women. Her involvement with the civil disobedience movement landed her in jail in 1930 and later in 1943, she was jailed again while participating in the non co-operation movement. After the Indian independence, she joined the Socialist Party but returned to the Indian National Congress and unsuccessfully contested in the 1957 Assam Legislative Assembly elections. Her son, Atul Saikia, is a politician and a former member of Assam Legislative Assembly.", "score": "1.4394578" }, { "id": "16021811", "title": "Lakshmi Tatma", "text": " Lakshmi Tatma is an Indian girl born in 2005 in a village in Araria district, Bihar, with \"4 arms and 4 legs.\" She was actually one of a pair of ischiopagus conjoined twins, one of which was headless because its head had atrophied and chest had not fully developed in the womb, causing the appearance of one child with four arms and four legs. She has undergone surgery to remove these extra limbs.", "score": "1.4376621" }, { "id": "27197472", "title": "Sevidzem Ernestine Leikeki", "text": " Leikeki was born in 1985, and has four children. Her community is located in a forest and farmland area which supplies firewood, but experiences poverty. She is an activist working towards gender equity in environmental protection and empowerment of girls and women. Leikeki was awarded a Bachelors degree in Common law from the University of Yaounde II. Leikeki is a climate and gender activist, involved in climate activities that lead to economic benefits and opportunities as well as environmental education. This includes tree planting, education about beeswax extraction and making honey wine, as well as detergents and lotions from beeswax. She says \"Honey equals income, equals jobs, equals gender equality, equals conservation\". She works to empower girls and women to enable sustainable development. By 2020, her organisation had planted 86,000 trees, for climate mitigation, as well as providing environmental education. Her project aims to advocate for women's and girls' socio-economic and environmental rights, and promoting women's voices. Cameroon Gender and Environment Watch (CAMGEW), her organisation, also helps women escape domestic violence, and has assisted 800 women.", "score": "1.4304045" }, { "id": "9664603", "title": "Suhasini Das", "text": " to be financially stable. In 1947, Das was instrumental in establishing the Rangirkul Ashram, which she ultimately became leader of. During the war for independence in 1971, it was Das' leadership which protected the ashram. After independence, Das left politics to concentrate on her social and religious work. However, in 1973, she still attended a conference of anti-British freedom fighters in Delhi, where she highlighted to role of people from East Bengal in the struggle. In 1986, Das attended the World Hindu Congress in Nepal. Religious tolerance and understanding was very important to her and in 1990 worked to restore faith between Hindus and Muslims after attacks on mosques and temples.", "score": "1.4270066" }, { "id": "11910033", "title": "Marjorie Sykes", "text": " (traveling to his school at Shantiniketan) and Mahatma Gandhi (traveling to his ashram at Sevagram). Beginning in 1939 she joined Santiniketan, working closely with Tagore and becoming acquainted with C.F. Andrews, later in 1944-46 holding the C.F. Andrews Memorial Chair at Santiniketan while working on Andrews' biography. In 1945, Gandhi invited Sykes to join his team working on Nai Talim (New Education), and she later became Principal of Gandhi's Basic Education Programme at Sevagram. In the 1960s Sykes served in efforts to bring peace in Nagaland, as well as living and conducting nonviolence training in Kotagiri in the Nilgiris Hills, and becoming increasingly active among Quakers, at Rasulia (Madhya Pradesh) as well as outside India. After an illness, at age 85 years, Sykes moved in 1991 from India to Swarthmore, a Quaker residential home in Buckinghamshire, England, where she remained until her death on 17 August 1995.", "score": "1.4251621" }, { "id": "9664602", "title": "Suhasini Das", "text": " Das was imprisoned alongside other members. She was also a supporter of the Non-Cooperation Movement. She later joined the Indian National Congress. During Partition in 1947, Das travelled widely in the Sylhet area, encouraging Hindu people to stay at home and tried to calm their fears. From 1946 to 1947, Das worked in a relief camp in Noakhali, one of seventeen set up by Leela Roy, following the riots which took place there. Whilst working there she contracted smallpox, and was visited by Gandhi whilst recovering. After Partition ended, Das remained in Sylhet and, along with Prunendu Sen and Nikunja Goswami, founded schools and set up a variety of strategies to enable ", "score": "1.4221259" } ]
What is Howard Fowles's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Howard Fowles
4,503,284
73
[ { "id": "452098", "title": "Howard Fowles", "text": " Howard Thomas Fowles (24 January 1894 – 17 May 1973) was an Australian politician. He was a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly from 1941 until 1968 and a member of the Labor Party (ALP). He was the acting Speaker of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly for 3 months in 1962. Fowles was born in Merrylands, New South Wales. He was the son of a blacksmith, was educated to elementary level at state schools. From the age of 14 he worked as a linesman for the New South Wales Government Railways and was an official in the Electrical Trades Union until 1941. In later life, he was also a poultry farmer. Fowles was elected to the New South Wales Parliament as the Labor member for the seat of Illawarra at the 1941 state election. . The sitting Labor member Billy Davies successfully contested the new seat of Wollongong-Kembla at that election. He retained the seat for the next 8 elections and retired at the 1968 state election.", "score": "1.8796539" }, { "id": "13454228", "title": "Edwin Fowles", "text": " Edwin Wesley Howard Fowles (17 June 1871 – 29 December 1945) was a barrister, journalist, and member of the Queensland Legislative Council.", "score": "1.607218" }, { "id": "26775927", "title": "Will Fowles", "text": " Fowles was born in 1978 and grew up in Hawthorn. His father was a business owner and his mother was a primary school teacher, who has since retrained as a nurse. He attended Saint Joseph’s Primary School and then Scotch College. He has three younger brothers. Fowles began his studies at Monash University in 1997, completing his Bachelor of Commerce in 2001 and his Bachelor of Laws in 2003. Fowles was elected President of the Monash Student Association for 2000, from a ticket composed primarily of Labor students.", "score": "1.5839169" }, { "id": "26775926", "title": "Will Fowles", "text": " Will Fowles (born 27 July 1978) is an Australian politician. He has been a Labor Party member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly since November 2018, representing the seat of Burwood in Melbourne's Eastern suburbs. During his time in office, Fowles has voiced support for growing social housing and mental health reform. He is a member of the Legislative Assembly Environment and Planning Committee and has a commercial background extending from hospitality to finance, property and strategic communication.", "score": "1.5745525" }, { "id": "26605787", "title": "John Fowles", "text": " Joining the community, Fowles served as the curator of the Lyme Regis Museum from 1979 to 1988, retiring from the museum after having a mild stroke. Fowles was occasionally involved in local politics, writing letters to The Times advocating preservation. Despite this involvement, he was generally considered reclusive.", "score": "1.550854" }, { "id": null, "title": "Edwin Fowles", "text": "Edwin Fowles\n\nEdwin Wesley Howard Fowles (17 June 1871 – 29 December 1945) was a barrister, journalist, and member of the Queensland Legislative Council.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Fowles", "text": "John Fowles\n\nJohn Robert Fowles (; 31 March 1926 – 5 November 2005) was an English novelist of international renown, critically positioned between modernism and postmodernism. His work was influenced by Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus, among others.\n\nAfter leaving Oxford University, Fowles taught English at a school on the Greek island of Spetses, a sojourn that inspired \"The Magus\" (1965), an instant best-seller that was directly in tune with 1960s \"hippy\" anarchism and experimental philosophy. This was followed by \"The French Lieutenant's Woman\" (1969), a Victorian-era romance with a postmodern twist that was set in Lyme Regis, Dorset, where Fowles lived for much of his life. Later fictional works include \"The Ebony Tower\" (1974), \"Daniel Martin\" (1977), \"Mantissa\" \n(1982), and \"A Maggot\" (1985).\n\nFowles's books have been translated into many languages, and several have been adapted as films.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Harold Pinter", "text": "Harold Pinter\n\nHarold Pinter (; 10 October 1930 – 24 December 2008) was a British playwright, screenwriter, director and actor. A Nobel Prize winner, Pinter was one of the most influential modern British dramatists with a writing career that spanned more than 50 years. His best-known plays include \"The Birthday Party\" (1957), \"The Homecoming\" (1964) and \"Betrayal\" (1978), each of which he adapted for the screen. His screenplay adaptations of others' works include \"The Servant\" (1963), \"The Go-Between\" (1971), \"The French Lieutenant's Woman\" (1981), \"The Trial\" (1993) and \"Sleuth\" (2007). He also directed or acted in radio, stage, television and film productions of his own and others' works.\n\nPinter was born and raised in Hackney, east London, and educated at Hackney Downs School. He was a sprinter and a keen cricket player, acting in school plays and writing poetry. He attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art but did not complete the course. He was fined for refusing national service as a conscientious objector. Subsequently, he continued training at the Central School of Speech and Drama and worked in repertory theatre in Ireland and England. In 1956 he married actress Vivien Merchant and had a son, Daniel, born in 1958. He left Merchant in 1975 and married author Lady Antonia Fraser in 1980.\n\nPinter's career as a playwright began with a production of \"The Room\" in 1957. His second play, \"The Birthday Party\", closed after eight performances but was enthusiastically reviewed by critic Harold Hobson. His early works were described by critics as \"comedy of menace\". Later plays such as \"No Man's Land\" (1975) and \"Betrayal\" (1978) became known as \"memory plays\". He appeared as an actor in productions of his own work on radio and film, and directed nearly 50 productions for stage, theatre and screen. Pinter received over 50 awards, prizes and other honours, including the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2005 and the French Légion d'honneur in 2007.\n\nDespite frail health after being diagnosed with oesophageal cancer in December 2001, Pinter continued to act on stage and screen, last performing the title role of Samuel Beckett's one-act monologue \"Krapp's Last Tape\", for the 50th anniversary season of the Royal Court Theatre, in October 2006. He died from liver cancer on 24 December 2008.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Greenleaf Whittier", "text": "John Greenleaf Whittier\n\nJohn Greenleaf Whittier (December 17, 1807 – September 7, 1892) was an American Quaker poet and advocate of the abolition of slavery in the United States. Frequently listed as one of the fireside poets, he was influenced by the Scottish poet Robert Burns. Whittier is remembered particularly for his anti-slavery writings, as well as his 1866 book \"Snow-Bound\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Colin Wilson", "text": "Colin Wilson\n\nColin Henry Wilson (26 June 1931 – 5 December 2013) was an English writer and novelist. He also wrote widely on true crime, mysticism and the paranormal,<ref>\"Colin Wilson, author of The Outsider, dies aged 82\" \nBBC News, 13 December 2013. Retrieved 15 December 2013.</ref> eventually writing more than a hundred books. Wilson called his philosophy \"new existentialism\" or \"phenomenological existentialism\", and maintained his life work was \"that of a philosopher, and (his) purpose to create a new and optimistic existentialism\".", "score": null }, { "id": "13591683", "title": "Jeffrey Edward Fowle", "text": " Fowle is from Miamisburg, Ohio, and worked in the Moraine, Ohio municipal street department. His wife, Tatyana was born in Russia, and they have three children.", "score": "1.538175" }, { "id": "26775929", "title": "Will Fowles", "text": " Fowles joined the Australian Labor Party at age 21 and became involved in local branches in Hawthorn, Richmond and Burwood. A staunch Republican, he was elected as National Youth Convenor of the Australian Republican Movement at age 23. He continued to serve in various positions in the Republican Movement until 2018. In 2002 Fowles stood as a candidate in the East Yarra by-election gaining an 8.8% swing to Labor, but failing narrowly to defeat Liberal MP Richard Dalla-Riva. In 2008, Fowles ran for Lord Mayor of Melbourne on the “Fowles: A Fresh Vision” ticket, advocating for stronger community engagement and accountability.", "score": "1.537195" }, { "id": "31001106", "title": "Leonard N. Fowles", "text": " Leonard Nowell Fowles (6 October 1870 – 18 January 1939) was an English organist and choirmaster, classical music composer, arranger, teacher, adjudicator and conductor, best remembered for his hymn tunes \"Golders Green\" and \"Phoenix\".", "score": "1.531801" }, { "id": "1230992", "title": "Mitchell Fowles", "text": " Mitchell Graham Fowles (born 18 December 1970) is a former English cricketer. Fowles was a right-handed batsman who bowled right-arm medium pace. He was born at Worcester, Worcestershire. Fowles made his debut for Herefordshire in the 1992 Minor Counties Championship against Wales Minor Counties. From 1992 to 1997, he represented the county in 30 Championship matches, the last of which came against Wiltshire. His MCCA Knockout Trophy debut for the county came against Staffordshire in 1992. From 1992 to 1997, he represented the county in 12 Trophy matches, the last of which came against Shropshire. He also represented Herefordshire in 2 List A matches against Durham in the 1995 NatWest Trophy and Somerset in the 1997 NatWest Trophy. In his 2 matches, he took 3 wickets at a bowling average of 48.66, with best figures of 2/73.", "score": "1.5293624" }, { "id": "26605773", "title": "John Fowles", "text": " John Robert Fowles (31 March 1926 – 5 November 2005) was an English novelist of international renown, critically positioned between modernism and postmodernism. His work was influenced by Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus, among others. After leaving Oxford University, Fowles taught English at a school on the Greek island of Spetses, a sojourn that inspired The Magus, an instant best-seller that was directly in tune with 1960s \"hippy\" anarchism and experimental philosophy. This was followed by The French Lieutenant's Woman (1969), a Victorian-era romance with a postmodern twist that was set in Lyme Regis, Dorset, where Fowles lived for much of his life. Later fictional works include The Ebony Tower, Daniel Martin, Mantissa, and A Maggot. Fowles's books have been translated into many languages, and several have been adapted as films.", "score": "1.50687" }, { "id": "13591682", "title": "Jeffrey Edward Fowle", "text": " Jeffrey Edward Fowle (born 1958) is an American citizen arrested while touring North Korea in May 2014 for leaving a Bible in a club in the northern port city of Chongjin.", "score": "1.5025756" }, { "id": "10002572", "title": "William Fowles", "text": " Fowles was born in 1842 in Kent, England, and emigrated with his family in 1849. He became an articled clerk with Charles Lilley (and later James Garrick) and was admitted as a solicitor in 1865.", "score": "1.4959855" }, { "id": "28309364", "title": "Ian Fowles", "text": " Fowles is left-handed, and currently plays a left-handed Fender Squier Vintage Modified Jazzmaster model guitar with The Aquabats and a left-handed Fender Kurt Cobain Jaguar model with Gerard Way. Like fellow Aquabats bandmates Christian Jacobs and Chad Larson, Fowles is a practicing Latter-day Saint. He is also a doctoral student at Claremont Graduate University, where he studies at the School of Religion. In November 2010, Fowles published his first book, an extension of his master's thesis entitled A Sound Salvation: Rock N' Roll as a Religion, a thesis which argues that rock music and culture satisfy an influential definition of \"religion\" in contemporary religious studies.", "score": "1.4884719" }, { "id": "7588342", "title": "Nathan Fowles", "text": " Nathan Shane Fowles (born 8 April 1993 in Rochdale, England) is a professional rugby union player who plays Scrum-half for Ealing Trailfinders in the English RFU Championship.", "score": "1.4858127" }, { "id": "26775932", "title": "Will Fowles", "text": " Fowles lives in Burwood with his wife Jessica and has four children. He has been married twice, most recently in 2017. Fowles is a strong advocate for mental health reform following personal mental health struggles which culminated in a 2019 breakdown in a Canberra hotel. Speaking after the event, Fowles openly discussed his struggles with depression and anxiety, which he was diagnosed with in 2006. “My focus is on … working hard on my mental health and being a better rep”. He has since been a strong supporter of Victoria’s Royal Commission into Mental Health, speaking in Parliament about his experiences with the mental health system after the final report was handed down in 2021. Fowles is an accomplished charity auctioneer, having conducted hundreds of auctions for causes including indigenous empowerment, medical research and homelessness. Fowles has been a member of the Melbourne Demons AFL club since 1996.", "score": "1.4702268" }, { "id": "33152233", "title": "Howard Parshley", "text": " Howard Madison Parshley (7 August 1884 in Hallowell, Maine – 19 May 1953) was an American zoologist, a specialist on the Heteroptera who also wrote more broadly on genetics, reproduction and human sexuality. He was responsible for translating The Second Sex into English.", "score": "1.4632089" }, { "id": "10002571", "title": "William Fowles", "text": " William Lambert Fowles (1842 - 18 August 1880) was a politician in Queensland, Australia, successfully winning the seat of Clermont in 1878. He was a Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly.", "score": "1.4478381" }, { "id": "10062519", "title": "Joseph Fowles", "text": " Joseph Fowles (24 December 1809 – 25 June 1878) was an Australian artist and educator, perhaps best remembered for his publication \"Sydney in 1848\", a series of etchings depicting Sydney’s streets and buildings in that year.", "score": "1.4439456" }, { "id": "31001108", "title": "Leonard N. Fowles", "text": " In 1896 Fowles became the organist and choirmaster of St George’s Presbyterian Church of West Croydon, a post which he held until 1904 when he was invited to serve as the organist and choir director of the Presbyterian Church in St. John's Wood, London. Fowles served as president of the Free Church Musician's Union in 1917, and as an examiner in the London College of Music from 1908 through 1920. In September 1899, Fowles was married to the former Ethel Hattie Phillips. He died on 18 January 1939 and was buried 24 January 1939, in Twickenham Cemetery, Richmond, London, Section, G. Grave, 151 fourth row. The epitaph on his gravestone states, \"Music was his life\".", "score": "1.4436737" }, { "id": "14932853", "title": "Howard Sokolowski", "text": " Howard Sokolowski, is a property developer, philanthropist and sport business owner from Toronto. He is the husband of Linda Frum and was the former co-owner of the Toronto Argonauts with David Cynamon from 2003 to 2010. His parents, Henry and Eva Sokolowski, were Holocaust survivors from Poland.", "score": "1.4426074" } ]
What is Julia de Asensi's occupation?
[ "journalist", "journo", "journalists" ]
occupation
Julia de Asensi
4,776,718
73
[ { "id": "13167950", "title": "Julia de Asensi", "text": " For the Spanish painter, see Asensio Julià Julia de Asensi (4 May 1859 – 7 November 1921) was a Spanish journalist, translator and writer.", "score": "1.8609625" }, { "id": "128886", "title": "Matilde Asensi", "text": " Asensi was born at Alicante. She studied journalism at the Autonomous University of Barcelona, and she later worked for three years in the service of news of Radio Alicante-SER and Radio Nacional de España (RNE, Spanish National Radio) as the person in charge of local and provincial news. She was also correspondent for Agencia EFE and provincial contributor in the newspapers La Verdad and Información.", "score": "1.5901904" }, { "id": "31882488", "title": "Asensio Julià", "text": " For the Spanish writer, see Julia de Asensi Asensio Julià i Alvarracín, nicknamed El Pescadoret, the Little Fisherman (c.1759/60, Valencia - 22 February or 25 October 1832, Madrid) was a Spanish painter and engraver who was closely associated with Francisco de Goya.", "score": "1.5716003" }, { "id": "26807542", "title": "Neus Asensi", "text": " María de las Nieves Asensio Liñán known as Neus Asensi (born 4 August 1965, in Barcelona) is a Spanish actress. She had a very complete training to become an actress. She studied classic dance for 5 years and jazz-dance. She studied drama in the centre \"La Casona\" and one speech therapy course. She has a feature role in the Spanish TV comedy Los hombres de Paco.", "score": "1.5423918" }, { "id": "4023731", "title": "Julia Draganović", "text": " Julia Draganović (born 1963 in Hamburg, Germany) is a German curator and cultural manager. German-Italian cultural relations have been a recurring theme in her work. In July 2019 she became director of the German Academy in Rome Villa Massimo (Deutsche Akademie Rom Villa Massimo).", "score": "1.5195253" }, { "id": null, "title": "Julia de Asensi", "text": "Julia de Asensi\n\nJulia de Asensi (4 May 1859 – 7 November 1921) was a Spanish journalist, translator and writer.\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Spanish women writers", "text": "List of Spanish women writers\n\nThis is a list of women writers who were born in Spain or whose writings are closely associated with that country.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Books", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of women writers (A–L)", "text": "List of women writers (A–L)\n\nThis is a list of notable women writers.\n\nAbbreviations: b. (born), c. (circa), ch. (children's), col. (columnist), es. (essayist), fl. (flourished), Hc. (Holocaust), mem. (memoirist), non-f. (non-fiction), nv. (novelist), pw. (playwright), wr. (writer), TV (television), YA (young adult)\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Missing articles by occupation ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "3422142", "title": "Asensio", "text": "Asensio Julià i Alvarracín (1760–1832), Spanish painter and engraver ; Asensio Nebot \"The Friar\" (1779 – after 1831), Spanish monk and rebel Ana Asensio (born 1978), Spanish actress and filmmaker ; Belén Asensio (born 1976), Spanish female taekwondo practitioner ; Carlos Asensio Cabanillas (1896–1969), Spanish soldier and statesman ; Eloy Guerrero Asensio (born 1962), track and field athlete from Spain ; Enrique García Asensio (born 1937), Spanish conductor ; Eugeni Asensio (born 1937), Spanish water polo sports official ; Florentino Asensio Barroso (1877–1936), Spanish Catholic bishop and martyr ; Jaime Asensio de la Fuente, commonly known as Asen (born 1978), a Spanish footballer ; José Asensio Torrado (1892–1961), Spanish general ; José María Asensio (1829–1905), Spanish historian, journalist, biographer and writer ; Manola Asensio (born 1943), Swiss ballet dancer ; Manuel P. Asensio (born 1954), American money manager ; Marco Asensio (born 1996), Spanish footballer ; Melanio Asensio (1936–2021), Spanish athlete ; Nicole Laurel Asensio (born 1986), Filipino singer-songwriter ; Pablo Asensio (born 1973), Spanish footballer ; Pedro Calvo Asensio (1821–1863), Spanish playwright, journalist and politician Asensio is a Spanish given name and surname. Notable people with the given name include: Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.5013741" }, { "id": "27081325", "title": "Romina de Novellis", "text": " Romina De Novellis, an Italian performer born in Naples (1982), was a longtime resident of Rome. After many years dedicated to dance and theater, she graduated from the Royal Academy of Dance de London and continued her studies at the University of Rome 3. She lives in Paris, where she is a PhD student in Anthropology et Sociology at the EHESS. Her thesis is on the anthropology of the body. Her artistic work is on the concept of the body in terms of public processions, installed in urban spaces and followed by the gaze of passers-by. Gesture is at the center of these paintings that come to life through her body. Her aim is to show how a state of trance, alienation and madness, can manifest on the body, especially in the precarious human conditions that exist on the margins of society (related to employment, wide social networks, and family). Women, Saints, Daughters, Icons of everyday life, the protagonists of Romina DeNovellis's work originate from her studies in anthropology and ethnomusicology. These women become a social message and, at the same time, politics.", "score": "1.4952438" }, { "id": "28651436", "title": "Júlia da Silva Bruhns", "text": " Brazil caring for the farms. After the death of her husband and as consequence of a bladder surgery, Júlia went to live in Munich with her children. She wrote an autobiographical work called Aus Dodos Kindheit, in which she described her idyllic childhood in Brazil. Her sons Heinrich and Thomas created characters inspired by her in several of their books, referring to her South American blood and passionate artistic temperament. Thomas Mann describes Júlia as \"Portuguese-Creole Brazilian\". In Buddenbrooks she was the inspiration for Gerda Arnoldsen and Toni Buddenbrook. In Doktor Faustus, she became the wife of Senator Rodde. In Tonio Kröger, she was the mother, Consuelo. In Death in Venice, she appears as the mother of the protagonist, Gustav von Aschenbach.", "score": "1.491518" }, { "id": "8014255", "title": "Julia Benites Arriola", "text": " Julia Benites Arriola (born 1952) is a Mexican-Mescalero-American sculptor and curator. Born in Tucson, Arizona to a military family, Arriola studied music at the University of Arizona before joining the United States Navy. After leaving the Navy she spent several years working in manufacturing, building missiles and other high-technology devices. In 1992 she was awarded a Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) by the University of Arizona, and in 1996 a Masters of Fine Arts. In 1994 she was awarded a Graduate Fellowship by the University of Arizona, along with the Rutgers Purchase Award at the Works on Paper Exhibition and a Museum Purchase Award from the Hoyt Institute of ", "score": "1.4912736" }, { "id": "128885", "title": "Matilde Asensi", "text": " Matilde Asensi Carratalá (born 1962) is a Spanish journalist and writer, specialised mainly in historical novels.", "score": "1.4700749" }, { "id": "301733", "title": "Yvonne De Rosa", "text": " group 24, which exhibited work in unlikely places, such as Soho and Trafalgar Square. In 2020 her work “correspondence\" has been shown in Iran at the Hasht Cheshmeh Art Space of Kashan. De Rosa's research is now focused on the representation of memory and truth and on the documentary and narrative aspects of photography. The artist often proceeds by doing research, aimed at reconstructing the story of unknown people met by chance. To do this he retrieves objects in the markets, speaks with possible witnesses still alive, takes photographs in the key places of the narration. After patiently collecting all the clues and traces, De Rosa builds photographic shots of what happened. She currently lives between Naples and London, where she works as a freelance photographer. She is also the girlfriend of Roberto Fico, president of camera dei deputati, and she know him since the Middle school", "score": "1.463901" }, { "id": "12660797", "title": "Ásta Júlía Grímsdóttir", "text": " Ásta is the daughter of Icelandic parliament member Helga Vala Helgadóttir and Grímur Atlason, a politician and former manager of the Iceland Airwaves music festival.", "score": "1.4610945" }, { "id": "32261829", "title": "Julia Rais", "text": " Yang Amat Berbahagia Cik Puan Julia Aishah Binti Abdul Rais, known professionally as Julia Rais, (born 19 February 1971) is a Malaysian former model and actress. She is a member of the Bendahara dynasty as the second wife of Abdullah of Pahang, the 6th Sultan of Pahang and 16th Yang di-Pertuan Agong of Malaysia. Julia had a successful, but short, career in Malaysia as a film actress in the early 1990s and was known for her European features. She played the title character in the 1990 films Isabella and Mira Edora and in the 1992 film Nadia. Julia also had roles in the films Hati Bukan Kristal, Driving School, and Suci Dalam Debu. She received two awards and a nomination for Best Actress at the 9th Malaysian Film Festival in 1991. She ended her acting career shortly after marrying into the Pahang royal family.", "score": "1.4599351" }, { "id": "15774728", "title": "Julia Fons", "text": " Julia Fons de Checa (1882 &ndash; 4 January 1973) was a Spanish singer and cupletista. Born in Seville, she moved to Madrid at the age of eight. She was popular during the first quarter of the 20th century, when the género chico, operetta, cuplé, and zarzuela were favored, cultivating these genres. In 1903, she joined the Casimiro Ortas Company and was a notable performer of Madrid's Teatro Eslava. She died in Madrid in 1973.", "score": "1.4546237" }, { "id": "15555389", "title": "Isabel-Clara Simó", "text": " Isabel-Clara Simó was BSc+MSc on Philosophy for the Universitat de València and Journalism, and PhD on Romance Philology. She taught at Bunyol and afterwards at the IES Ramon Muntaner of Figueres, a town where her kids were born, and at the IES Sant Josep de Calasanç of Barcelona. She turned to journalism in 1972 as a director of the weekly Canigó and collaborated on a regular basis in several media. She created in her tales and novels a number of complex characters who have conflictive relationships, such as La Nati (1991), Raquel (1992), those from Històries perverses (1992) or those from T'imagines la vida sense ell? (2000). Some works as Júlia (1983) or D'Alcoi a Nova York (1987) was set on Alcoi, her birthplace. ", "score": "1.453641" }, { "id": "12229217", "title": "Julia Zaetta", "text": " After attending Genazzano FCJ College in Melbourne, Victoria, she studied at the University of Melbourne, gaining a Bachelor of Arts degree. Whilst at university, she worked as a book editor for Hawthorn Press. After graduation, she studied at the Comitato Linguistico in Perugia, Italy, and the New York School of Interior Design.", "score": "1.4535158" }, { "id": "1751095", "title": "Julia O'Faolain", "text": " She was educated at University College Dublin, Sapienza University of Rome and the Sorbonne Paris. She worked as a writer, language teacher, editor and translator and lived in France, Italy, and the United States. Her novels include Godded and Codded (1970), Women In The Wall (1975), No Country for Young Men (1980), The Obedient Wife (1982), The Irish Signorina (1984), The Judas Cloth (1992) and Adam Gould (2009). Her short story collections include We Might See Sights! (1968), Man in the Cellar (1974), Melancholy Baby (1978) and Daughters of Passion (1982). As Julia Martines, she translated Two Memoirs of Renaissance Florence: The ", "score": "1.4533844" }, { "id": "1788259", "title": "Julia Solis", "text": " Julia Solis is a writer and photographer who investigates ruined urban spaces. She is the founder of two arts organizations: Dark Passage and Ars Subterranea, both of which are dedicated to exploring and exposing New York City ruins and underground spaces. Solis wrote the book New York Underground and her photography book Stages of Decay (Prestel, 2013) shows abandoned American and European theaters. She is the executive producer of the film American Ruins. She received a fellowship from the New York Foundation for the Arts. She is also an officer of the Madagascar Institute and a board member of Place in History.", "score": "1.4487612" }, { "id": "12145501", "title": "Pamella D'Pella", "text": " Pamella moved to Los Angeles in 1981. Within two weeks of her arrival she began working on the set of The Young and the Restless, eventually, settling into her role as \"Julia\", a recurring character that spanned ten years and over 40 episodes. Pamella's early work in Los Angeles consisted of guest star roles in series such as Hunter, O'Hara, and LA Law. After years of formal training Pamella D'Pella was ordained and licensed at the West Los Angeles' Church of Inner Light. An active participant in entertainment issues, D'Pella was elected as a board member of the Screen Actors Guild after joining that union in 1982, a member of the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (1981), Actors' Equity Association and served on the Executive Peer Committee of the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.", "score": "1.4424651" }, { "id": "29555492", "title": "Julia Castelló", "text": " Castelló is from the Catalan region of Spain. She has a physical disability. Living at the High Performance Centre (CAR) of San Cugat del Vallés in 2013, she shared a room with Melani Costa. The pair became roommates in October 2012, following the Olympic and Paralympic Games.", "score": "1.4419817" } ]
What is Đurđa Ivezić's occupation?
[ "actor", "actress", "actors", "actresses" ]
occupation
Đurđa Ivezić
394,628
96
[ { "id": "3146753", "title": "Đurđa Ivezić", "text": " Đurđa Ivezić (17 October 1936 – 11 December 2020) was a Croatian film, television and stage actress.", "score": "1.6610699" }, { "id": "27850366", "title": "Violeta Lutovac Đurđević", "text": " Lutovac Đurđević received the 153th position on the Progressive Party's Aleksandar Vučić — Future We Believe In electoral list for the 2014 Serbian parliamentary election and was elected when the list won a landslide victory with 158 out of 250 mandates. For the next two years, she served in parliament as a supporter of Vučić's government. She was promoted to the 147th position on the successor Aleksandar Vučić — Serbia is Winning list in the 2016 Serbian parliamentary election and was not immediately re-elected when the list won a second, narrower majority victory with 131 mandates. She returned to the assembly on 23 February 2019 as a replacement for Ivana Stojiljković, who had resigned.", "score": "1.5329785" }, { "id": "25465425", "title": "Slađana Đurić", "text": " She started her academic career at Faculty of Philosophy, University of Pristina in 1987. There she teaches the course Sociology II. Besides that, she teaches sociology and methodology of scientific research at University of Belgrade and is Vice-Dean in charge of postgraduate studies and scientific and research work at the University of Belgrade Faculty of Civil Defense. She also taught at the International Interdisciplinary Post-Graduate Studies \"State Executive and Humanitarian Activities\", organized by University of Belgrade in co-operation with La Sapienza University, Rome, and the University of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "score": "1.5210612" }, { "id": "2406890", "title": "Milica Đurđević", "text": " She was born 21 July 1990 in Belgrade. Her father is Rajko Đurđević, a journalist, writer and publicist. She graduated from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Political Sciences. She distinguished herself as the leader of ultranationalist protests with the support of other right-wing organizations against the 2008 Kosovo declaration of independence, the arrest of Radovan Karadžić, Ratko Mladić, the ICTY verdicts and the implementation of agreements on border crossings between Serbia and Kosovo, and the Brussels Agreement. Protests were also organized against the arrival of former British Prime Minister Tony Blair and the ratification of the Agreement between Serbia and NATO on the cooperation in the field of logistical support. She participated at the rally in support of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and at the rally in support of the Russian Federation on the occasion of the annexation of Crimea and the War in Donbas. She was the leader of the list of the Serbian Party Oathkeepers for the 2014 Serbian parliamentary elections in a coalition with Borislav Pelevic, however the list did not pass the census. On 10 September 2017, she married Stefan Stamenkovski, president and founder of the Serbian Party Oathkeepers.", "score": "1.5129774" }, { "id": "27850363", "title": "Violeta Lutovac Đurđević", "text": " Violeta Lutovac Đurđević, formerly known as Violeta Lutovac, is a politician in Serbia. She served in the National Assembly of Serbia from 2014 to 2016 and returned to the assembly to begin a second mandate on 13 February 2019. Lutovac Đurđević is a member of the Serbian Progressive Party.", "score": "1.5087752" }, { "id": "15393469", "title": "Sanja Iveković", "text": "together with other artists, she broke away from mainstream settings, pioneering video, conceptual photomontages and performance. Much of her work is centred on her own life and the place of women in today's society. She was the first artist in Croatia to label herself a feminist artist. She has been a key player at the Centre for Women's Studies in Zagreb since it opened in 1994. Iveković's activism extends beyond her art. She has founded or been engaged with Croatian women's organizations such as ELEKTRA-Women's Art Center, B.a.B.e., Autonomous Cultural Center—ATTACK!, Center for Women War Victims, and the Association of", "score": "1.4973123" }, { "id": "15393476", "title": "Sanja Iveković", "text": "2014 she was shortlisted for the Artes Mundi prize, exhibiting her photography-based works, \"GEN XX (1997–2001)\" and \"The Disobedient (The Revolutionaries)\" at the Turner House Gallery, Penarth, Wales. Sanja Iveković Sanja Iveković (born 1949 in Zagreb) is a Croatian photographer, sculptor and installation artist. Her work is known to tackle such issues as female identity, media, consumerism, and political strife. Considered to be one of the leading artists from the former Yugoslavia, she continues to inspire many young artists. Iveković was born in Zagreb in 1949, when it was still part of Yugoslavia under the rule of Marshal Josip Broz", "score": "1.4910457" }, { "id": "18336889", "title": "Sanda Rašković Ivić", "text": "Sanda Rašković Ivić Dr. Sanda Rašković Ivić (; ; born on January 8, 1956 in Zagreb) is a Serbian psychiatrist, psychotherapist and politician. From 2014 to 2016, she was the president of the Democratic Party of Serbia. She was commissioner for refugees, the president of Coordination Center for Kosovo and Metohija, Serbian ambassador to Italy and member of the Serbian Parliament. In October 2017 she joined newly formed Vuk Jeremić's centre-right People's Party. She is a daughter of Dr. Jovan Rašković. She finished primary and high school in Šibenik and the School of Medicine of the University of Zagreb in", "score": "1.4851655" }, { "id": "5793353", "title": "Ena Begović", "text": "\"Occupation in 26 Pictures\", a controversial 1976 film directed by Lordan Zafranović. The director noticed her talent and cast her in the main female role in his next film, \"The Fall of Italy\" where she played Veronika, the daughter of a wealthy local from the Dalmatia coast who sided with occupying Italian Fascists. This debut established Ena Begović as one of the sex symbols of 1980s Yugoslav cinema, a status that she later successfully maintained despite appearing in relatively few films as her acting career shifted towards theater. In the 1990s she was kept in the public eye more due", "score": "1.4843361" }, { "id": "1600055", "title": "Zoran Đinđić", "text": "when she was thirty\". In his embittered speech at the conference during which he resigned his post, Mićunović characterized the manner of Đinđić's takeover of DS as the \"combination of Machiavellianism and revolutionary technique\". In this internal party showdown with Mićunović, Đinđić also benefited from some discreet support in the Milošević-controlled state-run media. Though many DS members didn't like the way this transfer of power was executed, symbolically referring to it as \"oceubistvo\" (patricide). Đinđić managed to quickly move DS away from what he occasionally referred to in derisive terms as the \"debate club\" towards a modern and efficient organizational", "score": "1.4810624" }, { "id": "15687292", "title": "Miroslava Stanković Đuričić", "text": " Stanković-Đuričić is a graduate geographer and is president of the Danube District Committee in Smederevo. She lives in Smederevska Palanka.", "score": "1.5073111" }, { "id": "16213367", "title": "Milica Pejanović-Đurišić", "text": " Milica Pejanović-Đurišić (Serbian Cyrillic: Милица Пејановић-Ђуришић; born 27 April 1959) is a Montenegrin professor and politician who was Minister of Defense from 2012 to 2016. She is the first woman to hold this office. She is currently active as Ambassador of Montenegro to the United Nations.", "score": "1.5067494" }, { "id": "3146754", "title": "Đurđa Ivezić", "text": " She also voiced Betty Rubble in the Croatian synchronization of The Flintstones and Smurfette in The Smurfs. She died from COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic in Croatia.", "score": "1.5015724" }, { "id": "27850365", "title": "Violeta Lutovac Đurđević", "text": " Lutovac Đurđević entered politics at the municipal level in Varvarin. She was given the ninth position on the Progressive-led Let's Get Varvarin Moving electoral list in the 2012 Serbian local elections and, as the list won only five mandates, was not initially elected. She was awarded a mandate on 22 February 2013 as the replacement for another member. She was promoted to the second position on the party's list in the 2016 local elections and was re-elected when the list won seventeen mandates. Lutovac Đurđević was chosen as deputy mayor of Varvarin on 9 June 2016 and served for a time in this position. She remains a member of the municipal assembly as of ", "score": "1.4991217" }, { "id": "15163166", "title": "Gordana Đilas", "text": " advisor in 2005. She has organized the following exhibitions in the Matica Srpska Library: Silvije Strahimir Kranjčević, Srpska književna zadruga, Momčilo Nastasijević, Svetozar Miletić and Matica Srpska, Glasnik Društva srpske slovenosti, Branko Radičević, Matica Srpska: 1826–2001 and Aleksandar Tišma. She is President of the Subsidiaries of the Matica Srpska Library, the University of Novi Sad and colleges in Vojvodina. Since 1999, she is an Associate Member of Мatica Srpska. She has been a member of the editorial board of the periodical Glas biblioteke, (Чачак) and the Board of the Matica Srpska Department of Lexicography since 2012. She has published a series of ", "score": "1.4951153" }, { "id": "25465429", "title": "Slađana Đurić", "text": " Mrs. Djuric is a member of a number of international and domestic scientific associations (YUS, SDS, ESA, and ISA), she was a member of the Presidency of Yugoslav Sociological Association, one of the editors of Sociology Magazine. Presently, she is a member of the Presidency of the Serbian Sociological Society.", "score": "1.4941041" }, { "id": "8636774", "title": "Milena Popović", "text": " Kosovan local elections, when Ivanović was leading the only organized political opposition in the local Serb community. Popović has downplayed the significance of the video, describing it as short-term criticism in the context of a political campaign. She had previously said in a 2019 interview that Progressive Party member Marko Đurić, for many years the director of Serbia's Office for Kosovo and Metohija, did more to assist her husband during his incarceration than anyone else. She added that she acted as a conduit between Ivanović and Đurić when relations between the two were strained and that she considered Đurić to be a friend.", "score": "1.4939429" }, { "id": "16213368", "title": "Milica Pejanović-Đurišić", "text": " Pejanović-Đurišić was active in the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, where Momir Bulatović chose her as a board member on the organizational committee which replaced the older communists during the anti-bureaucratic revolution in Montenegro in January 1989. When Yugoslavia began to break up, she supported Montenegro remaining in Yugoslavia in 1992.", "score": "1.4922853" }, { "id": "9329250", "title": "Sanja Iveković", "text": " Sanja Iveković (born 1949 in Zagreb) is a Croatian photographer, performer, sculptor and installation artist. Her work is known to tackle such issues as female identity, media, consumerism, and political strife. Considered to be one of the leading artists from the former Yugoslavia, she continues to inspire many young artists.", "score": "1.4848108" }, { "id": "25849800", "title": "Vlada Ilić", "text": " villa, through an ad, to Nemanja Đorđević, then a senior member of JUL, or Yugoslav Left, political party founded by Mirjana Marković, first lady of Serbia as a wife of Slobodan Milošević. Đorđević then bestowed it to his party. so it became the seat of JUL. Đorđević then sued the party wanting the house back and the successors of Vlada Ilić also entered the process of restitution, asking for villa to be returned to them. The court ultimately decided in Đorđević's favor. The mansion is located in the neighborhood of Stari Grad, in modern Venizelosova street and today is adapted into the club and hotel Admiral, with ", "score": "1.4810966" }, { "id": "2406889", "title": "Milica Đurđević", "text": " Milica Đurđević is a Serbian politician, political scientist, vice president, spokesperson and one of the founders of the Serbian Party Oathkeepers.", "score": "1.477201" }, { "id": "1021569", "title": "Zekerijah Đezić", "text": " Đezić was born into a Bosniak family in Janja, near Bijeljina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. His mother Hanifa died in February 1965.", "score": "1.4755793" }, { "id": "26956672", "title": "Sanda Rašković Ivić", "text": " Dr. Sanda Rašković Ivić (, ; born 8 January 1956) is a Serbian psychiatrist, psychotherapist and politician. From 2014 to 2016, she was the president of the Democratic Party of Serbia. She was commissioner for refugees, the president of Coordination Center for Kosovo and Metohija, Serbian ambassador to Italy and a member of the Serbian Parliament. In October 2017 she joined newly formed Vuk Jeremić's centre-right People's Party.", "score": "1.4721423" }, { "id": "10978748", "title": "Vesna Ivković", "text": " Ivković is a medical doctor and labour medicine specialist in Smederevo. A 2013 article in Politika described her as the director of the city's health centre.", "score": "1.4721012" }, { "id": "15687291", "title": "Miroslava Stanković Đuričić", "text": " Miroslava Stanković-Đuričić (born June 3, 1976) is a politician in Serbia. She has served in the National Assembly of Serbia since 2016 as a member of the far-right Serbian Radical Party.", "score": "1.4685316" } ]
What is Thomas Widdrington's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Thomas Widdrington (died 1660)
5,985,932
45
[ { "id": "11833993", "title": "Widdrington baronets", "text": "Thomas Widdrington (died 1664) ; Ralph Widdrington (died 1688) ; Ralph Widdrington (1640&ndash;1718) ", "score": "1.4599452" }, { "id": "27405325", "title": "Theo Widdrington", "text": " Theo Jack Widdrington (born 6 April 1999) is an English professional footballer who plays for Gosport Borough, on loan from Havant & Waterlooville, as a midfielder.", "score": "1.4394205" }, { "id": "5790117", "title": "Thomas Elrington (actor)", "text": " Thomas Elrington (1688–1732), was an English actor.", "score": "1.422173" }, { "id": "6309219", "title": "Baron Widdrington", "text": "Thomas Widdrington (died 1664) ; Ralph Widdrington (died 1688) ; Ralph Widdrington (1640&ndash;1718) ", "score": "1.4149889" }, { "id": "5790120", "title": "Thomas Elrington (actor)", "text": " steward of the king's inns of court. A post in the Quit-rent Office was also given him, and by Lord Mountjoy he was made \"gunner to the train of artillery\", a post of some emolument, which subsequently he was allowed to sell. Under his management Smock Alley Theatre prospered, and he enjoyed high social and artistic consideration. Elrington made occasional visits to London, playing, 24 January 1715, at Drury Lane, Cassius in Julius Cæsar, appearing subsequently as Torrismond in the Spanish Friar, Hotspur, Orestes, Sylla in Caius Marius, Mithridates, &c., and the first to play the Earl of Pembroke in Nicholas Rowe's Lady Jane Grey. On 6 October 1716 he ", "score": "1.4009717" }, { "id": null, "title": "Tommy Widdrington", "text": "Tommy Widdrington\n\nThomas Widdrington (born 1 October 1971) is an English former football player and manager who is currently manager of club King's Lynn Town.\n\nAs a midfielder, he made 372 appearances in the English Football League in a 15-year career, before spending five years in non-league football. His career began at Southampton in 1990, where he spent the first six years of his career most of which were in the Premier League. In 1996, he moved to Grimsby Town, helping the \"Mariners\" to the League Trophy and promotion out of the Second Division in 1998. The next year he moved on to Port Vale for a two-year spell. Voted the club's Player of the Year in 2000, he captained the \"Valiants\" to the League Trophy in 2001. Later in the year he was transferred to Hartlepool United, helping the club to win promotion out of League Two in 2002–03, before he moved on to Macclesfield Town. In 2005 his career in the Football League ended back at Port Vale. He then spent 2005 to 2010 at non-league Salisbury City. As a player, he enjoyed promotion four times with three clubs, and lifted the Football League Trophy twice.\n\nPlayer-manager at Salisbury City for the 2009–10 season, he returned to the Football League at Southend United, as assistant manager but left the position in December 2010. He was appointed Hemel Hempstead Town manager in October 2011, before he was put it charge at Eastbourne Borough in February 2012. He left Eastbourne Borough in April 2017 and went on to work as head of recruitment at Coventry City and Bristol Rovers, before becoming caretaker-manager of the latter in November 2020. He returned to full-time management at King's Lynn Town in December 2021.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Second Protectorate Parliament", "text": "Second Protectorate Parliament\n\nThe Second Protectorate Parliament in England sat for two sessions from 17 September 1656 until 4 February 1658, with Thomas Widdrington as the Speaker of the House of Commons. In its first session, the House of Commons was its only chamber; in the second session an Other House with a power of veto over the decisions of the Commons was added.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "William Lenthall", "text": "William Lenthall\n\nWilliam Lenthall (1591–1662) was an English politician of the Civil War period. He served as Speaker of the House of Commons for a period of almost twenty years, both before and after the execution of King Charles I.\n\nHe is best remembered for his dignified defiance of the king on 4 January 1642 when Charles entered the chamber of the House of Commons, supported by 400 armed men, in an attempt to seize five members whom he accused of treason. When Charles asked Lenthall where the five were, Lenthall famously replied \"I have neither eyes to see nor tongue to speak in this place but as this House is pleased to direct me\". It was the first time in English history that a speaker of the House of Commons had declared his allegiance to the liberty of parliament rather than the will of the monarch.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Bulstrode Whitelocke", "text": "Bulstrode Whitelocke\n\nSir Bulstrode Whitelocke (6 August 1605 – 28 July 1675) was an English lawyer, writer, parliamentarian and Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Speakers of the House of Commons of England", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "30884769", "title": "Thomas Codrington", "text": " Thomas Codrington (1829 in Wroughton, Wiltshire – 1918) was a British engineer and antiquarian of the late Victorian era. With a career background as an Inspector for local government, he published several known works. First was Report on the Destruction of Town Refuse, published by Her Majesty's Stationery Office in 1888. This was only a short pamphlet of 48 pages, including illustrations of furnaces in use at the time. Codrington went on to write the slightly more substantial 172 page work The Maintenance of Macadamised Roads in 1879, published by E. & F.N. Spon. However, by far Codrington's most famous work was also one of his last. Roman roads in Britain, published originally in 1903, was the first attempt by any author to catalogue fully the evident remains of the Roman transport network in the United Kingdom. Several further editions were subsequently published, and indeed reprinted. The last of these was a reprint of the 3rd edition in 1928.", "score": "1.3945628" }, { "id": "8249138", "title": "Thomas Worsley Staniforth", "text": " Thomas was born in Sheffield, England to Thomas Staniforth, a Grinder and Cordelia Worsley. His family lived in the Wicker area of the city. Prior to becoming interested in music, Thomas worked as an Accounting clerk. By the time of the 1871 Census he had relocated to Brighton and is described as an Organist. Thomas primarily worked at St Paul's Church, Brighton as Organist and Choirmaster and later moved onto a position as music master at Highgate School in London. On 27 February 1872 his hymn O Thou Our Souls was chosen to be performed at St. Paul's Cathedral during a thanksgiving service for the recover of then Prince of Wales Edward VII. Other notable hymns composed by Staniforth include Jerusalem my happy home and St Paul He was also a regular contributor to the Sheffield Telegraph for whom he wrote articles on church history and music. Towards the end of the century he retired back to Sheffield. On 5 October 1898 he married Sarah Susannah Nicholson (Denton), a widower at the Wicker Parish church. He died on 25 March 1909 and was buried on 29 March 1909 at City Road Cemetery.", "score": "1.3791867" }, { "id": "11453239", "title": "Thomas Dimsdale", "text": " He was born in Theydon Garnon, Essex, the son of John Dimsdale, a surgeon, and his wife Susan. The family were Quakers. He was trained in medicine by his father before training further at St Thomas’ Hospital, London, after which he began to practise medicine in Hertford in 1734.", "score": "1.3696324" }, { "id": "8172831", "title": "Darrell Clarke", "text": " In July 2010, Tommy Widdrington left Salisbury City for the job of assistant manager at Southend United. As a result of this, Clarke became joint caretaker manager beside Mikey Harris. The next month he was made player-manager on a permanent basis, with Harris as his assistant. He needed to secure an immediate promotion in order to maintain the funding to keep the club a full-time professional organization and so recruited young players freshly released from Football League clubs. However he lost top-scorer Matt Tubbs, who was sold for a club record £55,000 to Crawley Town. After his first season, the 'Whites' won promotion from the Southern League Premier Division via the play-offs, winning 3–2 on penalties after a 2–2 draw with Hednesford ", "score": "1.3673489" }, { "id": "2675169", "title": "Thomas Wicksteed", "text": " Thomas Wicksteed (26 January 1806 – 15 November 1871) was a notable English civil engineer of the 19th century. As engineer to the East London Waterworks Company he was responsible for introducing the Cornish pumping engine. He oversaw many improvements, and was approached for advice by a number of water companies elsewhere in the country, later turning his attention to the efficient handling of sewage.", "score": "1.3588088" }, { "id": "25670084", "title": "Widdrington Village", "text": "Anne Hepple Dickinson (1877–1959), writer ; James Bulmer Johnson (1889–1943), First World War British Army officer and recipient of the Victoria Cross ; Bob Morton (1906–1990), English footballer ", "score": "1.3482431" }, { "id": "11622852", "title": "Blankney", "text": " family. It was the Thorolds who did much to embellish the house with carved panelling of the period. During the reign of Charles I, again through marriage it passed into the hands of Sir William Widdrington who was created Baron Widdrington of Blankney in 1643. Lord Widdrington's great grandson, William Widdrington, 4th Baron Widdrington had the indiscretion to take part in the Jacobite rising of 1715. He was captured at Preston, convicted of high treason and his lands were confiscated in the following year. In 1719 Thomas Chaplin, a prominent Lincolnshire landowner, purchased the land from the Crown Commissioners for Confiscated Land, and it was to remain in the family for over two centuries. The estate ", "score": "1.3467025" }, { "id": "27405327", "title": "Theo Widdrington", "text": " Widdrington began his career with Portsmouth, turning professional in 2017. He was released in April 2018 after 13 years with the club, having spent time earlier that season on loan at Havant & Waterlooville. He signed for Bristol Rovers in July 2018. He made his debut on 13 November 2018 in the EFL Trophy, one of four Bristol Rovers players (alongside Tareiq Holmes-Dennis, Zain Walker and Connor Jones) to do so in that match. On 21 December 2018 he moved on loan to Bognor Regis Town for one month. On 8 February 2019, he was loaned out to the same club once again, also for one ", "score": "1.3434882" }, { "id": "14753513", "title": "Thomas Boddington", "text": " Thomas Boddington (3 June 1736 – 28 June 1821) was a political activist in London in the late 18th century. He lived in Clapton (then in Middlesex). Boddington was involved in the slave trade and active as part of the West India lobby, but also participated in other committees: The Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor, and the Committees for Repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts. He was a director of the Bank of England (1776–1810) and was on the Board of the London Dock Company. He worked at the Board of Ordnance based at the Tower of ", "score": "1.3375978" }, { "id": "5040436", "title": "Thomas Beddoes", "text": " Thomas Beddoes (13 April 1760 – 24 December 1808) was an English physician and scientific writer. He was born in Shifnal, Shropshire and died in Bristol fifteen years after opening his medical practice there. He was a reforming practitioner and teacher of medicine, and an associate of leading scientific figures. He worked to treat tuberculosis. Beddoes was a friend of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and, according to E. S. Shaffer, an important influence on Coleridge's early thinking, introducing him to the higher criticism. The poet Thomas Lovell Beddoes was his son. A painting of him by Samson Towgood Roch is in the National Portrait Gallery, London.", "score": "1.3319111" }, { "id": "27137776", "title": "Thomas Liffen", "text": " He was mainly associated with Sussex. 88p99×?", "score": "1.3316987" }, { "id": "3174044", "title": "Thomas Brash", "text": " At 15 he was employed by his uncles James and Richard Cuddie as a boilerman in their dairy factory at Mosgiel. While in Mosgiel he joined the Taieri Ramblers’ Cycling Club and became well known for his successful cycle races.", "score": "1.3284037" }, { "id": "14713032", "title": "Thomas Witlam Atkinson", "text": " He was born in Cawthorne, near Barnsley, West Riding of Yorkshire in 1799. He began to learn his trade at the age of eight, working alongside his father, who was a stonemason at Cannon Hall, home of the Spencer Stanhope family. By the time he was twenty he was a stone-carver, and in that capacity executed some good work on churches at Barnsley, Ashton-Under-Lyne and elsewhere. At the last-named town he settled for a while as a teacher of drawing. Soon after he became clerk of works to a string of important Victorian architects, including George Basevi, who designed much of Belgrave Square in London. About this time he ", "score": "1.3190529" }, { "id": "11453243", "title": "Thomas Dimsdale", "text": " He lived in Bengeo a part of Hertford, the county town of Hertfordshire, where Dimsdale Street, which partly bounded his land, still bears his name. He died in 1800 and was buried in the Quakers' burial-ground at Bishop's Stortford, Hertfordshire.", "score": "1.3168378" }, { "id": "1017039", "title": "Henry Widdrington (died 1623)", "text": " Sir Henry Widdrington (died 1623) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1604 to 1622. Widdrington was the son of Edward Widdrington. He succeeded to the estates of his father in 1592. He was deputy warden and keeper of Ridsdale under Sir Robert Carey. He was knighted at Widdrington on 9 April 1603. In 1604, he was elected Member of Parliament for Northumberland. He was High Sheriff of Northumberland in 1606. He was re-elected MP for Northumberland in 1614 and 1621. Widdrington married Mary Curwen, daughter of Sir Nicholas Curwen. His son William was created Baron Widdrington.", "score": "1.3166404" } ]
What is Jean-Marie-Victor Viel's occupation?
[ "architect" ]
occupation
Jean-Marie-Victor Viel
1,484,274
74
[ { "id": "6627017", "title": "Jean-Marie-Victor Viel", "text": " Jean-Marie-Victor Viel (1796–1863) was a French architect who designed the Palais de l'Industrie, an exhibition hall located between the Seine River and the Champs-Élysées which was erected for the Paris World Fair in 1855.", "score": "1.5050858" }, { "id": "14800830", "title": "Viel (name)", "text": "Alain Viel, French educator ; Cristián Viel (born 1967), Argentine rugby union player ; Felipe Viel (born 1971), Chilean actor ; Jean-Marie-Victor Viel (1796–1863), French architect ; Marguerite Viel, French screenwriter and film director ; Mattia Viel (born 1995), Italian cyclist ; Nicolas Viel (died 1625), French missionary ; Placide Viel (1815–1877), French nun and mother general ; Roger Viel (1902–1981), French athlete ; Sabrina Viel (born 1973), Italian ice hockey player ; Tanguy Viel (born 1973), French writer ", "score": "1.4761181" }, { "id": "13509025", "title": "Jeffrey Viel", "text": " Viel was born on January 28, 1997, in Rimouski, Quebec, Canada.", "score": "1.4513865" }, { "id": "14800829", "title": "Viel (name)", "text": "Viel Bjerkeset Andersen (born 1963), Norwegian artist ", "score": "1.4374986" }, { "id": "12059208", "title": "Joseph-Marie Vien", "text": " Joseph-Marie Vien (sometimes anglicised as Joseph-Mary Wien; 18 June 1716 &ndash; 27 March 1809) was a French painter. He was the last holder of the post of Premier peintre du Roi, serving from 1789 to 1791.", "score": "1.4373686" }, { "id": null, "title": "1855 in architecture", "text": "1855 in architecture\n\nThe year 1855 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of members of the Académie française", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Horace de Viel-Castel", "text": "Horace de Viel-Castel\n\nMarc-Roch-Horace de Salviac, comte de Viel-Castel, known as Horace de Viel-Castel (16 August 1802 Paris – 1 October 1864), was an art lover and collector, and director of the Louvre until 1863. A Bonapartist, he staunchly supported Napoleon III. He was an intimate of Princess Mathilde and of Alfred de Musset, the right arm of Nieuwerkerke until his disgrace on 12 March 1863. He was a great-nephew of Victor de Riqueti, marquis de Mirabeau.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Mary, Queen of the World Cathedral", "text": "Mary, Queen of the World Cathedral\n\nMary, Queen of the World Cathedral or in full Mary, Queen of the World and St. James the Great Cathedral () is a minor basilica in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, and the seat of the Roman Catholic archdiocese of Montreal. It is the third largest church in Quebec after Saint Joseph's Oratory (also in Montreal) and the Basilica of Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré east of Quebec City. The building is 101 m (333 ft) in length, 46 m (150 ft) in width, and a maximum height of 77 m (252 ft) at the cupola, the diameter of which is 23 m (75 ft).\n\nThe church is located at 1085 Cathedral Street at the corner of René Lévesque Boulevard and Metcalfe Street, near the Bonaventure metro station and Central Station in downtown Montreal. It and the connected Archdiocese main buildings form the eastern side of Place du Canada, and occupies of dominant presences on Dorchester Square.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of French films of 1934", "text": "List of French films of 1934\n\nA list of films released in France in 1934:\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "12428310", "title": "Jean-Marie", "text": " Catholic Church ; Jean-Marie Atangana Mebara, a Cameroonian politician ; Jean-Marie Messier (born 1956), a French businessman ; Jean-Marie Mokole, a member of the Pan-African Parliament ; Jean-Marie Mondelet (circa 1771–1843), a notary and political figure in Lower Canada ; Jean-Marie Morel (1728–1810), a French architect ; Jean-Marie Musy (1876–1952), a Swiss politician ; Jean-Marie Neff (born 1961), a French racewalker ; Jean-Marie Pallardy (born 1940), a French film director ; Jean-Marie Pelt (born 1933), a French botanist ; Jean-Marie Peretti, a French researcher and teacher in human resources management ; Jean-Marie Perrot (1877–1943), a Breton priest ; Jean-Marie Pfaff (born 1953), a Belgian former football goalkeeper ; Jean-Marie Poiré (born 1945), a ", "score": "1.411268" }, { "id": "28089652", "title": "Jean-Marie Poumeyrol", "text": " Jean-Marie Poumeyrol (born at Libourne on June 8, 1946) is a French artist. Much of his early work consisted of erotica and hallucinogenic art, but as his art has developed he has shown a great interest in landscapes as well. He is an exponent of the fantastic realism movement.", "score": "1.4025325" }, { "id": "29649743", "title": "Victorin Lurel", "text": " Victorin Lurel (born 20 August 1951 in Vieux-Habitants, Guadeloupe) is a French politician who represented the 4th district of Guadeloupe in the French National Assembly from 2002 to 2012. He also served as the President of the Regional Council of the French overseas department of Guadeloupe from 2004 until 2015. His term began on 22 April 2004 and was renewed on 14 March 2010. In May 2012, he was made the Minister of Overseas France in Jean-Marc Ayrault's cabinet and was replaced in the national assembly by his supplementary candidate Hélène Vainqueur-Christophe. However, on 23 March 2014, he lost the local elections in Vieux-Habitants, and as of 2 April 2014, he was not reappointed to the Valls Cabinet. On December 13, 2015, he lost the regional elections in Guadeloupe.", "score": "1.4002552" }, { "id": "32322315", "title": "Victor-Jean Nicolle", "text": " Victor-Jean Nicolle (1754–1826) was a French artist. Nicolle was born in the city of Paris. He revealed his talent for landscape compositions at an early age when, in 1771, as a pupil of the Royal School of Drawing he won the Perspective Prize. He acquired a passion for depicting the architecture of classical ruins and in pursuit of this passion he embarked on a journey throughout southern Europe- Italy (Venice, Bologna, Florence, Naples and Rome) as well as France. Fascinated by Rome, he made two trips there, 1787–1789 and 1806–1811, to draw the buildings. Victor-Jean Nicolle's compositions include such works as the Pont Neuf seen through a circular window in the Louvre (shortly after 1808) which illustrates the view taken from one of the circular windows behind the colonnade of the east front of the Louvre, in Paris, hence the title of his work. His work forms a significant historic and topographical record of urban settings.", "score": "1.3956639" }, { "id": "12428307", "title": "Jean-Marie", "text": "Jean-Marie Abgrall (born 1950), a French psychiatrist, criminologist, specialist in forensic medicine, cult expert, and graduate in criminal law ; Jean-Marie Charles Abrial (1879–1962), a French Admiral and Minister of Marine of France ; Jean-Marie Andre (born 1944), a Belgian scientist ; Jean-Marie Auberson (1920–2004), a Swiss conductor and violinist ; Jean-Marie Balestre (born 1921), a president of FISA ; Jean-Marie Basset (born 1943), a French chemist ; Jean-Marie Beaupuy (born 1943), a French politician ; Jean-Marie Benjamin, a priest ; Jean-Marie Beurel (1813–1872), a French Roman Catholic priest ; Jean-Marie Bockel (born 1950), a French politician ; Jean-Marie Buchet, a Belgian film director ; Jean-Marie Cavada (born 1940), a French politician ; ", "score": "1.3853632" }, { "id": "8796124", "title": "Jean-Victor Schnetz", "text": " Jean-Victor Schnetz (April 14, 1787 in Versailles &ndash; March 15, 1870 in Paris) was a French academic painter well regarded for his historical and genre paintings.", "score": "1.3748698" }, { "id": "2313247", "title": "Jean-Louis Vieillard-Baron", "text": " Jean-Louis Vieillard-Baron was born in 1944. He entered the École normale supérieure de Saint-Cloud in 1965. He received the Agrégation in 1969 and a Doctorate in Philosophy in 1976.", "score": "1.374255" }, { "id": "4873194", "title": "Nicolas Sansu", "text": " Pascal Blanc was born in Vierzon, France on 1968. He announced in October 2019 to be a candidate for the 3rd time in the municipal election in Vierzon. He also member of the UNEF-SE national office during his studies, he holds a diploma of advanced studies in economic sciences. He is elected mayor by the new municipal council.", "score": "1.3731594" }, { "id": "2313246", "title": "Jean-Louis Vieillard-Baron", "text": " Jean-Louis Vieillard-Baron (born 19 April 1944) is a French Roman Catholic philosopher. He is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the University of Poitiers and Professor of the Philosophy of Religion at the Institut Catholique de Paris. He is the author of many books about Bergson and Hegel. He is an expert on spiritualism.", "score": "1.3574071" }, { "id": "11951127", "title": "Victor-Charles Mahillon", "text": " Victor-Charles Mahillon (March 10, 1841 in Brussels – June 17, 1924 in Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat, France) was a Belgian musician, instrument builder and writer on musical topics. He was the founder and first curator of the Musée instrumental du Conservatoire Royal de Musique, known today as the Musical Instrument Museum. He built, collected, and described more than 1500 musical instruments.", "score": "1.3554258" }, { "id": "31950771", "title": "Nicolas Viel", "text": " Father Nicolas Viel, O.M.R., (died 25 June 1625) was a French Recollect missionary to the Hurons from 1623 to 1625.", "score": "1.3539295" }, { "id": "14057521", "title": "Vierzon", "text": "Félix Pyat (1810–1889), politician and journalist ; Édouard Vaillant (1840–1915), politician ; Eugène Baudin (1853–1918), porcelain worker and left-wing politician Jacques Brel, a Belgian singer, made the city famous with his song \"Vesoul\" (1968).", "score": "1.352056" }, { "id": "16401415", "title": "Jean Glénisson", "text": "Degree in literature at the Faculty of Arts of Poitiers, (1940) ; Studies at the École nationale des chartes ; Archivist paleographer (1946) ; Member of the École française de Rome (1946–1948) ; Curator at the Archives nationales (1950–1952), responsible for the Trésor des Chartes ; Head of the Archives of the French Equatorial Africa library in Brazzaville (1952–1957) ; Professor of historiography at the University of São Paulo in Brazil ; Chargé de conférences (1959–1963) then director of studies at the VIe section of the École pratique des hautes études (EPHE) (1963) ; Director of the (1964 to 1986) ; Member of the International Committee of Latin paleography, successor of Jeanne Vielliard as director of the IRHT (1966–1992). A text editor, historian of medieval administration, including papal but also from Aunis and Saintonge, Glénisson also supported the introduction of laboratory techniques and computer analysis in order to study manuscript books.", "score": "1.3470261" }, { "id": "12633094", "title": "Alain Viel", "text": " Alain Viel is the director of Northwest Undergraduate Laboratories and senior lecturer in the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology at Harvard University.", "score": "1.3457804" }, { "id": "29563249", "title": "Jean-François Roux", "text": " Jean-François Roux (born February 19, 1973) is a politician from Quebec, Canada. He was an Action démocratique du Québec Member of the National Assembly for the electoral district of Arthabaska from 2007 to 2008. Roux was born in Victoriaville, Quebec. He studied psychology and philosophy at Bishop's University but did not complete a degree. He worked as a director for several small businesses in Victoriaville including a director for sales and director for projects. He was also a football instructor for two secondary school football team as well as a community radio host for Bishop's University's CJMQ-FM. He was also the founder of the pastoral collegiate council at the Cégep de Victoriaville. He was first elected in the 2007 election with 42% of the vote. Liberal incumbent Claude Bachand, finished second with 30% of the vote. Roux took office on April 12, 2007 and was named the critic for regions until May 2008.", "score": "1.3453796" } ]
What is Virginia Haviland's occupation?
[ "librarian", "library staff" ]
occupation
Virginia Haviland
6,112,233
90
[ { "id": "7489952", "title": "Virginia Haviland", "text": " Virginia Haviland (May 21, 1911 – January 6, 1988) was an American librarian and writer who became an international authority in children's literature. She chaired the prestigious Newbery-Caldecott Award Committee, traveled and wrote extensively. Haviland is also well known for her Favorite Fairy Tales series, featuring stories from sixteen countries.", "score": "1.7409735" }, { "id": "7489953", "title": "Virginia Haviland", "text": " Virginia Haviland was born in Rochester, New York, to William J. Haviland and Bertha M. Esten. She grew up mainly in Massachusetts. During her childhood, she traveled abroad and spent time with two aunts who entertained international visitors in their home. The early influence of contact with international visitors may have influenced her adult interest in traveling and working with international colleagues. Haviland held a BA in economics and mathematics from Cornell University (1933). She became a children's librarian in 1934 for the Boston Public Library, under the tutelage of Alice Jordan, founder of children's services there. She was a branch librarian and children's librarian at Boston from 1948 to 1952, and a reader's adviser for children from 1952 to 1963. Haviland studied folklore ", "score": "1.7003562" }, { "id": "7489961", "title": "Virginia Haviland", "text": " Russia. Some of these stories may seem violent or fantastical to our modern sensibilities, yet they often reflect the deepest yearnings and imaginings of the human mind and heart. Virginia Haviland traveled abroad frequently and was able to draw upon librarians, storytellers, and writers in countries as far away as Japan to help her make her selections. But she was also an avid researcher with a keen interest in rare books, and most of the stories she included in the series were found through a diligent search of old collections. Ms. Haviland was associated with the Boston Public Library for nearly ", "score": "1.6223712" }, { "id": "7489957", "title": "Virginia Haviland", "text": " Haviland was awarded the Regina Medal \"for continuous distinguished contribution to children's literature\" from the Catholic Library Association in 1976, and the Grolier Award for \"unusual contributions to the stimulation and guidance of reading by children and young people\" by the ALA that same year. The ALA would also give her an Honorary Life Membership in 1982 \"for her many accomplishments on behalf of children and for those professionals who work with children in the United States and throughout the world ... the Association joins her colleagues who have bestowed upon her the rank of Ambassador for Children's Books.\" Her \"interest and participation in the international arena was ahead of her time and gave the United States an established place in international children's library and literature organizations. She left a worthy legacy for children's literature at the Library of Congress at the culmination of her career.\"", "score": "1.612953" }, { "id": "7489956", "title": "Virginia Haviland", "text": " was invited to found the Center for Children's Literature at the Library of Congress in Washington DC. She became its first Head in 1963, and worked for the Library of Congress until her retirement in 1981. In a note to Haviland's cousin, author C. S. Haviland, fellow Regina Medal-winning author Jane Yolen wrote: \"She was funny, acerbic, brilliant, and did not suffer fools at all. She was also gracious, never condescending, and saw her calling (as a librarian) as one of the highest callings of all. Her knowledge of American and British children's literature—and folklore in particular—was encyclopedic. It's been years since she died, but I still think of her.\" Virginia Haviland died of a stroke on January 6, 1988, in Washington, D.C.", "score": "1.5792708" }, { "id": null, "title": "Virginia Haviland", "text": "Virginia Haviland\n\nVirginia Haviland (May 21, 1911 – January 6, 1988) was an American librarian and writer who became an international authority in children's literature. She chaired the prestigious Newbery-Caldecott Award Committee, traveled and wrote extensively. Haviland is also well known for her \"Favorite Fairy Tales\" series, featuring stories from sixteen countries.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Laura Smith Haviland", "text": "Laura Smith Haviland\n\nLaura Smith Haviland (December 20, 1808 – April 20, 1898) was an American abolitionist, suffragette, and social reformer. She was a Quaker and an important figure in the history of the Underground Railroad.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Willis Bradley Haviland", "text": "Willis Bradley Haviland\n\nCommander Willis Bradley Haviland, (10 March 1890 – 28 November 1944) was a pioneer military pilot in World War I and a Naval Air Station Commanding Officer in World War II. As the sixteenth American volunteer in the Lafayette Escadrille, he was among the first air combat pilots to fight the Germans in World War I, before the United States officially entered the war. He would later become the first pilot to launch a plane from a battleship.\nSection::::Early life.\nBorn on 10 March 1890 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Willis was the only son of Dr. Willis Henry Haviland (10 Sep 1864 – 15 Jan 1939) by his first wife Grace Hynes. His parents divorced 28 Jun 1895, when he was only about 5 years old, and Dr. Haviland remarried to Mary Page Irvine on 22 Jul 1895 in Butte, Montana. Willis Bradley Haviland would remain close to his biological mother well into his adulthood.\n\nHe attended Kemper Military School and Iowa State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts at Ames.\n\nHis father was elected a Montana State Senator in 1906 for one term in the Democratic Party. Meanwhile, young Willis B. Haviland enlisted in the United States Navy from 1907 to 1911. When war broke out in Europe, Willis joined the American Field Service (American Ambulance Corp, nicknamed \"Friends of France\") in 1915. There he drove ambulances for seventeen months at the Alsace front. When the Field Service and American Ambulance severed ties in the summer of 1916, Willis received a pilot's license on 7 September in that year and entered the American Escadrille (soon afterward renamed Lafayette Escadrille) becoming the sixteenth American volunteer pilot in the squadron.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "E. C. Spykman", "text": "E. C. Spykman\n\nElizabeth Choate Spykman (b. Elizabeth Choate on July 17, 1896 in Southborough, Massachusetts - d. August 7, 1965) was an American author known primarily for her children's books.\n\nChoate married geostrategist and founder of the Department of International Studies at Yale University Nicholas J. Spykman (pronounced \"Speak-man\") in her mid-thirties, and had two daughters. In 1955, at the age of 59, she published her first children's book, \"A Lemon and a Star\". Her second, \"The Wild Angel\", was published in 1957. \"Terrible, Horrible Edie\" was published in 1960, and her final children's book, \"Edie on the Warpath\", was published posthumously in 1966.\n\nThese four books are about the Cares children growing up in Summerton, Massachusetts in the 1910s. They are widely believed to be autobiographical fiction. Virginia Haviland, writing in \"The Horn Book\", said of \"A Lemon and a Star\", \"A remarkable evocation of turn-of-the-century growing-up in a story with a strong feeling of particular family reminiscence and at the same time of universal childhood . . . Unusually well written.\"\n\nSpykman also wrote a history of the Westover School in 1959. In this, she wrote of the Westover School architecture, \"the building was intentionally kept free from luxury as unsuited to school life and out of harmony with the atmosphere of the village, and the quiet refinement which goes with straightforward simplicity.\"", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Alice Dalgliesh", "text": "Alice Dalgliesh\n\nAlice Dalgliesh (October 7, 1893 – June 11, 1979) was a naturalized American writer and publisher who wrote more than 40 fiction and non-fiction books, mainly for children. She has been called \"a pioneer in the field of children's historical fiction\". Three of her books were runners-up for the annual Newbery Medal, the partly autobiographical \"The Silver Pencil\", \"The Bears on Hemlock Mountain\", and \"The Courage of Sarah Noble\", which was also named to the Lewis Carroll Shelf Award list.\n\nAs the founding editor (in 1934) of Scribner's and Sons Children's Book Division, Dalgliesh published works by award-winning authors and illustrators including Robert A. Heinlein, Marcia Brown, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, Katherine Milhous, Will James, Leonard Weisgard, and Leo Politi. Her prominence in the field of children's literature led to her being appointed the first president of the Children's Book Council, a national nonprofit trade association of children's book publishers and presses.", "score": null }, { "id": "32943250", "title": "Chris Haviland", "text": " Christopher Douglas Haviland (born 27 February 1952) is an Australian politician. Born in Sydney, he has worked as a public servant with the Commonwealth Department of Health, a teacher, a maths tutor and an umpire for Sydney Grade Cricket. He was district cricketer in Sydney and Perth. He is a leading activist for party democratisation and is an active member of the progressive Left faction. He is the New South Wales State Convenor of grassroots party reform organisation Local Labor.", "score": "1.5655559" }, { "id": "7489967", "title": "Virginia Haviland", "text": "International Board on Books for Children (member of executive board) ; International Federation of Library Associations (member of executive committee) ; P.E.N. ; Authors Guild ; Authors League of America (the parent of the Author's Guild) ; American Library Association (chairman of Children's Library Association, 1954–55 Chairman of Book Evaluation Committee, 1962–63) ; National Council of Administrative Women in Education ; International Society of Woman Geographers ; District of Columbia Library Association ; Washington Children's Book Guild ; Pi Lambda Theta ", "score": "1.564392" }, { "id": "7489955", "title": "Virginia Haviland", "text": " Documentation Centers. She was also chair of the Newbery-Caldecott Award Committee of the ALA from 1953–1954, and held positions of authority in other national and international professional organizations, including positions on many committees and juries that selected outstanding children's books. Her \"credo was 'The right book for the right child at the right time.' She had high standards by which to judge children's literature and also accepted newer forms.\" Haviland judged the New York Herald Tribune Children's Spring Book Festival Awards from 1955 to 1957, as well as the International Hans Christian Andersen Award, the Book World Children's Spring Book Festival Awards, and the National Book Awards (1969). She was instrumental in beginning the Washington Post Children's Book Guild Nonfiction Award. In 1962 ", "score": "1.5406375" }, { "id": "7489954", "title": "Virginia Haviland", "text": " Albert B. Lord at Harvard. In 1949 Haviland gave the New England Library Association's Hewins Lecture for research in the history of children's literature about nineteenth-century travel books for children, and taught Library Service to Children and Reading Guidance for Children at Simmons College School of Library Science from 1957 to 1962 where there is now a Virginia Haviland Scholarship. She also reviewed for The Horn Book Magazine for about thirty years. Haviland chaired the Children's Services Division of the American Library Association (ALA) from 1954 to 1955, and as such attended conferences of the International Board on Books for Children (now called the International Board on Books for Young People), the International Federation of Library Associations, and the Institutions Roundtable for Children's ", "score": "1.5233881" }, { "id": "7489962", "title": "Virginia Haviland", "text": " years—as a children's and branch librarian, and eventually as Readers Advisor to Children. She reviewed for The Horn Book Magazine for almost thirty years and in 1963 was named Head of the Children's Book Section of the Library of Congress. Ms. Haviland remained with the Library of Congress for nearly twenty years, and wrote and lectured about children's literature throughout her career. She died in 1988.\" Haviland also organized The Fairy Tale Treasury (1972) and The Mother Goose Treasury (1966), both illustrated by Raymond Briggs and published by Hamish Hamilton. The Mother Goose Treasury won the Kate Greenaway Medal in 1966.", "score": "1.5188057" }, { "id": "7489963", "title": "Virginia Haviland", "text": "Haviland, Virginia (ed). The Fairy Tale Treasury. Illustrated by Raymond Briggs. London: Hamish Hamilton, c1972. ; Andersen, Hans Christian. The Complete Fairy Tales and Stories. Translated by Eric Christian Haugaard. Foreword by Virginia Haviland. New York: Doubleday & Co., c1974. ; Haviland, Virginia (ed). The Openhearted Audience: Ten Authors Talk about Writing for Children. Washington DC: Library of Congress, c1980. (Featuring: Introduction by Virginia Haviland; \"Only Connect\" by P. L. Travers; \"Questions to an Artist Who Is Also an Author\" (an interview of Maurice Sendak by Virginia Haviland); \"Between Family and Fantasy: An Author's Perspectives on Children's Books\" by Joan Aiken; \"Portrait of a Poet: Hans Christian Andersen and His Fairy Tales\" by Erik Christian Haugaard; \"Sources and Responses\" ", "score": "1.5039213" }, { "id": "7489965", "title": "Virginia Haviland", "text": " Selective Annotated Bibliography. Washington DC: Library of Congress, c1969. ; Haviland, Virginia. William Penn: Founder and Friend. New York: Abingdon-Cokesbury Press, c1952. ; Haviland, Virginia. Children and Literature Views and Reviews. Scott, Foresman, c1973. ; Haviland, Virginia. The Stone of Victory and Other Tales of Padraic Colum. New York: McGraw Hill, c1966. ; Bechtel, Louise Seaman. Books in Search of Children – Speeches and Essays by Louise Seaman Bechtel. Edited by Virginia Haviland. New York: MacMillan, c1969 / London: Hamish Hamilton, c1970. ; Elleman, Barbara and Virginia Haviland. Children's Books of International Interest. Chicago: American Library Association, c1972. ; Haviland, Virginia. Children's Literature – A Guide to Reference Sources. Washington DC: Library of Congress, c1966. ; Haviland, Virginia. Ruth ", "score": "1.4911938" }, { "id": "10033472", "title": "Laura Smith Haviland", "text": " During the Civil War, Laura toured many refugee camps and hospitals, even venturing onto the frontlines, to distribute supplies to displaced citizens, freed slaves, and soldiers. In the spring of 1865, the commissioner of the newly created Freedmen's Bureau, General Oliver O. Howard, named Haviland Inspector of Hospitals. Haviland's actual duties consisted of far more than inspecting hospitals. She spent the next two years traveling through Virginia, Tennessee, Kansas and Washington, D.C., distributing supplies, reporting on the living conditions of Freedmen and indigent whites, organizing refugee camps, establishing schools, working as a teacher, volunteering as a nurse at Freedmen's hospitals, and giving public lectures. In an effort to help whites understand what the Freedmen had endured under slavery, she toured ", "score": "1.4743775" }, { "id": "7489958", "title": "Virginia Haviland", "text": " In the 1950s, Virginia Haviland was a pioneer in attempting to collect international fairy tales into a series of volumes that were more accessible to children. While still a Boston librarian, Haviland submitted a proposal for her Favorite Fairy Tales series to Little, Brown and Company, who accepted and published her books in hard cover ca 1959–71. The books were republished in trade paperback by Beech Tree in the mid-1990s. To compile her series, Virginia Haviland traveled around the world meeting with librarians, authors, and authorities in fairy tales. The collection includes: In 1985, Little, Brown and Company also published a ", "score": "1.4682012" }, { "id": "27883424", "title": "John Kenneth Haviland", "text": " After the war he moved to Canada before obtaining a PhD from Massachusetts Institute of Technology and becoming a professor in engineering in the Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department at the University of Virginia, specialising in aerospace projects.", "score": "1.4591477" }, { "id": "25894513", "title": "Amelia Haviland", "text": " Amelia M. Haviland is an American statistician currently the Anna Loomis McCandless Professor of Statistics and Public Policy at Carnegie Mellon University. She was named a Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 2021.", "score": "1.4536214" }, { "id": "28113711", "title": "Haviland Morris", "text": " Haviland Morris (born September 14, 1959) is an American film, television, and Broadway actress, who currently works in real estate.", "score": "1.4431639" }, { "id": "28718899", "title": "Julian Haviland", "text": " Julian Arthur Charles Haviland (born 8 June 1930) is a British print and broadcasting journalist of over sixty years' standing. He was a lobby correspondent at Westminster for over twenty years, and is the former Political Editor of Independent Television News (1975–81) and The Times newspaper (1981–86). He is also the author of two books.", "score": "1.4401143" }, { "id": "11135480", "title": "Andrew Haviland", "text": " Andrew Haviland, a senior Foreign Service officer with the rank of Minister-Counselor, has been serving as Chargé d'Affaires for the U.S. Mission to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) since October 2017.", "score": "1.423245" }, { "id": "10033455", "title": "Laura Smith Haviland", "text": " of Cambria, in western New York. At the time there was no school near their home, and for the next six years Haviland's education consisted of little more than \"a spelling lesson\" given to her daily by her mother. Haviland described herself as an inquisitive child, deeply interested in the workings of the world around her, who at a young age began questioning her parents about everything from scripture to Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation. Once she had mastered spelling, Haviland supplemented her meager education by devouring every book she could borrow from friends, relatives, and neighbors, reading everything from religious material to serious historical studies. At sixteen, Laura met Charles ", "score": "1.417479" } ]
What is Frances Josephy's occupation?
[ "journalist", "journo", "journalists", "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Frances Josephy
658,003
54
[ { "id": "27829449", "title": "Frances Currey", "text": " Frances Currey was born in Indianapolis, Indiana in 1925. She was raised on a farm in Jennings County, Indiana. In the mid-1960s, Currey was a school teacher, teaching third grade in Liberty, Indiana. She had earned her master's degree at Ball State University in Elementary Education. She also studied for her doctorate, studying Alzheimer's disease at Earlham College. She married and had three children.", "score": "1.4326514" }, { "id": "7500429", "title": "Frances Joseph-Gaudet", "text": " Frances Joseph-Gaudet (1861 – December 1934) was an American educator, social worker and prison reformer, honored as a saint in the Episcopal Church.", "score": "1.4142137" }, { "id": "27829452", "title": "Frances Currey", "text": " Currey was a folk artist who painted depictions of her childhood in Indiana and every day life of living on a farm and small town. She had no formal training. Her work is story based. Currey would tell stories to visitors to the studio to accompany her paintings.", "score": "1.4067287" }, { "id": "27829448", "title": "Frances Currey", "text": " Frances Currey (1925–2012; also known as Grandma Fran and Frances Currey Brown) was an American folk art painter.", "score": "1.4002974" }, { "id": "15837674", "title": "Johny Joseph (civil servant)", "text": " Johny Joseph is married to Reena Joseph who is an active environmentalist and patron of several social causes.", "score": "1.3705001" }, { "id": null, "title": "Frances Josephy", "text": "Frances Josephy\n\nFrances Louise Josephy (February 1900 – 1985) was a British Liberal politician, journalist and lecturer.\nSection::::Background.\nShe was born in Broughty Ferry, Forfarshire. She was educated at Seymour Lodge School, Dundee, before going on to St. Andrews University and Newnham College, Cambridge. She graduated from Cambridge with a degree in Classics and English.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Franz Joseph I of Austria", "text": "Franz Joseph I of Austria\n\nFranz Joseph I or Francis Joseph I (, , 18 August 1830 – 21 November 1916) was Emperor of Austria, King of Hungary, and the other states of the Habsburg monarchy from 2 December 1848 until his death on 21 November 1916. In the early part of his reign, his realms and territories were referred to as the Austrian Empire, but were reconstituted as the dual monarchy of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1867. From 1 May 1850 to 24 August 1866, Franz Joseph was also President of the German Confederation.\n\nIn December 1848, Franz Joseph's uncle Emperor Ferdinand abdicated the throne at Olomouc, as part of Minister President Felix zu Schwarzenberg's plan to end the Revolutions of 1848 in Hungary. Franz Joseph then acceded to the throne. Largely considered to be a reactionary, he spent his early reign resisting constitutionalism in his domains. The Austrian Empire was forced to cede its influence over Tuscany and most of its claim to Lombardy–Venetia to the Kingdom of Sardinia, following the Second Italian War of Independence in 1859 and the Third Italian War of Independence in 1866. Although Franz Joseph ceded no territory to the Kingdom of Prussia after the Austrian defeat in the Austro-Prussian War, the Peace of Prague (23 August 1866) settled the German Question in favour of Prussia, which prevented the unification of Germany from occurring under the House of Habsburg.\n\nFranz Joseph was troubled by nationalism during his entire reign. He concluded the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, which granted greater autonomy to Hungary and created the dual monarchy of Austria-Hungary. He ruled peacefully for the next 45 years, but personally suffered the tragedies of the execution of his brother Emperor Maximilian I of Mexico in 1867, the suicide of his son Crown Prince Rudolf in 1889, the assassination of his wife Empress Elisabeth (\"Sisi\") in 1898, and the assassination of his nephew and heir-presumptive, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, in 1914. \n\nAfter the Austro-Prussian War, Austria-Hungary turned its attention to the Balkans, which was a hotspot of international tension because of conflicting interests of Austria with not only the Ottoman but also the Russian Empire. The Bosnian Crisis was a result of Franz Joseph's annexation in 1908 of Bosnia and Herzegovina, which had already been occupied by his troops since the Congress of Berlin (1878). On 28 June 1914, the assassination of his nephew Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo resulted in Austria-Hungary's declaration of war against the Kingdom of Serbia, which was an ally of the Russian Empire. That activated a system of alliances declaring war on each other, which resulted in World War I. The Emperor died in 1916, after ruling his domains for almost 68 years. He was succeeded by his grandnephew Charles I & IV.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Saint Joseph", "text": "Saint Joseph\n\nJoseph (; ) was a 1st-century Jewish man of Nazareth who, according to the canonical Gospels, was married to Mary, the mother of Jesus, and was the legal father of Jesus. The Gospels also name some brothers of Jesus who may have been: (1) the sons of Mary, the mother of Jesus, and Joseph; (2) sons of Mary, the wife of Clopas and sister of Mary the mother of Jesus; or (3) sons of Joseph by a former marriage.\n\nJoseph is venerated as Saint Joseph in the Catholic Church, Orthodox Church, Oriental Orthodox Church and Anglicanism. His feast day is observed by some Lutherans. In Catholic traditions, Joseph is regarded as the patron saint of workers and is associated with various feast days. The month of March is dedicated to Saint Joseph. Pope Pius IX declared him to be both the patron and the protector of the Catholic Church, in addition to his patronages of the sick and of a happy death, due to the belief that he died in the presence of Jesus and Mary. Joseph has become patron of various dioceses and places. Being a patron saint of the virgins, too, he is venerated as \"most chaste\". A specific veneration is tributed to the most chaste and pure heart of Saint Joseph.\n\nSeveral venerated images of Saint Joseph have been granted a decree of canonical coronation by a pontiff. Religious iconography often depicts him with lilies or spikenard. With the present-day growth of Mariology, the theological field of Josephology has also grown and since the 1950s centers for studying it have been formed.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Tolkien (priest)", "text": "John Tolkien (priest)\n\nJohn Francis Reuel Tolkien (16 November 1917 – 22 January 2003) was an English Roman-Catholic priest and the eldest son of J. R. R. Tolkien. He served as a parish priest in Oxford, Coventry, Birmingham, and Stoke-on-Trent. He was also a chaplain at the University College of North Staffordshire and to two schools, as well as a governor of St Joseph's College. During his lifetime and after his death, there were a number of allegations of child sexual abuse against him: he was questioned by the police but never charged or convicted.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Spain under Joseph Bonaparte", "text": "Spain under Joseph Bonaparte\n\nNapoleonic Spain was the part of Spain loyal to Joseph I during the Peninsular War (1808–1813) after the country was partially occupied by French forces. During this period, the country was considered a client state of the First French Empire.\n\nThe part of Spain which continued to resist French occupation remained loyal to Ferdinand VII and allied with Britain and Portugal to expel Napoleon's armies from Spain. The war would be much of a back and forth, till from 1812 to 1813 Allied victories at Salamanca and Vitoria meant the defeat of the Bonapartist régime and the expulsion of Napoleon's troops. The Treaty of Valençay recognized Ferdinand VII as the legitimate King of Spain.", "score": null }, { "id": "15837671", "title": "Johny Joseph (civil servant)", "text": " Johny Joseph (born 29 May 1949) is an Indian Administrative Service officer of 1972 batch. He graduated from Trivandrum Engineering College with a degree in Mechanical Engineering and served as commissioner of Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation from 29 February 2004 to May 2007.", "score": "1.3694141" }, { "id": "25296930", "title": "Frances Bellerby", "text": " Frances Bellerby (born Mary Eirene Frances Parker; 29 August 1899–30 July 1975) was an English poet, novelist and short story writer. \"Her poetry is imbued with a spiritual awareness encoded through the natural environment while her political socialism is more evident in her prose\".", "score": "1.3606974" }, { "id": "28266095", "title": "Dotie Joseph", "text": " Dotie Joseph (born August 1979) is a Democratic member of the Florida Legislature representing the State's 108th House district. Joseph was born in Haiti and moved to Florida in 1982; she currently resides in North Miami. She received her BA from Yale College in 2001 and her JD from Georgetown University Law Center in 2005. While at Yale, she co-founded Yale's Haitian Student Alliance.", "score": "1.3584335" }, { "id": "27067831", "title": "Michal Josephy", "text": " Michal Josephy, Ph.D. (born 1977) is an anthropologist, traveller, adventurer, humanitarian and street photographer, travel and science journalist and lecturer of science journalism and visual anthropology at Faculty of Humanities, Charles University, Prague.", "score": "1.3504368" }, { "id": "28632864", "title": "Ammu Joseph", "text": " Joseph started her career as a journalist with Eve's Weekly, for which she served as Assistant Editor for four years. In 2007, Joseph served as Coordinator – India for the Global Media Monitoring Project (2010 and 2015) and Coordinator – South Asia for the Global Report on Women in the News Media (2011). In 2012, Joseph was among the principal drafters of UNESCO’s Gender Sensitive Indicators for Media. She serves on the board of Oxfam India, a non-for profit organization. She has been on the visiting faculty of the Sophia College Polytechnic, Mumbai (1981–85) and the Asian College of Journalism, Chennai/Madras (2000–2003), and is currently teaching at the Convergence Institute of Media, ", "score": "1.3486009" }, { "id": "28266096", "title": "Dotie Joseph", "text": " Joseph has worked as a law clerk, a civil rights lawyer, and for the City of North Miami Beach. She is currently an attorney with Austin Pamies Norris Weeks, an all-Black and female law firm. Joseph won the election for Florida's House of Representatives on November 6, 2018, from the platform of Democratic Party. She secured 92% of the vote while her closest rival, Riquet Caballero, an LPF candidate, secured eight percent.", "score": "1.3418503" }, { "id": "7359505", "title": "Norma Joseph", "text": " Joseph was born in Brooklyn to Moishe (Murray) Baumel and Madeline (née Kohn). Moishe was a salesman who had emigrated to the United States as a child, and Madeline was a typist-secretary who arrived in the United States as an infant. Both sides of Joseph's family were heavily engaged in Jewish occupations. In 1965, she married Rabbi Howard Joseph who, five years later, became the leader of Montreal's Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue. She received a B.A. from Brooklyn College in 1966, an M.A. from the City University of New York in 1968, and a Ph.D in religion from Concordia University in 1995. Her doctoral dissertation focused on the legal decisions of Rabbi Moshe Feinstein concerning the separate spheres for women in ", "score": "1.3411233" }, { "id": "28632863", "title": "Ammu Joseph", "text": " Joseph received her B.A. in English literature from Women's Christian College, Chennai in 1974, a diploma in Social Communications Media from Sophia College Polytechnic in Mumbai in 1975, and a B.S. in Public Communications from Syracuse University, New York in 1975. She has also been a press fellow at Wolfson College, Cambridge University, England.", "score": "1.3386967" }, { "id": "30669834", "title": "Carole Frances Lung", "text": " Carole Frances Lung (born 1966) is an American artist and labor activist, known for her performance art which centers around subjects such as textile consumption, unfair labor practices, and production systems. Lung is an associate professor of Fashion Fiber and Materials at California State University, Los Angeles. Her work concerns labor in the fashion industry and often comprises long-duration projects of performance art and collaborative art activism. She is based in Long Beach, California.", "score": "1.3363549" }, { "id": "15828961", "title": "Frances Coady", "text": " Born in London, Frances Coady has degrees from the University of Sussex and the University of Essex.", "score": "1.3307045" }, { "id": "5079682", "title": "Louisy Joseph", "text": "Featured in ", "score": "1.3271581" }, { "id": "7359504", "title": "Norma Joseph", "text": " Norma Baumel Joseph (born 1944 in Brooklyn) is an American-born Canadian professor and Jewish feminist activist. In 1990, Joseph was successful in working with the Government of Canada to pass a law that would protect Jewish women in need of a get. She currently serves as Professor of Religion at Concordia University and Associate Director of the University's Azrieli Institute of Israel Studies.", "score": "1.319066" }, { "id": "9374487", "title": "Merin Joseph", "text": " Merin Joseph is an Indian Police Service (I.P.S.) officer. She currently serves as the Superintendent of Police (Headquarters), Kerala.", "score": "1.3179433" }, { "id": "2599119", "title": "Fanny Josephs", "text": " Frances Adeline \"Fanny\" Josephs (1842–1890) was an English actress and singer. In 1877, she starred in one of the most successful plays of the day, The Pink Dominos at the Criterion Theatre, alongside Charles Wyndham.", "score": "1.3138008" }, { "id": "3295544", "title": "Josephy Center for Arts and Culture", "text": " The Center holds a variety of weekly classes, including painting workshops, clay classes for kids, and other kids' art programs. It also provides space for a variety of community events, such as yoga, meditation, and chess club. At least twice a month the Center hosts film screenings about a variety of topics, including DamNation, Finding Vivian Maier, and Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Radiant Child. ", "score": "1.3131263" } ]
What is John Williams Tobey's occupation?
[ "architect" ]
occupation
John Williams Tobey
4,741,585
89
[ { "id": "26201601", "title": "John Williams Tobey", "text": " John Williams Tobey (August 3, 1827 &ndash; February 4, 1909) was an American architect, carpenter and builder from Neenah, Wisconsin. He served as mayor of Neenah, and served one term as an independent member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from Winnebago County.", "score": "1.9237278" }, { "id": "26201602", "title": "John Williams Tobey", "text": " Tobey was born in Hawley, Franklin County, Massachusetts on August 3, 1827, son of John and Sybil (Lathrop) Tobey. He received a public school education and went into the trades of architect, carpenter and builder. He moved to Cleveland, Ohio in 1846, and lived in Cuyahoga and Lorain counties in that state. During the American Civil War he tried to enlist in the Ohio National Guard, but was rejected by the examining surgeon. He moved to Wisconsin in 1864, settling in Neenah. He designed the plans for the Russell House in Neenah, and superintended the erection of it, as well as the Neenah High School and the Patten Mill at Appleton.", "score": "1.7903197" }, { "id": "26201605", "title": "John Williams Tobey", "text": " Tobey married Lucey D. Smith, also from Massachusetts, in Cuyahoga Co., Ohio, in 1853. Lucey Tobey died suddenly on May 31, 1890 at the age of 57, leaving John with two children, Isora and Mary. Isora died April 13, 1893 of \"consumption\". Tobey was a member of the Royal Arcanum. He died February 4, 1909, while in Cuyahoga County, Ohio; and was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery in Neenah.", "score": "1.6345097" }, { "id": "26201603", "title": "John Williams Tobey", "text": " Tobey held various local offices such as county supervisor and alderman, and was elected mayor of the City of Neenah in April, 1886. He described his political position as having been brought up in the \"Jeffersonian and Jacksonian school of politics, and believes in law being founded on equal rights in the strictest sense, and fearlessly executed.\" Tobey was elected as an Independent to the second Winnebago County Assembly district (the Towns of Neenah, Menasha, Clayton, Winchester, Winneconne, and Vinland; and the Cities of Neenah and Menasha) in 1886, with 1,408 votes to 1,185 for former State Representative and State Senator William P. Rounds, ", "score": "1.629255" }, { "id": "30924329", "title": "Tobey", "text": "Alton Tobey (1914–2005), American artist ; Charles W. Tobey (1880–1953), American politician from New Hampshire; U.S. Senator 1939–53 ; David Tobey (1898–1988), American professional basketball referee ; Edward Silas Tobey (1813–1891), American businessman, Postmaster of Boston, president of the American Missionary Association ; Franklin W. Tobey (1844–1878), New York politician ; John Williams Tobey, American politician ; Kenneth Tobey (1917–2002), American stage, film, and television actor ; Mark Tobey (1890–1976), American abstract expressionist painter ; Paul Tobey (b. 1962), Canadian jazz pianist and composer ; Ray Tobey (b. 1965), American computer and video game programmer ; William H. Tobey (1799–1878), New York politician Tobey is a surname, and may refer to:", "score": "1.564182" }, { "id": null, "title": "Tobey Maguire", "text": "Tobey Maguire\n\nTobias Vincent Maguire (born June 27, 1975) is an American actor and film producer. He is best known for playing the title character from Sam Raimi's \"Spider-Man\" trilogy (2002–2007), a role he later reprised in \"\" (2021).\n\nHe started his career in supporting roles in the films \"This Boy's Life\" (1993), \"The Ice Storm\", \"Deconstructing Harry\" (both 1997), and \"Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas\" (1998). His leading roles include \"Pleasantville\" (1998), \"Ride with the Devil\" (1999), \"The Cider House Rules\" (1999), \"Wonder Boys\" (2000), \"Seabiscuit\" (2003), \"The Good German\" (2006), \"Brothers\" (2009), \"The Great Gatsby\" (2013), and \"Pawn Sacrifice\" (2014).\n\nHe has received two Screen Actors Guild Award nominations for Outstanding Cast in a Motion Picture for \"Cider House Rules\" (1999) and \"Seabiscut\" (2003) as well as a Golden Globe Award nomination for Best Actor in a Motion Picture Drama for \"Brothers\" (2009). Maguire established his own production company in 2012 called Material Pictures, and co-produced \"Good People\" (2012), and \"Pawn Sacrifice\" (2014). ", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:American carpenters", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Itzhak Perlman", "text": "Itzhak Perlman\n\nItzhak Perlman (; born August 31, 1945) is an Israeli-American violinist widely considered one of the greatest violinists in the world. Perlman has performed worldwide and throughout the United States, in venues that have included a State Dinner at the White House honoring Queen Elizabeth II, and at President Barack Obama's inauguration. He has conducted the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Westchester Philharmonic. In 2015, he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom.<ref name=\"AmMstrs\"/> Perlman has won 16 Grammy Awards, including a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, and four Emmy Awards.<ref name=\"AmMstrs\"/>", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Jewish American entertainers", "text": "List of Jewish American entertainers\n\nThis is a list of notable Jewish American entertainers. For other Jewish Americans, see Lists of Jewish Americans.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Paesano", "text": "John Paesano\n\nJohn Paesano (born July 2, 1977) is an American composer working primarily in film, television and video games. He is known for collaborating with director Wes Ball on the \"Maze Runner\" film series, as well as composing for the Marvel Television series \"Daredevil\" and \"The Defenders.\" As a video game composer, he has contributed music to the acclaimed titles, \"Detroit Become Human\", \"Marvel's Spider-Man\" and \"\". For his work on \"Miles Morales\", Paesano won the BAFTA for Best music in a video game.", "score": null }, { "id": "10942027", "title": "William H. Tobey", "text": " He studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1820, and practiced in New Lebanon. He was a member of the New York State Assembly (Columbia Co.) in 1838; Surrogate of Columbia County from 1841 to 1845; and a member of the New York State Senate (11th D.) in 1862 and 1863. He was a Director of the National Bank of Kinderhook from 1839; and President of the National Union Bank of Kinderhook from 1853 until his death.", "score": "1.4995605" }, { "id": "28779232", "title": "Rufus Tobey", "text": " Rev. Rufus B. Tobey (1849–1920) was a Congregationalist pastor who founded the Floating Hospital for Children in Boston, which was later renamed Tufts Children's Hospital at Tufts Medical Center. Rufus Babcock Tobey was born in New Bedford, Massachusetts on May 6, 1849 to Charles Tobey and Maria Robbins. Tobey attended Phillips Academy Andover and then Amherst College, graduating in the class of 1877. He then graduated from Andover Seminary in 1880. Tobey first served as a pastor in Harwich, Massachusetts before founding a Congregational church in Helena, Montana. He then returned to Harwich before leaving to serve as a pastor at Berkeley Temple in Boston. While ", "score": "1.4639895" }, { "id": "32782730", "title": "Josiah Tobey House", "text": " The Josiah Tobey House is a historic house located at 67 Oxbow Road in Falmouth, Massachusetts.", "score": "1.4588467" }, { "id": "10942026", "title": "William H. Tobey", "text": " William Henry Tobey (1799 Hudson, Columbia County, New York – May 1878) was an American lawyer, banker and politician from New York.", "score": "1.4562478" }, { "id": "1459550", "title": "Dave Tobey (American football)", "text": " David Morgan Tobey (born March 17, 1943) is a former American football player who played as a linebacker in the National Football League (NFL) from 1965 to 1968. Born in Portland, Oregon, he attended South Eugene High School and the University of Oregon before being drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the 10th round (130th overall) of the 1965 NFL Draft. He failed to make an appearance for the Steelers and joined the Minnesota Vikings for the 1966 season. He played 16 times for the Vikings in two seasons, starting twice, before joining the Denver Broncos for the 1968 season. He played seven times for the Broncos in what turned out to be his final season in the league.", "score": "1.4449165" }, { "id": "226755", "title": "Mike Tobey", "text": " Michael Edward Tobey (born October 10, 1994) is an American–Slovenian professional basketball player for Valencia Basket of the Liga ACB. He played college basketball for the Virginia Cavaliers.", "score": "1.4436915" }, { "id": "31753317", "title": "Franklin W. Tobey", "text": " Franklin Ward Tobey (February 7, 1844 in Jay, Essex County, New York – May 5, 1878) was an American lawyer and politician from New York.", "score": "1.430769" }, { "id": "26201604", "title": "John Williams Tobey", "text": " Republican), and 157 votes for Prohibitionist E. W. Clark. Incumbent Charles B. Clark (also a former mayor of Neenah) was not a candidate, as he was (successfully) pursuing a campaign for Congress. Tobey was appointed to the standing committee on medical societies. Tobey was reported in some press accounts to be a Democrat. He did not run for re-election in 1887, and was succeeded by Republican Walter L. Miller. Tobey ran for his old Assembly seat in 1890 as a Democrat, but lost to Neenah mayor Samuel A. Cook, who received 1326 votes to 1042 for Tobey and 63 for Prohibitionist Lucius Webster.", "score": "1.4054058" }, { "id": "6956555", "title": "John Williams (priest, born 1792)", "text": "Attribution ", "score": "1.4046503" }, { "id": "28803630", "title": "John Osborn Williams", "text": " Williams was born at 46 George Street, Cardiff, Wales, his parents' home, and was the youngest son of Silas and Mary Williams. He was one of eight children and known as \"Jack\" within the family. He left school at age 14 in 1900 and entered the timber exporting business. \"Jayo\" as he was usually known, like two of his brothers Hiram and Arthur, became a commercial clerk at the age of fifteen. The family's heavy industrial and clerical occupational experience was the background for at least two other logging, trading, and shipping agency companies he was to set up. In 1908, at 22 years of age, ", "score": "1.3822019" }, { "id": "2052891", "title": "John Williams (trade unionist)", "text": " John Williams (born 1873) was a British trade unionist and political activist. Born in Cheshire, Williams worked as a farm labourer, a brickmaker, and then as a gas stoker. In this last job, he joined the National Union of Gas Workers and General Labourers. From 1903 to 1905, he worked as a gold miner in West Africa, but he then returned to Cheshire. He became the chair of the Crewe Labour Party and also of the town's trades council. In 1908, he was elected to Crewe Town Council, serving until 1917. He was also chair of the Railway Workers' Joint Trade Movement. During the First World War, Williams served on the Cheshire Appeal Tribunal, and in 1917 he became the full-time Lancashire District ", "score": "1.3802245" }, { "id": "15438718", "title": "John Williams (convict)", "text": " John Williams was a convict transported to Van Diemen's Land (now Tasmania). He is best known as the man with whom Joseph Johns, later to become the bushranger Moondyne Joe, was arrested and tried for burglary. Originally from Horsley, Gloucester, Williams was working as a canal boatman on the Brecon to Monmouth in Wales under the pseudonym William Cross when he and Johns were arrested on 15 November 1848 near Chepstow for \"... illegally entering the premises of Mr Richard Price, Esquire, of Pentwyn Clydach... and from there taking three loaves of bread, one piece of bacon, several cheeses, a kettle and a quantity of salt\". Arraigned at the Brecon Assizes on charges of burglary and stealing, the pair pleaded not guilty. On 23 March they were tried ", "score": "1.365339" }, { "id": "28605700", "title": "Windsor Utley", "text": " Windsor Utley (1920 - 8 April 1989) was an American musician, artist, teacher and gallery owner, closely associated with the painter Mark Tobey.", "score": "1.3637714" }, { "id": "5416198", "title": "John Williams (Ab Ithel)", "text": " John Williams (bardic name: Ab Ithel) (7 April 1811 &ndash;27 August 1862), was an antiquary and Anglican priest. Born in Llangynhafal, Denbighshire Wales in 1811, he graduated from Jesus College, Oxford in 1835 to become the Anglican curate of Llanfor, Merionethshire, where he married Elizabeth Lloyd Williams. In 1843 he became perpetual curate of Nercwys, Flintshire, and rector of Llanymawddwy, Merionethshire, in 1849.", "score": "1.3621657" }, { "id": "7511354", "title": "Hale Appleman", "text": " Hale Isaac Appleman (born January 17, 1986) is an American actor. He is known for playing Tobey Cobb in the 2007 film Teeth and Eliot in the television fantasy series The Magicians.", "score": "1.3620307" } ]
What is Jorge Traverso's occupation?
[ "journalist", "journo", "journalists" ]
occupation
Jorge Traverso
1,158,868
43
[ { "id": "9592002", "title": "Jorge Traverso", "text": " Schubert Jorge Pérez Denis (born March 29, 1954 in Montevideo), known for his sakename Jorge Traverso, is a Uruguayan journalist and newsanchor.", "score": "1.8464227" }, { "id": "31608397", "title": "Cristian Traverso", "text": " Cristian Alberto Traverso (born 17 April 1972 in San Martín, Buenos Aires Province) is a retired Argentine footballer who played for a number of clubs both in Argentina and Latin America, including Argentinos Juniors, Boca Juniors and Puebla. Nicknamed \"Tigre\" Traverso was named the Chilean Footballer of the Year in 1995 while playing for Universidad de Chile, though despite this honour he never played for his country.", "score": "1.6228533" }, { "id": "11972228", "title": "Christian Traverso", "text": " Christian Traverso (born August 19, 1971 in Buenos Aires, Argentina) is a former Argentine footballer who played for clubs of Argentina and Chile.", "score": "1.5724503" }, { "id": "8291256", "title": "Gerardo Traverso", "text": " Traverso moved to Paraguay as a youth player and began his professional career with Rubio Ñú before moving to Nacional in the Primera División de Paraguay. He played on loan for Barcelona in Serie A de Ecuador. He also had a brief spell with Dundee in the Scottish Premier League. Traverso's career ended following a serious injury sustained in an automobile crash in Asunción in May 2004. His wife was also injured in the accident.", "score": "1.5539263" }, { "id": "14994318", "title": "Juan María Traverso", "text": " Juan María El Flaco Traverso (born 28 December 1950 in Ramallo, Buenos Aires Province ), is a retired racing driver from Argentina. He is a multiple champion in the most important championships in Argentina. He also raced in European Formula Two in 1979.", "score": "1.552783" }, { "id": null, "title": "Jorge Ubaldo Traverso", "text": "Jorge Ubaldo Traverso\n\nJorge Traverso (born 18 October 1947) is an Argentine former footballer.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Subrayado", "text": "Subrayado\n\nSubrayado is the news program of the Uruguayan Channel 10. It airs from Monday to Friday at three different times, in addition to a broadcast on Sundays and holidays. It is presented by Blanca Rodríguez.\n\nThe first broadcast of \"Subrayado\" was in 1971 under the leadership of the journalist Omar Defeo, being its director until 1989. It is currently the most watched newscast in Uruguay. It has also been accoladed with the \"Iris Award\" for best newscast on several occasions.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Blanca Rodríguez (journalist)", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Uruguayan television journalists", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Juan Grompone", "text": "Juan Grompone\n\nJuan Arturo Grompone Carbonell (Montevideo, 1939) is a Uruguayan engineer and writer.\n\nHe is a member of the National Academy of Economics and also of the Academia Nacional de Letras (english: \"National Academy of Letters\").<ref name=\"shivav\"/>\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "15560836", "title": "Enzo Traverso", "text": " Enzo Traverso (born 14 October 1957 in Gavi, Piedmont region, Italy) is an Italian s cholar of European intellectual history. He is the author of several books on critical theory, the Holocaust, Marxism, memory, totalitarianism, and contemporary historiography. His books are translated into numerous languages. After living and working in France for over 25 years, he is currently the Susan and Barton Winokur Professor in the Humanities at Cornell University.", "score": "1.5102625" }, { "id": "29483589", "title": "Gabriel Traversari", "text": " Traversari was born in Los Angeles, California, but grew up in El Crucero, a municipality just outside Managua, Nicaragua. He attended the Rectory School, a junior boarding school in Pomfret, Connecticut and graduated from Middlesex School in Concord, Massachusetts. Traversari went on to graduate from Florida State University in Tallahassee, Florida with a Bachelor of Arts in Acting. While in school he performed on stage in Twelfth Night (as Antonio), The Apple Tree (as Adam), Princess Ida (as Cyril), Macbeth (as Macduff), Infancy (as Avonzino), What the Butler Saw (as Nick), The Sea Gull (as Trigorin), Romeo and Juliet (as Romeo), The Lost Colony (as A. Dare/J. Borden) and Camino Real (as Abdullah).", "score": "1.5061628" }, { "id": "15560838", "title": "Enzo Traverso", "text": " From 1989 through 1991, he worked for the International Institute for Research and Education (IIRE) based in Amsterdam, and after that in the Library of contemporary international documentation (BDIC) in Nanterre. He also held the position of a lecturer in the Departement of Political science at the University of Paris VIII (1993–1995) and at School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences (EHESS) (1994–1997). In 1995 he was hired by the University of Picardie Jules Verne in Amiens as an assistant professor. He was later promoted to full professor, a post he held from 2009 to 2013, when he joined the faculty at Cornell. In 2014, he was awarded the Premio Pozzale Luigi Russo and in 2016, the Huésped de Honor Extraordinario, Universidad Nacional de La Plata, in recognition of his historical scholarship.", "score": "1.4769733" }, { "id": "6988514", "title": "Scott A. Travers", "text": " Travers grew up in New York City, and attended the Dwight School on Manhattan's Upper West Side during grade school when he first began buying and selling coins. Travers earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Brandeis University in 1983.", "score": "1.4736308" }, { "id": "10913528", "title": "Martino Traversa", "text": " Martino Traversa (born 1960) is a composer of classical, electronic and electroacoustic music. Martino Traversa has studied piano, composition, electronic music and Information Technology. He graduated in Improvisation Technique at the \"Accademia di Alto Perfezionamento\" in Pescara. He attended to 3-yearly summer courses in Siena. Has studied at Salzburg's Mozarteum and at CCRMA (Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustic) at Stanford University. He studied with Luigi Nono from 1987 to 1989. In 1990, he founded and managed Ensemble Edgard Varèse, with Luigi Nono's support. In 1991, he launched \"Traiettorie\", an international festival of modern and contemporary music. In 1999, Martino Traversa founded the Prometeo Foundation, a resident laboratory of cultural activities, related to physiques, arts and philosophy. He regularly composes and researches the field of electronics applied to musical acoustic. Martino Traversa is professor of music at the University of Parma.", "score": "1.4535075" }, { "id": "15560837", "title": "Enzo Traverso", "text": " Enzo Traverso obtained a master's degree (Laurea) in modern history at the University of Genoa (Italy) in 1982. After moving to Paris in 1985 to further pursue his academic trajectory he completed his PhD program at School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences (EHESS) in 1989, under the direction of Michael Löwy. In 2009 he achieved the academic qualification of habilitation (accreditation to supervise research).", "score": "1.4497027" }, { "id": "29456519", "title": "Tommaso Traversa", "text": " Tommaso Traversa (born 4 August 1990) is an Italian ice hockey player for UK Elite Ice Hockey League (EIHL) side Sheffield Steelers and the Italian national team. He participated at the 2017 IIHF World Championship.", "score": "1.4487863" }, { "id": "8291255", "title": "Gerardo Traverso", "text": " Gerardo Adrián Traverso Píriz (7 October 1975 – 17 May 2019) was an Uruguayan football player.", "score": "1.4464563" }, { "id": "24991079", "title": "Jorge Rodriguez-Chomat", "text": " Rodriguez-Chomat was born in Havana and was active in the Cuban-American lobby. He attended high school briefly but dropped out. He was educated at St. Thomas University and served in the U.S. Army Reserve. Rodriguez-Chomat went on to work as an accountant, an IRS agent and a tax lawyer before winning office as a lawmaker and later serving as a judge.", "score": "1.4431566" }, { "id": "7256277", "title": "Jorge Orrico", "text": " Jorge Orrico was born 25 October 1946 in Montevideo.", "score": "1.4348462" }, { "id": "29483588", "title": "Gabriel Traversari", "text": " Gabriel Traversari (born Gabriel Augusto Traversari y Debayle on September 7, 1963) is a Nicaraguan American actor, director, writer, singer, songwriter, painter and photographer.", "score": "1.4345827" }, { "id": "3633890", "title": "Alejandro Traversa", "text": " Alejandro Pablo Traversa Machado (born 8 September 1974), commonly known as Alejandro Traversa, is a Uruguayan footballer who plays as a defender.", "score": "1.433599" }, { "id": "2356376", "title": "David Travers", "text": " David John Travers is a businessman from Sydney, Australia.", "score": "1.4260621" }, { "id": "25046702", "title": "Jorge Bucay", "text": " He was born in Buenos Aires on October 30, 1949, to a modest family. His four grandparents were Syrians born in Damascus, with three of them being Jewish and one of them a Christian. He started working at the age of thirteen. In the course of his life, he has worked as a traveling salesman selling socks, books and sports clothing, as well as an insurance agent, taxi driver, clown, warehouseman, educator, actor, doctor on duty, host of children's parties, psychiatrist, group coordinator, radio collaborator, and television host. In 1973, he graduated as an MD from the University of Buenos Aires, and specialized in mental illnesses at the Buenos Aires Pirovano Hospital and at the Santa Mónica clinic. He currently defines his job as professional helper. He divides his attention between attending therapeutic teaching conferences, which have taken him around the world, and the writing of his books, which he considers therapeutic tools.", "score": "1.4203883" }, { "id": "8969525", "title": "Alfredo Traverso", "text": " Alfredo Traverso (c. 1910&ndash;1980) was a prolific Argentine cinematographer who worked on over 70 films in the Cinema of Argentina between 1940 and 1970. He worked on cinematography on films such as El Asalto (1960), in which he worked with Austrian director Kurt Land, and Asalto a la ciudad (1968), one of his last films in which he worked with Carlos Cores.", "score": "1.4164789" } ]
What is Paolo Pellizzari's occupation?
[ "photographer", "photog", "photographers" ]
occupation
Paolo Pellizzari
5,378,331
74
[ { "id": "25799697", "title": "Paolo Pellizzari", "text": " Paolo Pellizzari (born 1956), is an Italian photographer living in Belgium. He specialises in crowds, human landscapes, he is a flaneur and observer of our world. He teaches author photography at La Cambre School of Art in Brussels and is a guest teacher at the ICP in New York.", "score": "2.0688796" }, { "id": "25799698", "title": "Paolo Pellizzari", "text": " Paolo Pellizzari was born on February 7, 1956. His photographic work finds its roots in the German School of photography. His panoramic pictures featuring crowds and human landscapes makes his work distinctive among others. He studied architecture at Université catholique de Louvain and Business at INSEAD (Fontainebleau). His work is shown in Museums and Art Galleries. Before being a photographer, starting 1981, Paolo Pellizzari worked in the business world: From 1981 to 1984, Pellizzari worked as a consultant at the Boston Consulting Group in France. From 1984 to 1989 Paolo was the founder and general manager of the Kiel Corporation in New Hampshire. ", "score": "1.9805875" }, { "id": "25799699", "title": "Paolo Pellizzari", "text": " he designed hand-held computers with a touchscreen and a built-in modem. Ultimately, the company was sold to the Japanese company Murata. From 1989 to 1992, Pellizzari worked as an executive director of Neuhaus-Mondose in Belgium, overseeing the manufacturing of luxury chocolates. From 1992 to 1999, Pellizzari was the owner of Inducolor SA in Belgium and worked with the Venture Capital Arm of Li & Fung. After eight years of management, he sold Inducolor SA and quit the Business world. Starting in 1999 he dedicated all his time to photography.and became an independent photographer. Italian born he lives in Belgium. His first exhibition was ", "score": "1.795454" }, { "id": "25799702", "title": "Paolo Pellizzari", "text": " of work called The Broad Way and exhibited at the Italian Pavilion at the World Expo in Shanghai. In 2011 after some time spend in Puerta del Sol in Madrid with the Indignados, he sponsored an initiative to create a dialogue web site called www.eskutcha.com. In 2013 his work was shown in New York at Anastasia Photo Gallery. Paolo Pellizzari teaches author photography at the International Center of Photography (ICP) in New York and at l'Ecole Nationale d'Art de Lacambre in Brussels Belgium. His work for the Press is distributed by Agence Vu in Paris and Contact Press Images in New York.", "score": "1.7362274" }, { "id": "25799700", "title": "Paolo Pellizzari", "text": " Brussels with Moving Art. He was awarded first prize for Grand Prix d’auteur Couleur de France. Followed an exhibition in Paris entitled Around the World and other group exhibitions on the same theme. In 2000 he published a book entitled La France du Tour and in 2005 \"The Tours of the world\". This book was awarded Best Sport Book of the year 2006. In 2001, he had a solo exhibition at the Museum of modern art in Hasselt and entered into an agreement to cover the Tour de France, in the newspaper, Libération. In 2002, Paolo had two group exhibitions with the ", "score": "1.7056895" }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Italian photographers", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Roberto Baggio", "text": "Roberto Baggio\n\nRoberto Baggio (; born 18 February 1967) is an Italian former professional footballer who mainly played as a second striker, or as an attacking midfielder, although he was capable of playing in several offensive positions. He is the former president of the technical sector of the Italian Football Federation. A technically gifted creative playmaker and set piece specialist, renowned for his curling free-kicks, dribbling skills, and goalscoring, Baggio is widely regarded as one of the greatest players of all time. In 1999, he came fourth in the FIFA Player of the Century internet poll, and was chosen on the FIFA World Cup Dream Team in 2002. In 1993, he was named FIFA World Player of the Year and won the Ballon d'Or. In 2004, he was named by Pelé in the FIFA 100, a list of the world's greatest living players.\n\nBaggio played for Italy in 56 matches, scoring 27 goals, and is the joint fourth-highest goalscorer for his national team, alongside Alessandro Del Piero. He starred in the Italian team that finished third in the 1990 FIFA World Cup, scoring twice. At the 1994 World Cup, he led Italy to the final, scoring five goals, received the World Cup Silver Ball and was named in the World Cup All-Star Team. Although he was the star performer for Italy at the tournament, he missed the decisive penalty in the shootout of the final against Brazil.\n\nIn 2002, Baggio became the first Italian player in over 50 years to score more than 300 career goals; he is the fifth-highest scoring Italian in all competitions with 318 goals. In 2004, during the final season of his career, Baggio became the first player in over 30 years to score 200 goals in Serie A, and is the seventh-highest goalscorer of all time in Serie A, with 205 goals. In 1990, he moved from Fiorentina to Juventus for a world record transfer fee. Baggio won two Serie A titles, a Coppa Italia, and a UEFA Cup, playing for seven different Italian clubs during his career (Vicenza, Fiorentina, Juventus, AC Milan, Bologna, Inter Milan, and Brescia).\n\nBaggio is known as \"\" (\"The Divine Ponytail\"), for the hairstyle he wore for most of his career, for his talent, and for his Buddhist beliefs. In 2002, Baggio was nominated Goodwill Ambassador of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. In 2003, he was the inaugural winner of the Golden Foot award. In recognition of his human rights activism, he received the Man of Peace award from the Nobel Peace Prize Laureates in 2010. In 2011, he was the first footballer to be inducted into the Italian Football Hall of Fame. Throughout his career, including friendlies, Baggio scored 425 goals.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Giorgio Chiellini", "text": "Giorgio Chiellini\n\nGiorgio Chiellini (; born 14 August 1984) is an Italian professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Major League Soccer club Los Angeles FC. Considered one of the best defenders of his generation, Chiellini is known for his strength, aggressiveness and man-marking, as well as his ability to play in either a three or four-man defence. He has also played as a left-back earlier in his career.\n\nAt club level, Chiellini began his career with Livorno in 2000, also later playing for Fiorentina, before moving to Juventus in 2005. With Juventus, he has won a record-nine consecutive Serie A titles from 2012 to 2020, as well as five Coppa Italia titles and five Supercoppa Italiana titles, having also played two UEFA Champions League finals in 2015 and 2017. Chiellini has been named in the Serie A Team of the Year five times: in 2012–13, 2014–15, 2015–16, 2017–18 and 2018–19 and has been awarded the Serie A Defender of the Year also three times: in 2008, 2009 and 2010.\n\nHaving made his international debut for Italy in 2004, Chiellini was selected in the nation's squads for the 2004 Summer Olympics, winning a bronze medal, as well as for four UEFA European Championships, two FIFA World Cups and two FIFA Confederations Cups, helping the \"Azzurri\" to win UEFA Euro 2020, reach the final of UEFA Euro 2012, and achieve a third-place finish at the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup. He retired from international football in 2022 with 117 caps, making him Italy's joint fifth-highest appearance holder.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Diego Maradona", "text": "Diego Maradona\n\nDiego Armando Maradona (; 30 October 196025 November 2020) was an Argentine professional football player and manager. Widely regarded as one of the greatest players in the history of the sport, he was one of the two joint winners of the FIFA Player of the 20th Century award. Maradona's vision, passing, ball control, and dribbling skills were combined with his small stature, which gave him a low centre of gravity allowing him to manoeuvre better than most other players. His presence and leadership on the field had a great effect on his team's general performance, while he would often be singled out by the opposition. In addition to his creative abilities, he possessed an eye for goal and was known to be a free kick specialist. A precocious talent, Maradona was given the nickname \"El Pibe de Oro\" (\"The Golden Boy\"), a name that stuck with him throughout his career. He also had a troubled off-field life and was banned in both 1991 and 1994 for abusing drugs.\n\nAn advanced playmaker who operated in the classic number 10 position, Maradona was the first player to set the world record transfer fee twice: in 1982 when he transferred to Barcelona for £5 million, and in 1984 when he moved to Napoli for a fee of £6.9 million. He played for Argentinos Juniors, Boca Juniors, Barcelona, Napoli, Sevilla, and Newell's Old Boys during his club career, and is most famous for his time at Napoli where he won numerous accolades.\n\nIn his international career with Argentina, he earned 91 caps and scored 34 goals. Maradona played in four FIFA World Cups, including the 1986 World Cup in Mexico, where he captained Argentina and led them to victory over West Germany in the final, and won the Golden Ball as the tournament's best player. In the 1986 World Cup quarter final, he scored both goals in a 2–1 victory over England that entered football history for two different reasons. The first goal was an unpenalized handling foul known as the \"Hand of God\", while the second goal followed a dribble past five England players, voted \"Goal of the Century\" by FIFA.com voters in 2002.\n\nMaradona became the coach of Argentina's national football team in November 2008. He was in charge of the team at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa before leaving at the end of the tournament. He then coached Dubai-based club Al Wasl in the UAE Pro-League for the 2011–12 season. In 2017, Maradona became the coach of Fujairah before leaving at the end of the season. In May 2018, Maradona was announced as the new chairman of Belarusian club Dynamo Brest. He arrived in Brest and was presented by the club to start his duties in July. From September 2018 to June 2019, Maradona was coach of Mexican club Dorados. He was the coach of Argentine Primera División club Gimnasia de La Plata from September 2019 until his death in November 2020.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Hans T. Bakker", "text": "Hans T. Bakker\n\nHans T. Bakker (born 1948) is a cultural historian and Indologist, who has served as the Professor of the History of Hinduism and Jan Gonda Chair at the University of Groningen. He currently works in the British Museum as a researcher in project \"Beyond Boundaries: Religion, Region, Language and the State\".", "score": null }, { "id": "25799701", "title": "Paolo Pellizzari", "text": " of Photography in Charleroi and Recyclart. He published l'Equipe'', Vélo Magazine and was photographer for Liberation at the World Soccer Cup. Later he had other exhibits at Couleur Café, at the Queen Galleries in Brussels for his work entitled One Billion Indians, at Young Gallery in Brussels, Husson, le Musée de la photographie in Charleroi and the Château d'Eau in Toulouse. In 2008 he worked on \"Extrattitude.com\", an initiative to promote as a photographer extraordinary people around the world. In 2008 and 2009 he directed two movies (Inspirations and The Proof of the Sun). In 2010 he produced a book with his ", "score": "1.6509674" }, { "id": "4737308", "title": "Paolo Pedercini", "text": " Paolo Pedercini (born 1981 ) is an Italian game designer known for making flash videogames based on provocative left-wing socio-political points of view, on topics such as labour market flexibility and Queer theory, in explicit opposition with the mainstream video game industry. He is also known under the pseudonym Molleindustria, the name of his website. He is known for games such as Queer Power, Faith Fighter and the McDonald's Video Game. The games are often offered as freeware under a Creative Commons license.", "score": "1.6403558" }, { "id": "4659788", "title": "Paolo Bolpagni", "text": " Paolo Bolpagni (born 1981) is an Italian art historian, critic and curator.", "score": "1.533354" }, { "id": "26725504", "title": "Umberto Pelizzari", "text": " Pelizzari is currently professor at the Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna di Pisa and a TV host. He has also formed the freediving training agency Apnea Academy which sees much respect in freediving circuits, and co-authored the widely used Manual of Freediving with his former trainer Stefano Tovaglieri.", "score": "1.5255345" }, { "id": "26725500", "title": "Umberto Pelizzari", "text": " Umberto Pelizzari (born August 28, 1965) is an Italian freediver, widely considered among the best of all times. Of his era, he is the sole person to have established world records in all the then existing disciplines of freediving.", "score": "1.5241163" }, { "id": "29505028", "title": "Sergio Pellizzaro", "text": " Sergio Pellizzaro Domenicacci, known as Sergio Pellizzaro (born 1 March 1945 in Montebello Vicentino) is a retired Italian professional footballer who played as a midfielder.", "score": "1.5125549" }, { "id": "16585330", "title": "Gianni Pezzani", "text": " at the Galleria Civica in Modena in 1984. The same year he too part in a travelling exhibition on Italian photography atone of the more important galleries in China. In 1984 moved to Japan, where he worked for Mamiya and begins to design clothing. Between 1984 and 1993 he traveled from Tokyo to Bali and then to New Zealand. In 1993, after returning to Italy, he moved to Milan, but maintained a refuge in an old house in Torrechiara, in the Province of Parma, at the foot of a castle. In 2008 he started \"Milano Notte\", new work in which the Lombard city is photographed in its nocturnal solitude. He will conduct the same work in the city of Tokyo between January 2010 and December 2011. ", "score": "1.5061681" }, { "id": "6243890", "title": "Stefano Pellizzari", "text": " Stefano Pellizzari (born 3 January 1997) is an Italian footballer who plays as a defender for Vis Pesaro.", "score": "1.495436" }, { "id": "27503725", "title": "Paolo Fabbri", "text": " Paolo Fabbri is an Italian musicologist and academic. In 1989 he was awarded the Dent Medal. He is best known for his extensive publications on the life and works of Gioachino Rossini, and for a biography of composer Claudio Monteverdi which was first published in the Italian language in Turin in 1985 but later published by Cambridge University Press using an English language translation by Tim Carter in 1994. He is also the author of Il secolo cantante: Per una storia del libretto d'opera nel Seicento (Bologna, 1990). For many years he has been a Professor of Music History and Musical Aesthetics at the University of Ferrara. He is the current director of the Fondazione Donizetti library in Bergamo.", "score": "1.4939425" }, { "id": "16585328", "title": "Gianni Pezzani", "text": " Gianni Pezzani was born in Colorno, a small town in the Province of Parma on 18 June 1951. He attended the University of Florence where in 1979 he graduated in Agricultural sciences.", "score": "1.490437" }, { "id": "16585327", "title": "Gianni Pezzani", "text": " Gianni Pezzani (real name Giovanni Pezzani, born on 18 June 1951 in Colorno), is an Italian photographer.", "score": "1.4877367" }, { "id": "6243891", "title": "Stefano Pellizzari", "text": " Pellizzari made his Austrian Football First League debut for WSG Wattens on 21 July 2017 in a game against TSV Hartberg. On 24 July 2019, he returned to Ravenna on a permanent basis. On 20 January 2020, his contract with Ravenna was terminated. On 23 January 2020 he signed with Serie C club Reggio Audace until the end of the 2019–20 season. On 14 September 2020 he moved to Legnago. On 14 July 2021 he joined Vis Pesaro on a two-year contract.", "score": "1.4872499" }, { "id": "7627142", "title": "Franco Pellizotti", "text": " Franco Pellizotti (born 15 January 1978) is an Italian former professional road bicycle racer, who rode professionally between 2001 and 2018 for the Alessio,, and teams. Pellizotti now works as a directeur sportif for the team.", "score": "1.4797543" }, { "id": "11315841", "title": "Paolo Cognetti", "text": " Paolo Cognetti (Milan, 27 January 1978) is an Italian writer. He started studying mathematics at university, but quit to enroll at Milan's film-making school Civica Scuola di Cinema «Luchino Visconti», where he graduated in 1999. He taught himself American literature and started directing documentaries in 2004, especially about social, political and literary topics. His first work as a writer was the short story Fare ordine, which won the Premio Subway−Letteratura. He loves New York City, which has become the main subject of some of his documentaries. His other passion is the mountain, where he likes to spend a few months alone every year. In 2016, he published his first novel Le otto montagne (The Eight Mountains, English translation by Simon Carnell and Erica Segre for Atria Books, 2018), which granted him the Premio Strega 2017, Italy′s most prestigious literary award, as well as various international awards, such as the Prix Médicis étranger, the Prix François Sommer, and the English Pen Translates Award.", "score": "1.4787309" }, { "id": "9615984", "title": "Paolo Baratta", "text": " Paolo Baratta (born 11 November 1939) is an Italian economist and ex-minister. From 2008 to 2020 he was the President of the Venice Biennale. He graduated in Engineering at the Polytechnic University of Milan and in Economics at the University of Cambridge. In 1967 he did industrial research for the Italian Association for the development of Industry in the South, the SVIMEZ. In 1977 he became director of the ICIPU, an italian credit consortium for public companies; later, he became the first vice president and then president. From 1980 to 1992, he held many positions: in addition to the ICIPU presidency he was also president of Crediop, the credit consortium for ", "score": "1.4765453" } ]
What is Petr Mlsna's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Petr Mlsna
298,388
78
[ { "id": "2334396", "title": "Petr Mlsna", "text": " Petr Mlsna (born 13 November 1978) is a Czech politician, who served as Head of the Government Legislative Council and Minister without Portfolio of the Czech Republic from December 2012 to July 2013. He was appointed to Petr Nečas' Cabinet as an independent on 12 December 2012.", "score": "1.7958581" }, { "id": "12530577", "title": "Petr Hlaváček", "text": " He grew up in South Moravia in Boršice, near Buchlov Castle. From 1965 to 1969 he studied at the Secondary Technical School in Zlin leather. Upon graduation he worked at a shoe factory, Svit, as a production foreman. From 1970 to 1979 he studied at the Faculty of Technology VUT Brno. In 1979, he began working as a lecturer at the Faculty of Technology. He was Dean of the Faculty of Technology at Tomas Bata University in Zlin from 2007 to 2011. On June 15, 2007, he was elected to the position by the Academic Senate of FT and on July 1, 2007 he was appointed by ", "score": "1.4938025" }, { "id": "13923958", "title": "Petr Kolář", "text": " Kolář graduated from Charles University in Prague in 1986 with majors in information technology, library science and ethnography. His interests are international politics, sport, literature, history, fine arts. Kolář is married and has two children.", "score": "1.4300499" }, { "id": "30064212", "title": "Petr Nárožný", "text": " Petr Nárožný (born 14 April 1938 in Prague ) is a Czech actor and television presenter. Petr Nárožný attended Czech Technical University in Prague (civil engineering, graduate in 1968). He began his career as a presenter of the band Rangers in 1968. From 1973, he was engaged as an actor in the Semafor Theatre in Prague, together with Luděk Sobota and Miloslav Šimek. As of 2011, he is a member of The Drama Club.", "score": "1.4228988" }, { "id": "27081016", "title": "Martin C. Putna", "text": " Putna was born in Písek, Czech Republic. Between 1986 and 1991 he studied Philology at the Charles University in Prague. Since 1992 he has worked at the Charles University. He also studied Theology at the University of South Bohemia in České Budějovice. He was visiting scholar at the University of Regensburg. He worked as a director of Vaclav Havel Presidential Library during the years 2009–2011. He is a regular contributor to the daily paper Lidové noviny, replacing Ludvík Vaculík as a core column author after Vaculík's death in 2015.", "score": "1.3998923" }, { "id": null, "title": "Petr Mlsna", "text": "Petr Mlsna\n\nPetr Mlsna (born 13 November 1978) is a Czech politician, who served as Chairman of the Government Legislative Council and Minister without Portfolio of the Czech Republic from December 2012 to July 2013. He was appointed to Petr Nečas' Cabinet as an independent on 12 December 2012.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Marie Benešová", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Government ministers of the Czech Republic", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Karolína Peake", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Czech Republic", "text": "Czech Republic\n\nThe Czech Republic, or simply Czechia, is a landlocked country in Central Europe. Historically known as Bohemia, it is bordered by Austria to the south, Germany to the west, Poland to the northeast, and Slovakia to the southeast. The Czech Republic has a hilly landscape that covers an area of with a mostly temperate continental and oceanic climate. The capital and largest city is Prague; other major cities and urban areas include Brno, Ostrava, Plzeň and Liberec.\n\nThe Duchy of Bohemia was founded in the late 9th century under Great Moravia. It was formally recognized as an Imperial State of the Holy Roman Empire in 1002 and became a kingdom in 1198. Following the Battle of Mohács in 1526, the whole Crown of Bohemia was gradually integrated into the Habsburg monarchy. The Protestant Bohemian Revolt led to the Thirty Years' War. After the Battle of White Mountain, the Habsburgs consolidated their rule. With the dissolution of the Holy Empire in 1806, the Crown lands became part of the Austrian Empire.\n\nIn the 19th century, the Czech lands became more industrialized, and in 1918 most of it became part of the First Czechoslovak Republic following the collapse of Austria-Hungary after World War I. Czechoslovakia was the only country in Central and Eastern Europe to remain a parliamentary democracy during the entirety of the interwar period. After the Munich Agreement in 1938, Nazi Germany systematically took control over the Czech lands. Czechoslovakia was restored in 1945 and became an Eastern Bloc communist state following a coup d'état in 1948. Attempts to liberalize the government and economy were suppressed by a Soviet-led invasion of the country during the Prague Spring in 1968. In November 1989, the Velvet Revolution ended communist rule in the country, and on 1 January 1993, Czechoslovakia was dissolved, with its constituent states becoming the independent states of the Czech Republic and Slovakia.\n\nThe Czech Republic is a unitary parliamentary republic and developed country with an advanced, high-income social market economy. It is a welfare state with a European social model, universal health care and free-tuition university education. It ranks 16th in the UN inequality-adjusted human development, 32nd in the Human Development Index and 24th in the World Bank Human Capital Index. It ranks as the 8th safest and most peaceful country and 29th in democratic governance. The Czech Republic is a member of the United Nations, NATO, the European Union, the OECD, the OSCE, and the Council of Europe.", "score": null }, { "id": "519648", "title": "Petr Kalina", "text": " Petr Kalina (born 9 July 1997) is a Czech professional ice hockey player. He is currently playing for HC Sparta Praha of the Czech Extraliga. Kalina made his Czech Extraliga debut playing with Mountfield HK during the 2015–16 Czech Extraliga season.", "score": "1.3924892" }, { "id": "10171056", "title": "Gymnázium třída Kapitána Jaroše", "text": "Alfons Mucha (1860—1939), artist ; Vilem Mrstik (1863—1912), writer ; Petr Bezruč (1867—1958), poet and short story writer ; Karel Absolon (1877—1960), archaeologist and speleologist ; Karel Čapek (1890—1938), author and journalist ; Lev Blatný (1894—1930), poet ; Ondrej Sekora (1899—1967), painter and author ; Růžena Vacková (1901—1982), art historian ; Ivan Blatny (1919—1990), poet ; Zdeněk Rotrekl (1920—2013), poet ; Felix Maria Davídek (1921—1988), Roman Catholic bishop ; Jan Novak (1921—1984), composer ; Josef Koukl (1926—2010), Roman Catholic Bishop of Litoměřice ; Milan Kundera (born 1929), novelist ; Jiří Zlatuška (born 1957), ANO 2011 politician ; Petr Fiala (born 1964), politician, leader of the Civic Democratic Party ; Petr Zelenka (born 1967), film director ; Pavel Blatny (born 1968), chess grandmaster ; Jaroslav Suchy (born 1971), figure skater and politician ; Katerina Mrazova (born 1972), figure skater ; Martin Špinar (born 1972), footballer ; Radka Kovarikova (born 1975), figure skater ; Kateřina Tučková (born 1980), writer ; Jakub Hrůša (born 1981), conductor ; Mario Holek (born 1986), footballer ", "score": "1.3794396" }, { "id": "12334043", "title": "Richard Pokorný", "text": " Pokorný was born in Rychnov nad Kněžnou, Czechoslovakia. After graduating from high school (Gymnázium Františka Martina Pelcla) there, he studied the higher vocational school in Tábor and the Faculty of Environment on Jan Evangelista Purkyně University in Ústí nad Labem. Since 2004 he stay on the Faculty of Environment as the assistant, later as assistant professor, in 2015 he worked temporarily as the vice-dean for study. At university he teaches subjects related to inanimate nature, most of the time he devoted to research projects and research activities and curatorship of the geological collections. He lives in Litoměřice city, he is married and ", "score": "1.3746411" }, { "id": "12530576", "title": "Petr Hlaváček", "text": " Petr Hlavacek (February 23, 1950 – January 10, 2014) was a Czech shoe expert, university lecturer and researcher. His professional focus was to study the preparation and production of shoe materials, footwear, footwear ergonomics (especially for diabetics ) and historical footwear. ", "score": "1.3713663" }, { "id": "29975162", "title": "Petr Luxa", "text": " Petr Luxa (born 3 March 1972) is a retired professional tennis player from Czech Republic. He mainly played doubles, winning three titles partnering fellow countryman Radek Štěpánek.", "score": "1.3670796" }, { "id": "7281357", "title": "Petr Kašpar", "text": " He began business career with traded fruit, clothing and furniture from Hungary, which were exported to the Czech Republic. Later he continued as a FK DAC 1904 Dunajská Streda club officer. Then he moved to Artmedia Petržalka as club officer. From 2010 he is a director general of ŠK Slovan Bratislava.", "score": "1.3666312" }, { "id": "28610916", "title": "Petr Švancara", "text": " Petr Švancara (born 5 November 1977) is a former Czech football player. Švancara started his football career in his native Brno, eventually playing for the local side 1. FC Brno, and, later, for several other Gambrinus liga clubs. In 2008, his goal for FK Viktoria Žižkov in a match against Bohemians Prague was voted Gambrinus liga goal of the year. In June 2012, Švancara, the captain of Brno, signed a two-year extension to his contract to keep him at the club until 2014.", "score": "1.3642814" }, { "id": "5095764", "title": "Václav Mls", "text": " Václav Mls (born 17 July 1949) is a Czech rower. He competed in the men's eight event at the 1976 Summer Olympics.", "score": "1.3597356" }, { "id": "3788916", "title": "Jan Těsnohlídek", "text": " After K. V. Raise grammar school in Hlinsko he had many jobs - worked in bookstores, coffee shops, construction sites as a bricklayer, electrician, in galleries, in a fast-food restaurant, in the notary and attorney's office, etc. After he moved to Prague he briefly studied library studies and information studies at the Faculty of Arts of Charles University in Prague. Since 2008 to 2011 he has been editor and deputy editor of the magazine for contemporary poetry Psí víno. In 2009 he founded with Petr Štengl publishing house called Petr Štengl, and in 2011 he established his own publishing house JT's. His poems have been translated into English, German, Italian, Finnish, Slovenian, Spain, Dutch and Polish, and printed in Czech and foreign journals and anthologies. He cooperated with music bands Umakart and Lesní zvěř. Since 2009 he started organize and since 2011 he is an appointed judge of the literary competition for young poets called Competition Ortenova Kutná Hora. he is the youngest member of Czech PEN Club. Since 2012 to 2016 he lived in Krakow, Poland.", "score": "1.3596573" }, { "id": "13251634", "title": "Petr Fical", "text": " Petr Fical (born 23 September 1977) is a Czech-born German former professional ice hockey player. Fical competed with the Germany men's national ice hockey team at the 2006 Winter Olympics. He also competed with Team Germany at the 2004 World Cup of Hockey, and at the 2005, 2007, and 2008 IIHF World Championships.", "score": "1.3582101" }, { "id": "29882075", "title": "Petr Galuška", "text": " Petr Galuška (born 8 July 1996) is a Czech professional football forward who last played for Pohronie in Fortuna Liga. He previously played for Slovácko and Karviná in the Czech First League.", "score": "1.3545144" }, { "id": "4262141", "title": "Petr Rosol", "text": " Petr Rosol (born June 20, 1964) is a Czech former professional ice hockey forward. He played in the 1992 Olympic ice hockey for Czechoslovakia where he won a bronze medal. He was drafted 75th overall by the Calgary Flames in the 1984 NHL Entry Draft.", "score": "1.3539786" }, { "id": "25917412", "title": "Petr Rajnoha", "text": " Petr Rajnoha (born in 1974) is a Czech organist. He is a graduate of the Conservatory in Brno and the Faculty of Music of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague under the tutelage of Prof. Jaroslav Tůma. In 1996 – 1997 he continued his studies at the Conservatoire de Paris under Professor Susan Landale. In 2006, Rajnoha recorded the Five Concert Fantasies by Josef Klička for the Czech label ARTA Records.", "score": "1.3519411" }, { "id": "27448503", "title": "Petr Šiška", "text": " Petr Šiška (born 4 May 1965, in Třinec) is a Czech TV presenter, screenwriter, musician, and occasional songwriter. He is currently the host of the Czechia game show Nic než pravda (English: Moment of truth) on the Czechia TV channel Prima, based on the American game show The Moment of Truth. In addition to his television career, he is a successful songwriter, having written lyrics and music for singers such as Czech icon Karel Gott, Helena Vondráčková, Hana Zagorová, Leona Machálková, and others. He is also a member of the rock band Legendy se vrací (The Legends return). Since 1997, Petr Šiška has been CEO and chairman of the board of directors of Petarda Production a.s., a production company that organizes benefit concerts, charity events, art exhibitions, and offers companies public relation services. The company also represents young talented artists and musicians. In 2016, he was the screenwriter for The Fountain for Zuzana, a movie that pays tribute to the Czech-Polish-Slovak border area, its music, and to the musicians from all genres. Much of the film showed concert footage of famous groups and musicians like Jarek Nohavica, Peter Cmorik, and Roman Izzi Iziáš.", "score": "1.349994" }, { "id": "32450398", "title": "Petr Nečas", "text": " Nečas was born in Uherské Hradiště, Czech Republic, on 19November 1964. He attended gymnasium in Uherské Hradiště from 1979 to 1983. He graduated from the Faculty of Science at the University of J.E. Purkyně in Brno in 1988. Nečas met his future wife, Radka Nečasová, at school when he was18. In 2013, he filed for divorce and not long after married his former chief of staff, Jana Nagyová.", "score": "1.3491905" } ]
What is Lorena Corona Valdés's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Lorena Corona Valdés
1,419,959
35
[ { "id": "7909532", "title": "Lorena Corona Valdés", "text": " Lorena Corona Valdés (born 16 December 1972) is a Mexican politician from the Ecologist Green Party of Mexico. She serves as a federal deputy to the LXIII Legislature of the Mexican Congress representing Durango and the first electoral region.", "score": "1.6778282" }, { "id": "7909533", "title": "Lorena Corona Valdés", "text": " Corona received her law degree from the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM) in 1997 and worked primarily as a communications lawyer. Between 2001 and 2006, she was the legal director of Televisa Radio (Sistema Radiópolis, S.A. de C.V.); during this time, she obtained graduate degrees in intellectual property law and in operating broadcasting companies, and she was also named by Vicente Fox to serve on the Federal Telecommunications Commission. After she left Televisa Radio, she worked at Ecija Abogados from 2006 to 2007 and at Legal Media Advisers from 2007 to 2008. From 2009 to 2012, Corona spent her first term in the Chamber of Deputies for the LXI Legislature, where she sat on the Public Education and Educational Services Commission as well as those dealing with Government and National Defense. She returned to the chamber in 2015, again as a proportional representation deputy; she sits on the Economy, Constitutional Points, and Culture and Film Commissions.", "score": "1.6040497" }, { "id": "32343010", "title": "Julia Emilia Valdés Borrero", "text": " Julia Emilia Valdés Borrero (born February 26, 1952 in Santiago de Cuba, Cuba) is a Cuban artist specializing in painting, drawing, engraving, and illustration. From 1967 to 1972, she studied in the Escuela Nacional de Arte (ENA), in Havana, Cuba. Between 1984 and 1989 she studied art history at the Universidad de Oriente in Santiago de Cuba.", "score": "1.4146829" }, { "id": "12754527", "title": "Lorena Benítes", "text": " Lorena Aida Benítes Valverde (born July 24, 1982 in Esmeraldas) is an Ecuadorian taekwondo practitioner. She represented Ecuador at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where she competed and played for the women's heavyweight category (+67 kg), an event which was later dominated by Mexico's María Espinoza. She was eliminated in the first preliminary round of the competition, after being defeated by Australia's Carmen Marton, who only scored two points in the match.", "score": "1.4088113" }, { "id": "3719059", "title": "Adriana Valdés", "text": " Valdés studied at the Catholic University of Chile. She taught literature at that University (1965–1975) and, after 25 years working for the United Nations, went back to postgraduate teaching on arts at the University of Chile for some years after 2002. She writes on visual arts and literature. Two collections of her essays were published in book form, in 1996 and 2006. With Pedro Lastra she co-edited the posthumous book of Enrique Lihn, \"Diario de muerte\", in 1989. She was named a Fellow of the Chilean Academy of Language in 1993. In 2010 she became the first woman to serve as deputy director of the Academy. ", "score": "1.3973328" }, { "id": null, "title": "Lorena Corona Valdés", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ramón Valdés", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ignacio Coronel Villarreal", "text": "Ignacio Coronel Villarreal\n\nIgnacio \"Nacho\" Coronel Villarreal (1 February 1954 – 29 July 2010) was a Mexican suspected drug lord and a founding member of the Sinaloa Cartel, a criminal group based in Sinaloa. He worked alongside Joaquín \"El Chapo\" Guzmán, Mexico's most-wanted drug lord. His stronghold was Jalisco.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Maribel Guardia", "text": "Maribel Guardia\n\nMaribel Guardia (; born Maribel Del Rocío Fernández García on May 29, 1959, in San José, Costa Rica) is a Costa Rican-Mexican actress, model, singer and TV hostess. She was winner of Miss Costa Rica 1978 and contestant in Miss Universe 1978.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Mexicans", "text": "List of Mexicans\n\nThis article contains a list of well-known Mexicans in science, publication, arts, politics and sports.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "13860327", "title": "Lorena Hermida", "text": " Lorena is student of Business Administration at the National Unified Corporation of Neiva. Lorena is studying English, play tennis, football and basketball. Hermida is the daughter of Oliver and Geovanna Aguilar Trujillo. Her height is 5 feet part with 9 1/2 inches, their body measurements are 34.3 - 25.4 - 39, having a swarthy skin and dark brown eyes.", "score": "1.3757012" }, { "id": "1382130", "title": "Zoé Valdés", "text": " Zoé Valdés (born May 2, 1959 in Havana, Cuba) is a Cuban novelist, poet, scriptwriter, film director and blogger. She studied at the Instituto Superior Pedagógico Enrique José Varona, but did not graduate. From 1984 to 1988, she worked for the Delegación de Cuba at UNESCO in Paris and in the Oficina Cultural de la Misión de Cuba in Paris. From 1990 to 1995, she was an editor of the magazine Cine Cubano. She lives with her daughter in Paris. She has been married three times: with Cuban writer Manuel Pereira Quintero, Cuban government official José Antonio González and Cuban independent filmmaker Ricardo Vega.", "score": "1.37257" }, { "id": "3719058", "title": "Adriana Valdés", "text": " Adriana Valdés Budge (born October 3, 1943 in Santiago, Chile) is a Chilean writer essayist.", "score": "1.3645152" }, { "id": "3719060", "title": "Adriana Valdés", "text": " was reelected to this position in 2013. She received the 2010 Altazor Award in literary essay category for her book Enrique Lihn: vistas parciales, and in 2013 was short-listed for the same award for her book on \"De ángeles y ninfas\", on Aby Warburg and Walter Benjamin. Along with Alfredo Jaar, she published Studies on Happiness, Barcelona, 1999. She has edited a book on the painter Roser Bru (1996) and two books about the artist Alfredo Jaar: Jaar/SCL/2006 and Venezia, Venezia (2013). In 2018 she received the Santiago Municipal Literature Award in the Essay category for Redefinir lo humano: las humanidades en el siglo XXI.", "score": "1.350148" }, { "id": "25593231", "title": "Rosa Valdeón", "text": " Rosa María Valdeón Santiago (born 17 December 1960) is a Spanish politician and physician. Rosa Valdeón is a member of the People's Party of Castile and León. Rosa Valdeón was the Minister of Economy and Finance of Castile and León, in office from 8 July 2015 to 10 September 2016. She was the mayor of Zamora from 2007 to 2015. Rosa Valdeón was also the procurator of the Cortes of Castile and León. Rosa Valdeón held the position of general director of public health at the Junta of Castile and León from 2001 to 2003.", "score": "1.3489698" }, { "id": "31668147", "title": "Asunción Valdés", "text": " the German Marshall Fund of the United States. She began her professional career in 1972, with Información. Later, she joined La Verdad, both newspapers in her native city of Alicante. In 1975, she began broadcasting on Radio Exterior. In January 1976 she was one of the journalists who put together the first edition of El País, working as International Economic Editor. In 1977, she moved to Bonn as a correspondent of Radio Nacional de España, and remained in West Germany until 1982, when she became the station's correspondent in Brussels. In Bonn she was vice president of the Association of the Foreign Press in Germany (Verein der Ausländische ", "score": "1.3364666" }, { "id": "27591284", "title": "Loren Legarda", "text": " Lorna Regina \"Loren\" Bautista Legarda (born January 28, 1960) is a Filipina politician, environmentalist, cultural worker, and former journalist who is currently serving as the representative of Antique and as a House Deputy Speaker. She previously served as a senator twice: from 1998 to 2004 and from 2007 to 2019. She is the only female in the Philippines to top two senatorial elections: 1998 and 2007. She also unsuccessfully ran for vice president twice: In 2004 as the running mate of Fernando Poe Jr., and again in 2010 as the running mate of Manny Villar. Legarda was a 2001 UNEP Laureate as declared by the United Nations Environment Programme, and a 2008 Regional Champion for Disaster Risk Reduction and Climate Change Adaption for Asia and the Pacific as declared by the United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduction. She was declared by the United Nations as a UN Global ", "score": "1.3335896" }, { "id": "13302683", "title": "Elsa Paredes de Salazar", "text": " Law and Dentistry at the University of La Paz, managing to crown her brilliant studies with the university degree of Surgeon-dentist in National Provision. She studied Political and Social Sciences only to expand her vast culture without being seduced by the hard work of the professional, taking advantage of his intellectual skills at the service of society to vigorously promote institutions of social assistance and dissemination of women's culture, work in which she has undoubtedly achieved full success. However, Dr. Paredes de Salazar has taken special care not only to analyze issues related to the family and society, but has studied historical and legal problems of undeniable importance, demonstrating their capacity and illustration.\"", "score": "1.3314538" }, { "id": "31015252", "title": "Ángeles González-Sinde", "text": " Ángeles González-Sinde Reig (born 7 April 1965) is a Spanish scriptwriter, film director and politician. She served as Minister of Culture of the Government of Spain from April 2009 until December 2011. Her appointment was received with anger and rejection by the Spanish Internet Community, due to González-Sinde's opposition to P2P file sharing and the alleged conflict of interest due to her ties to the film industry. A strict anti-piracy law enacted in Spain in December 2011 has become known colloquially as Ley Sinde, or the Sinde Law, as she was seen as the primary backer of the measure.", "score": "1.3312056" }, { "id": "9385758", "title": "Blanca Alva Guerrero", "text": " Alva Guerrero graduated from Pontifical Catholic University of Peru and the Ricardo Palma University with post graduate studies in Museology. She has been deaf since childhood. She was the General Director of Defense of Cultural Heritage at the Ministry of Culture from 2006 to 2017. She works to protect archaeological works and other cultural heritage items for the country, confiscating illegal handicrafts. As part of her work with Peru's Ministry of Culture, she ensured people do not sell land where cultural items are and that people do not move into those areas. In 2010, she was awarded the Peru Ministry of Labor \"Recognition of the Work and Entrepreneurship\" Award.", "score": "1.3301861" }, { "id": "25593232", "title": "Rosa Valdeón", "text": " Rosa Valdeón was born in Toro, Zamora, Spain. She studied at the University of Salamanca. Rosa Valdeón was vice–presidente of the Junta of Castile and León from 2015 to 2016. Rosa Valdeón served as medical inspector of social security. Rosa Valdeón is a member of the National Executive Committee of the People's Party. Rosa Valdeón also elected to councilor for family and equal opportunities of the Junta of Castile and León from 2003 to 2007.", "score": "1.3297108" }, { "id": "24935502", "title": "Beatriz Valdés", "text": " Beatriz Valdés Fidalgo (born May 12, 1963, in Havana) is a Cuban-Venezuelan actress. She was born in Cuba, where she studied drama and worked as an actress before she arrived to Venezuela as a guest at the Cinema Interamerican Forum in 1989. She gave birth to her first child there in 1991.", "score": "1.3288171" }, { "id": "3134753", "title": "Lorena Ziraldo", "text": " She studied Art History at the University of Toronto and Fine Arts under Gerald Ferguson at NSCAD University, obtaining her BFA in 2000.", "score": "1.3250082" }, { "id": "25794188", "title": "Lorena Vindel", "text": " Lorena Vindel (born 1977) is a Honduran actress and artist.", "score": "1.3230071" }, { "id": "14146896", "title": "Soraya Rodríguez", "text": " Born in Valladolid, Rodríguez graduated with her law degree from the University of Valladolid, with a specialization in Community Law, in 1987. Between 1988 and 1990 she worked as a lawyer at the Center for the Reception of Women Victims of Ill-treatment in Valladolid. She was Secretary of Social Movements and Citizen Participation in the Regional Executive of the PSOE in Castile and Leon. Later, in 1991 she was professor of the University School of Labor Relations of Valladolid. Between 1994 and 1997 she was director of the Center for Women in the city of Valladolid. In 1998, she served as legal advisor to the Local Administration.", "score": "1.3224516" } ]
What is Sir Thomas Clarges, 3rd Baronet's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Sir Thomas Clarges, 3rd Baronet
1,204,905
39
[ { "id": "15221846", "title": "Sir Thomas Clarges, 4th Baronet", "text": " Sir Thomas Clarges (c. 1780-17 February 1834) was the son of Sir Thomas Clarges, 3rd Baronet and Louisa Skrine. He was a pupil at Eton College, matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford in 1799, and graduated from Oxford University in 1802. He succeeded as the 4th Baronet Clarges, of St. Martin's in the Fields in the County of Middlesex, on 23 December 1782. From 1803 until his death, he was Constable of Durham Castle in the County Palatine. In addition to his landed estates (including Bitchfield and Norton Disney in Lincolnshire, and Sutton-on-Derwent, near York), he also owned a half-share in the Theatre Royal, Brighton, which he had purchased in 1807. He died on 17 February 1834 at Brighton, unmarried. On his death, his baronetcy became extinct. His will was proven (by probate) in March 1834.", "score": "1.9116852" }, { "id": "3452409", "title": "Sir Thomas Clarges, 3rd Baronet", "text": " Sir Thomas Clarges, 3rd Baronet (1751–1782) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1780 to 1782. Clarges was the son of Thomas Clarges of Aston, Hertfordshire and his wife Anne Shute of John Shute, 1st Viscount Barrington and was born on 4 October 1751. He succeeded his grandfather Sir Thomas Clarges, 2nd Baronet in the baronetcy on 19 February 1759. He was educated Eton College in 1765 and matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford in 1770. He married Louisa Skrine, daughter of William Skrine on 20 October 1777. Clarges was elected Member of Parliament for Lincoln at the 1780 general election and held the seat until his death on 23 December 1782.", "score": "1.8479159" }, { "id": "3452292", "title": "Sir Thomas Clarges, 2nd Baronet", "text": " Sir Thomas Clarges, 2nd Baronet (25 July 1688 – 19 February 1759), of Aston, near Stevenage, Hertfordshire, was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1713 to 1715. Clarges was the eldest surviving son of Sir Walter Clarges, 1st Baronet, whom he succeeded circa 31 March 1706 and was educated at St Paul's School. Clarges was a Member of Parliament for Lostwithiel from 1713 to 1715. Clarges was appointed a Gentleman of the privy chamber by 1734 until his death. He married twice; firstly Katherine, the daughter and coheiress of John Berkeley, 4th Viscount Fitzhardinge and secondly Frances, with whom he had a son Thomas, who predeased him. He was succeeded by his grandson Thomas.", "score": "1.761747" }, { "id": "15131874", "title": "Thomas Clarges", "text": " Sir Thomas Clarges (c 1618 &ndash; 4 October 1695) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1656 and 1695. He played an important part in bringing about the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660.", "score": "1.6939355" }, { "id": "5502753", "title": "Robert Clarges", "text": " Robert Clarges (c. 1693 - before 1727) was an English Tory MP. Clarges was the third son of Sir Walter Clarges, 1st Baronet, the first son of his marriage to Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Thomas Gould, Sheriff of London, widow of Sir Robert Wymondsell. He was educated at St Paul's School, London and Trinity College, Cambridge. His father died in 1706 whilst Clarges was still a minor and his inheritance of Stoke Poges Rectory Manor was held in trust for him until he became of age. He was elected MP for Reading from 1713 to 30 May 1716. Clarges was described as a Tory who might often vote Whig. He voted against the Septennial Act 1716. His election was declared void on 30 May 1716. He died unmarried apparently before April 1727 (he was not mentioned in his mother's will of that date). His estate was admininistered by his mother and elder brother. The Rectory Manor passed to his brother George.", "score": "1.6917968" }, { "id": null, "title": "Sir Walter Clarges, 1st Baronet", "text": "Sir Walter Clarges, 1st Baronet\n\nSir Walter Clarges, 1st Baronet (4 July 1653 – March 1705/6) was an English Tory politician who served four separate terms in Parliament. An early ally of William of Orange, he inherited large holdings of land but no great ability from his father, Sir Thomas Clarges, and largely used his Parliamentary seat to advance his own business and financial interests.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Thomas Clarges", "text": "Thomas Clarges\n\nSir Thomas Clarges (c 1618 – 4 October 1695) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1656 and 1695. He played an important part in bringing about the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Great Britain MP (1707–1800) for England stubs", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:English MPs 1680–1681", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:British MPs 1780–1784", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "15131879", "title": "Thomas Clarges", "text": " Clarges married Mary Proctor, daughter of George Proctor of Norwell Woodhouse in Nottinghamshire. They had a son Sir Walter Clarges, 1st Baronet.", "score": "1.6804371" }, { "id": "14938188", "title": "Sir Thomas Clavering, 7th Baronet", "text": " Sir Thomas Clavering, 7th Baronet (19 June 1719 – 14 October 1794) was a British landowner and Member of Parliament. He was the son of Sir James Clavering, 6th Baronet and succeeded to the Baronetcy of Axwell and to the family estates on the death of his father in 1748. He was Member of Parliament for St Mawes 1753–1754, and for Shaftesbury 1754–60 (where he paid £2000 to secure the seat). He resigned his seat at Shaftesbury in December 1760 to fight a by-election for County Durham; he lost that election and the general election of 1761, but was elected for the constituency at the third attempt in 1768 and continued to ", "score": "1.5153637" }, { "id": "13536829", "title": "Sir Thomas Burnett, 3rd Baronet", "text": " Sir Thomas Burnett of Leys, 3rd Baronet, (ca. 1658 – January 1714), Lord Clerk Register, PC, MP. He was, at Stonehaven, 21 April 1664, retoured as heir to his father, Sir Alexander Burnett, 2nd Baronet who had died the previous year. The 3rd Baronet is the grandson of Sir Thomas Burnett, 1st Baronet, who completed the reconstruction of Muchalls Castle and the great-grandson of Alexander Burnett of Leys (died 1619), who completed the construction of Crathes Castle.", "score": "1.5130252" }, { "id": "15131876", "title": "Thomas Clarges", "text": " In 1656 Clarges was elected Member of Parliament for the Sheriffdoms of Ross, Sutherland, and Cromarty in the Second Protectorate Parliament. In 1659 he was MP for the Boroughs of Banff and Cullen, and Aberdeen and for the Boroughs of Peebles, Selkirk, Jedburgh, Lauder, North Berwick, Dunbar and Haddington in the Third Protectorate Parliament. When Richard Cromwell became Lord Protector he ordered Clarges to go immediately to Scotland with his letters to George Monck, Clarge's brother-in-law, to obtain Monck's view of his protectorate. Clarges became Monck's main agent as he set about planning the Restoration of the Monarchy. In April 1660 Clarges was elected Member of Parliament for Westminster in the Convention Parliament. On 5 May Monck sent Clarges as an envoy to King Charles II at Breda carrying a letter from the ", "score": "1.5062945" }, { "id": "6982417", "title": "List of extinct baronetcies", "text": "Clarges of St Martin's in the Fields (cr. 20 October 1674), extinct with the death of the fourth baronet. ; Lawrence of Brough Hall (cr. 6 July 1665), extinct with the death of the sixth baronet. ; May of Mayfield (cr. 30 June 1763), extinct with the death of the fourth baronet. ", "score": "1.4955378" }, { "id": "15131878", "title": "Thomas Clarges", "text": " Clarges died at his house in Piccadilly, Mayfair, in London. His properties in Mayfair are commemorated in the name of Clarges Street, which is near Albemarle Street named after the site of the residence of his nephew Christopher Monck, 2nd Duke of Albemarle.", "score": "1.4783025" }, { "id": "15131875", "title": "Thomas Clarges", "text": " Clarges was the son of John Clarges and his wife Anne Leaver. He was an apothecary in London. His sister Anne Clarges was the wife of the royalist General George Monck, later 1st Duke of Albemarle.", "score": "1.4768214" }, { "id": "11373749", "title": "Sir Thomas Hesilrige, 4th Baronet", "text": " Sir Thomas Hesilrige, 4th Baronet (1664 - 11 July 1700) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1690 to 1695. Hesilrige was the son of Sir Thomas Hesilrige, 3rd Baronet and his wife Elizabeth Fenwick, daughter of George Fenwick, of Bruntonhall, Northumberland. He succeeded to the baronetcy on the death of his father in 1680. In 1687 Hesilrige was appointed Sheriff of Leicestershire and in 1690 was elected Member of Parliament for Leicestershire, holding the seat until 1695. Hesilrige died unmarried at the age of 36. He was succeeded in the baronetcy by his uncle Sir Robert Hesilrige, 5th Baronet.", "score": "1.4758295" }, { "id": "934980", "title": "Clere baronets", "text": " as \"Madam Williams\". Pepys strongly disapproved of the affair, but it endured until Lord Brouncker's death in 1684, and he left Abigail much of his property. The Cleres were an ancient Norfolk family. Sir Robert Clere was famous for his great wealth and served as High Sheriff of Norfolk in 1501. His son Sir John Clere was Treasurer of the King's Army in France in 1549. Sir John's son Edward Clere represented both Thetford and Grampound in Parliament. Edward's son Sir Edward Clere was High Sheriff of Norfolk in 1586 but was forced to sell the family estate of Blickling Hall. Sir Edward's son was the first Baronet. Sir Thomas Clere was the third son of Sir Robert Clere.", "score": "1.4705698" }, { "id": "15952806", "title": "Sir Thomas Isham, 3rd Baronet", "text": " Sir Thomas Isham, 3rd Baronet of Lamport (15 March 1656/57 – 26 July 1681) is known for a diary he wrote from 1671 to 1673 of his observations as a teenage member of the English aristocracy.", "score": "1.463424" }, { "id": "2908439", "title": "Grey Egerton baronets", "text": " The baronetcy was created on 5 April 1617 for Sir Roland Egerton, whose family were established by the 13th-century in Cheshire. The Anglo-Norman chevalier David le Clerc de Malpas migrated to England, and was appointed justice for Cheshire by King Henry III in 1252. Le Clerc held three knights' fees for the county, owing the King their service as and when summoned to war. His second son named Philip le Goch (translated from the brythonic as 'the Red') was lord of the manor of Egerton, Cheshire. The late 15th-century head of the family, Philip Egerton of Egerton, married Margery, daughter of Sir William Mainwaring; he died in 1474 at the height of the civil strife, leaving a number of sons: the second was Sir Ralph Egerton of ", "score": "1.4497828" }, { "id": "8382732", "title": "Sir Thomas Barlow, 3rd Baronet", "text": " had four children: Barlow succeeded to the title of 3rd Baronet Barlow, of Wimpole Street, London on 28 February 1968, after the death of his father. He was appointed a Deputy Lieutenant of Buckinghamshire in 1976. Barlow was also a conservationist and was a trustee of the Galapagos Conservation Trust. Barlow was also a trustee for over 20 years of the Barlow Collection of Oriental art collected by his father. In 1997 Sir Thomas, along with his brother Erasmus Barlow were both awarded honorary Doctors of Letters degrees by the University of Sussex, who were bequeathed the Barlow Collection in 1968 on the death of Sir Alan", "score": "1.4425223" }, { "id": "11963544", "title": "Sir Thomas Grosvenor, 3rd Baronet", "text": " Grosvenor was born at Eaton Hall, Cheshire, the son of Roger Grosvenor by his wife, Christian (or Christine), daughter of Thomas Myddleton of Chirk Castle, Denbighshire. He was less than five years old when his father, Roger, was killed in a duel with his cousin, Hugh Roberts, on 22 August 1661. Roger had been the son and heir of Sir Richard Grosvenor, 2nd Baronet, and therefore, Thomas succeeded to the baronetcy upon the death of his grandfather on 31 January 1665. He was eight years old at that time. Grosvenor was educated by a private tutor, who also accompanied him when he undertook the Grand Tour, in his case, a three-year ", "score": "1.4389455" }, { "id": "5601643", "title": "Sir George Thomas, 3rd Baronet", "text": " Sir George Thomas, 3rd Baronet (c. 1740 – 6 May 1815), was a British politician.", "score": "1.4364412" }, { "id": "32723556", "title": "Thursby baronets", "text": " The Thursby Baronetcy, of Ormerod House in the Parish of Burnley in the County Palatine of Lancaster and of Holmhurst in the Parish of Christchurch in the County of Southampton, was a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 26 July 1887 for John Hardy Thursby, then Honorary Colonel of the 3rd Battalion, East Lancashire Regiment. The Rev. John Hargreaves (1732-1812), had entered the Burnley coal industry through marriage in 1755 and in 1797 he acquired the lease-holds for most of the mineral rights in the area. After his death, the company adopted the name 'The Executors of John Hargreaves'. His nephew Colonel John Hargreaves (1775-1834), who inherited the business, married Charlotte Anne (died 1806), the only child of Lawrence Ormerod of Ormerod Hall in Cliviger. Although they had ", "score": "1.434699" } ]
What is Donald Robert Macgregor's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Donald Robert Macgregor
3,939,174
29
[ { "id": "10290904", "title": "Donald Robert Macgregor", "text": " Donald Robert Macgregor (1824 – 9 December 1889) was a Scottish politician. From 1874 to 1878 he was a Member of Parliament (MP) for the Leith Burghs constituency, near Edinburgh.", "score": "1.7403576" }, { "id": "27169499", "title": "Donald Macgregor (athlete)", "text": " Madras College, St Andrews from 1974 until 1999, when he retired from full-time teaching. Until 2006 he taught French and German part-time in the Business School of the University of Abertay Dundee and was also a German-language tour guide. He published a book of poetry, Stars and Spikes (2004, Nutwood Press), following in the footsteps of his father Forbes, who was a more prolific author and published among many other books with a Scottish theme, including the best-selling Greyfriars Bobby – the True Story at Last. More recently Donald was involved in research for John Bryant's books 3:59.4 (2004 – Random House) and The Marathon Makers (2008 – John Blake Publishing) and in photo caption translations for German books about ", "score": "1.737577" }, { "id": "27169498", "title": "Donald Macgregor (athlete)", "text": " Donald Forbes Macgregor (23 July 1939 – 3 June 2020) was a Scottish long-distance runner, teacher and politician. He competed in the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, representing Great Britain in the men's marathon event, in which he finished in seventh position in 2:16:34. He also competed for Scotland at the Commonwealth Games in 1970 in Edinburgh and 1974 in Christchurch, New Zealand. He had a personal best time of 2:14:15.4. Macgregor was born in Edinburgh, and studied at the University of St Andrews. He was chairman of the Royal Burgh of St Andrews Community Council until 2007, and served as a Liberal Democrat councillor on North East Fife District Council from 1988 to 1996. He was principal teacher of German ", "score": "1.6614025" }, { "id": "10291061", "title": "Donald MacGregor (Liberal MP)", "text": " Donald MacGregor (1839 – 20 July 1911) was a Scottish Liberal Party politician. From 1892 to 1895 he was a Member of Parliament (MP) for the Inverness-shire constituency. He is buried in London at St Mary Magdalen Roman Catholic Church Mortlake.", "score": "1.62664" }, { "id": "28157863", "title": "Douglas Macgregor", "text": " Douglas Abbott Macgregor (born January 4, 1953, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is a U.S. Army Colonel (retired), government official, author, consultant, and television commentator. On July 27, 2020, the White House announced that President Donald Trump intended to nominate Macgregor to serve as the United States Ambassador to Germany. On November 11, 2020, a Pentagon spokesperson announced that Macgregor had been hired to serve as Senior Advisor to the Acting Secretary of Defense.", "score": "1.6154299" }, { "id": null, "title": "Rob Roy MacGregor", "text": "Rob Roy MacGregor\n\nRobert Roy MacGregor (; 7 March 1671 – 28 December 1734) was a Scottish outlaw, who later became a folk hero.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Douglas Macgregor", "text": "Douglas Macgregor\n\nDouglas Abbott Macgregor (born January 4, 1953) is a retired U.S. Army colonel and government official, and an author, consultant, and television commentator. He played a significant role on the battlefield in the 1990-91 Gulf War and the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia. His 1997 book \"Breaking the Phalanx\" established him as an influential if unconventional theorist of military strategy. His thinking contributed to the US strategy in its 2003 invasion of Iraq. \n\nAfter leaving the military in 2004, he became more politically active. In 2020, President Donald Trump proposed Macgregor as ambassador to Germany, but the Senate blocked the nomination. On November 11, 2020, a Pentagon spokesperson announced that Macgregor had been hired to serve as Senior Advisor to the Acting Secretary of Defense, a post he held for less than three months. Trump also appointed him to the board of West Point Academy, his alma mater. These appointments proved controversial due to his history of racist comments. He regularly contributes to Fox News, where his opinions on Russia have caused controversy.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Robert Henry McGregor", "text": "Robert Henry McGregor\n\nRobert Henry McGregor, (March 1, 1886 – October 25, 1965) was a long-time Canadian parliamentarian.\n\nMacGregor was a contractor and horticulturalist by profession. He grew up in the Todmorden area of suburban Toronto, and was once an Elementary School student of a teacher named William Thomas Diefenbaker. \nHis initial experience in politics began in 1912 when he was appointed a school trustee for York Township. Following the formation of North York Township, he eventually became the first reeve of East York. In 1922, R.H. McGregor Elementary School, located in the eventual centre of East York, was erected and named in his honour.\n\nHe was first elected to the House of Commons of Canada in the 1926 federal election and sat continuously in the chamber for thirty-six years until his defeat in the 1962 federal election when he was 79 years old.\n\nOriginally elected as the Conservative Member of Parliament for York South, he switched to the new Toronto riding of York East when it was created for the 1935 federal election. He won election a total of eight consecutive times\n\nDespite his long tenure in the House of Commons he spoke rarely and was nicknamed \"Silent Bob\" McGregor. His only recorded Parliamentary speech occurred when being feted in the House on his 74th birthday. On that occasion he remarked \"If a good many hon. Members made fewer speeches in the House, they would be here longer.\"<ref name=GMObit /><ref name = \"milliken\" />\n\nThough never a member of Cabinet, he was elevated to the Queen's Privy Council for Canada on December 21, 1960 on Diefenbaker's recommendation in recognition of McGregor's long tenure of service.<ref>Silent Dean of Commons Takes Oath as Privy Council Member\nThe Globe and Mail (1936-2016); Toronto, Ont. [Toronto, Ont]22 Dec 1960: 3</ref>\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Robert the Bruce", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Donald Pleasence", "text": "Donald Pleasence\n\nDonald Henry Pleasence (; 5 October 1919 – 2 February 1995) was an English actor. He began his career on stage in the West End before transitioning into a screen career, where he played numerous supporting and character roles including RAF Flight Lieutenant Colin Blythe in \"The Great Escape\" (1963), the villain Ernst Stavro Blofeld in the James Bond film \"You Only Live Twice\" (1967), SEN 5241 in \"THX 1138\" (1971), and the deranged Clarence \"Doc\" Tydon in \"Wake in Fright\" (1971).\n\nPleasence starred as psychiatrist Dr. Samuel Loomis in \"Halloween\" (1978) and four of its sequels, a role for which he was nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Actor. The series' popularity and critical success led to a resurgent career for Pleasence, who appeared in numerous American and European-produced horror and thriller films. He collaborated with \"Halloween\" director John Carpenter twice more, as the President of the United States in \"Escape from New York\" (1981), and as the Priest in \"Prince of Darkness\" (1987).", "score": null }, { "id": "27169500", "title": "Donald Macgregor (athlete)", "text": " 2006 World Cup and 2008 Olympic Games. He did this and other translation work for the Olympic historian Volker Kluge (Berlin/Brandenburg). In May 2007 he was elected to Fife Council as one of the ward members for East Neuk and Landward ward (Liberal Democrat) and forms part of the Fife Council coalition administration with the Scottish National Party. Following his running career, he coached distance athletes as a member of Fife Athletic Club. Macgregor and his former wife had three children. In 2010 he published an autobiography, Running My Life (Pinetree Press, St Andrews). In 2016, with co-author Tim Johnston, a fellow Olympian, he published His Own Man a biography of Dr Otto Peltzer, a German athlete (Pitch Publishers 2016).", "score": "1.6097156" }, { "id": "2906833", "title": "William Firth MacGregor", "text": " William Firth MacGregor (1896&ndash;1958/73) was a painter, illustrator and artist who immigrated to Canada in 1925. MacGregor was a central witness in the Canadian Art Fraud case of 1962 to 1964, in which Toronto art dealer and owner of the Haynes Art Gallery in Toronto, Leslie W. Lewis and art dealer Neil Sharkey were convicted of fraud and sentenced to prison. More than 30 paintings, made by MacGregor, were admitted as evidence in the trial, all bearing fake signatures of Tom Thomson, A.Y. Jackson, J.E.H. MacDonald, James Wilson Morrice, David Milne or Arthur Lismer.", "score": "1.5952308" }, { "id": "10184314", "title": "James Drummond McGregor", "text": " James Drummond McGregor (1 September 1838 &ndash; 4 March 1918) was a Canadian businessman, politician, and the tenth Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia. Born in New Glasgow, Nova Scotia, the son of Roderick MacGregor and Janet Chisholm, both of Scottish descent, he was mayor of New Glasgow from 1879 to 1880. In 1867, MacGregor married Elizabeth McColl. He represented Pictou County in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly from 1890 to 1894 and from 1897 to 1900. MacGregor married Roberta Ridley in 1894. In 1900, he ran unsuccessfully for the House of Commons of Canada in the riding of Pictou. MacGregor was appointed to the Senate of Canada in 1903 representing the senatorial division of New Glasgow, Nova Scotia. A Liberal, he resigned in 1910 when he was appointed lieutenant governor of Nova Scotia. He served until 1915. MacGregor died in New Glasgow at the age of 79. His son Robert also represented Pictou County in the provincial assembly.", "score": "1.5808573" }, { "id": "5140157", "title": "Graeme MacGregor", "text": " Graeme MacGregor (born 14 June 1993) is a Scottish footballer who plays primarily as a defender. MacGregor was with Bolton Wanderers as a youth and played for Scotland under-19. He was released by Bolton Wanderers in June 2012 and signed for St Mirren in September 2012. He then played for East Stirlingshire for two years, before signing for East Fife in July 2015.", "score": "1.5381832" }, { "id": "25189349", "title": "Craig MacGregor", "text": " Source:", "score": "1.5378897" }, { "id": "25189348", "title": "Craig MacGregor", "text": " Source:", "score": "1.5378897" }, { "id": "3413531", "title": "Gregor MacGregor (sportsman)", "text": " MacGregor was born in 1869 to Donald MacGregor J.P. of Argyll in Edinburgh, Scotland. He was schooled at Uppingham before matriculating to Jesus College, Cambridge in October 1887. On leaving university he found work on the London Stock Exchange.", "score": "1.5308349" }, { "id": "9824243", "title": "Neil MacGregor", "text": " Robert Neil MacGregor (born 16 June 1946) is a British art historian and former museum director. He was editor of the Burlington Magazine from 1981 to 1987, then Director of the National Gallery, London, from 1987 to 2002, Director of the British Museum from 2002 to 2015, and founding director of the Humboldt Forum in Berlin until 2018.", "score": "1.5187702" }, { "id": "7263463", "title": "Fulton MacGregor", "text": " Fulton James MacGregor MSP (born 1980) is a Scottish National Party (SNP) politician who has been the Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) for the constituency of Coatbridge and Chryston since 2016. He serves on the Justice and Education & Skills committees in the Scottish Parliament.", "score": "1.5072315" }, { "id": "1321868", "title": "MacGregor (surname)", "text": "Alasdair Alpin MacGregor (1899–1970), writer and photographer ; Andrew MacGregor (1897–1983), World War I flying ace ; Brad MacGregor (born 1964), Canadian ice hockey player ; Byron MacGregor (1948–1995), Canadian news anchor ; Chummy MacGregor (1903–1973), jazz pianist and songwriter ; Clark MacGregor (1922–2003), U.S. politician ; Clifford J. MacGregor (1904–1985), American meteorologist and Arctic explorer ; David MacGregor (born 1983), Scottish musician ; Douglas Macgregor, military writer ; Elizabeth Ann Macgregor (born 1958), Scottish curator and art historian ; Gregor MacGregor (1869–1919), cricketer ; Gregor MacGregor (1786–1845), adventurer and confidence trickster ; Sir Ian Kinloch MacGregor (1912–1998), British industrialist ; Ian Macgregor (born 1937), accountant and charity finance guru ; James Mor MacGregor (1695–1754), the eldest son of Rob Roy and a major during the rising of '45 ; Joanna MacGregor (born 1959), classical pianist ; John MacGregor (disambiguation), multiple people ; Judith Macgregor (born 1952), ", "score": "1.5019665" }, { "id": "1321869", "title": "MacGregor (surname)", "text": " diplomat ; Katherine MacGregor (1925–2018), television actress ; Mary MacGregor (born 1948), singer ; Neil MacGregor (born 1946), art historian and museum director ; Robert Roy MacGregor (\"Rob Roy\", 1671–1734), Scottish outlaw and folk hero ; Sara Macgregor (died 1919), British painter ; Sue MacGregor (born 1941), writer and broadcaster ; William MacGregor (1846–1919), British imperial administrator MacGregor, also spelt Macgregor, is a Scottish surname. The name is Anglicised form of the Scottish Gaelic MacGriogair. The Gaelic name was originally a patronym, and means \"son of Griogar\". The Gaelic personal name Griogar is a Gaelicised form of the name Gregory. The surname is used by members of the Scottish clan Clan Gregor, also known as Clan MacGregor. The surname was banned in Scotland several times prior to the 18th century, in an effort to clamp down on the unruly clan. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.499053" }, { "id": "28157871", "title": "Douglas Macgregor", "text": " Macgregor is the vice president of Burke-Macgregor, LLC, a consulting firm based in Reston, Virginia, and he appears as a guest commentator on television and radio. Macgregor has been a regular guest on Tucker Carlson’s Fox News program since 2017. When John Bolton was removed from the White House in 2019, Macgregor was one of five finalists under consideration for selection as President Trump's National Security Advisor. In 2012, he challenged general James F. Amos' stance on the United States Marine Corps. Macgregor argued that the military capability and pertinence of the Marines, along with Army’s XVIII Airborne Corps, made them both \"as relevant as ", "score": "1.4946625" }, { "id": "3413530", "title": "Gregor MacGregor (sportsman)", "text": " Gregor MacGregor (31 August 1869 – 20 August 1919) was a Scottish cricketer and rugby union player. He played rugby for Scotland and cricket for England.", "score": "1.4934064" }, { "id": "27717523", "title": "Ian Donald", "text": " Later in 1952 Donald resigned his role at St Thomas's to take up a position as a reader at the Institute of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Royal Postgraduate Medical School located in Hammersmith Hospital. At the medical school Donald continued his research into neonatal breathing disorders. Donald worked to improve the Servo patient-cycled respirator as the device that Donald and Young had built. Later working with Josephine Lord, a registrar, Donald built a new piece of equipment called the Trip Spirometer later called the Spirometer whose purpose was to measure the respiratory efficiency of a neonate. As well as being a diagnostic device, Donald used the device to make a quantitative determination of normal respiration with the goal of determining the physiology and pathology of neonatal pulmonary disease.", "score": "1.4881493" }, { "id": "4254771", "title": "Alasdair Alpin MacGregor", "text": " He was born at Applecross, Ross and Cromarty, on 20 March 1899, the son of Colonel John MacGregor M.D. of the Indian Medical Service. He was educated at Tain Academy. MacGregor was brought up in Tain and Inverness, and educated there and in Edinburgh. His books were mainly about Scotland, and his romanticising style incurred the displeasure of Compton Mackenzie, who caricatured him in some of his novels (perhaps unjustly so as MacGregor was forced to be critically realistic about certain aspects of life on the west coast, in his book The Western Isles). Judging by the title of the 1931 book ''A Last ", "score": "1.4831431" } ]
What is Clement Baker's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Clement Baker
3,752,840
43
[ { "id": "28869128", "title": "Clement Baker", "text": " Clement Baker (by 1470 – 1516), of New Romney, Kent, was an English politician. He was a Member of Parliament (MP) for New Romney in 1512 and 1515, and was chamberlain, commissioner of subsidy, and jurat of the town. He was also bailiff to Yarmouth.", "score": "1.6295568" }, { "id": "16141794", "title": "Allen Baker", "text": " Joseph Allen Baker (10 April 1852 – 3 July 1918) was a Canadian-born British engineer, specialising in machinery for the confectionery and bakery industries and later in transportation systems, who was also a Liberal Party politician in London.", "score": "1.5818316" }, { "id": "6033028", "title": "Thomas Baker (artist)", "text": " Thomas Baker (9 October 1809 – 10 August 1864) was a Midlands landscape painter and watercolourist often known as \"Baker of Leamington\" or \"Landscape Baker\". Born in Harborne, Birmingham, Baker was a student of Vincent Barber (1788–1838) at the Barber family's Charles Street Academy in Birmingham. Exhibiting publicly with the Birmingham Society of Artists from 1827 onwards, he painted landscapes throughout Warwickshire, the Midlands and the Welsh border regions and occasionally producing depictions of the Lake District, Scotland and Ireland. More often than not Baker's landscapes include cattle, although sheep and human figures are also fairly common in his works. Baker kept comprehensive ", "score": "1.5423712" }, { "id": "894092", "title": "Charles Baker (surveyor)", "text": " Charles Baker (5 October 1743—19 February 1835) was born in Virginia, and was a surveyor in Canada as his first recorded profession. Baker was in Nova Scotia in 1765 as a deputy surveyor in the Chignecto region. After the American Revolution, he was active in the surveys which settled loyalists. In 1788 he settled in Amherst Township on an 800 acre land grant he had received. There he became a justice of the peace and a clerk of the courts and by 1802 was a judge. History records him as being a good magistrate and public servant. Through his various activities, he contributed significantly to the settlement and development of the areas where he lived.", "score": "1.533845" }, { "id": "13250720", "title": "Bobby Baker (artist)", "text": " Bobby Baker (born 1950, Kent) is a multi-disciplinary artist and activist working across performance, drawing and multi-media. Baker is the artistic director of the arts organisation Daily Life Ltd. A hallmark of Baker's work is food being used as an artistic medium. As John Daniel writes, 'Food - shopping for it, cooking it, serving it, consuming it - is a consistent feature in Baker's work, which focuses on the seemingly mundane, everyday details of life' (2007:246) Drawing from her own personal and family experiences, her work explores the relationship between art and lived experience and addresses the splitting of women's domestic and professional lives. Claire MacDonald points out how her artistic trajectory - moving from early food sculptures to later performances and installations - reflects the changing agenda of women's movement.", "score": "1.5208983" }, { "id": null, "title": "Baker (surname)", "text": "Baker (surname)\n\nBaker is a common surname of Old English (Anglo-Saxon) origin and Scotland where Gaelic was anglicized. From England the surname has spread to neighbouring countries such as Wales, Scotland and Ireland, and also to the English speaking areas of the Americas and Oceania where it is also common. The gaelic form of Baker in Scotland and Ireland is \"Mac a' Bhacstair\". Some people with the surname have used DNA to trace their origins to Celtic countries and specifically to the Baxter sept of the Clan MacMillan in Scotland. It is an occupational name, which originated before the 8th century CE, from the name of the trade, baker. From the Middle English \"bakere\" and Old English \"bæcere\", a derivation of \"bacan\", meaning \"to dry by heat\". The bearer of this name may not only have been a baker of bread. The name was also used for others involved with baking in some way, including the owner of a communal oven in humbler communities. The female form of the name is \"Baxter\", which is seen more in Scotland. The German form of the name is \"Bäcker\".\n\nThe name, Baker, appeared in many references, and from time to time, the surname was spelt \"Baker\", \"Bakere\" and these changes in spelling frequently occurred within the family name. Scribes and church officials spelt the name as it sounded, and frequently the spelling changed even during the person's own lifetime. The family name Baker entered Britain with the Anglo-Saxons, who traditionally are said to have settled Britain from the 5th century CE, although Germanic communities were already well established in Britain long before this time.\nNotable people with the surname include:\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Annie Baker", "text": "Annie Baker\n\nAnnie Baker (born April 1981)<ref name=heller /> is an American playwright and teacher who won the 2014 Pulitzer Prize for her play \"The Flick.\" Among her works are the Shirley, Vermont plays, which take place in the fictional town of Shirley: \"Circle Mirror Transformation\", \"Nocturama\", \"Body Awareness\", and \"The Aliens.\" She was named a MacArthur Fellow in 2017.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Josephine Baker", "text": "Josephine Baker\n\nJosephine Baker (born Freda Josephine McDonald; naturalised French Joséphine Baker; 3 June 1906 – 12 April 1975) was an American-born French dancer, singer and actress. Her career was centered primarily in Europe, mostly in her adopted France. She was the first black woman to star in a major motion picture, the 1927 silent film \"Siren of the Tropics\", directed by and .\n\nDuring her early career, Baker was among the most celebrated performers to headline the revues of the in Paris. Her performance in the revue in 1927 caused a sensation in the city. Her costume, consisting of only a short skirt of artificial bananas and a beaded necklace, became an iconic image and a symbol both of the Jazz Age and the Roaring Twenties.\n\nBaker was celebrated by artists and intellectuals of the era, who variously dubbed her the \"Black Venus\", the \"Black Pearl\", the \"Bronze Venus\", and the \"Creole Goddess\". Born in St. Louis, Missouri, she renounced her U.S. citizenship and became a French national after her marriage to French industrialist Jean Lion in 1937. She raised her children in France.\n\nShe aided the French Resistance during World War II. Baker sang: \"I have two loves, my country and Paris.\"\n\nBaker refused to perform for segregated audiences in the United States and is noted for her contributions to the civil rights movement. In 1968, she was offered unofficial leadership in the movement in the United States by Coretta Scott King, following Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination. After thinking it over, Baker declined the offer out of concern for the welfare of her children.\n\nOn 30 November 2021, she was interred in the Panthéon in Paris, the first black woman to receive one of the highest honors in France. As her resting place remains in Monaco Cemetery, a cenotaph was installed in vault 13 of the crypt in the Panthéon.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Special Operations Executive", "text": "Special Operations Executive\n\nThe Special Operations Executive (SOE) was a secret British World War II organisation. It was officially formed on 22 July 1940 under Minister of Economic Warfare Hugh Dalton, from the amalgamation of three existing secret organisations. Its purpose was to conduct espionage, sabotage and reconnaissance in occupied Europe (and later, also in occupied Southeast Asia) against the Axis powers, and to aid local resistance movements.\n\nFew people were aware of SOE's existence. Those who were part of it or liaised with it were sometimes referred to as the \"Baker Street Irregulars\", after the location of its London headquarters. It was also known as \"Churchill's Secret Army\" or the \"Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare\". Its various branches, and sometimes the organisation as a whole, were concealed for security purposes behind names such as the \"Joint Technical Board\" or the \"Inter-Service Research Bureau\", or fictitious branches of the Air Ministry, Admiralty or War Office.\n\nSOE operated in all territories occupied or attacked by the Axis forces, except where demarcation lines were agreed upon with Britain's principal Allies (the United States and the Soviet Union). It also made use of neutral territory on occasion or made plans and preparations in case neutral countries were attacked by the Axis. The organisation directly employed or controlled more than 13,000 people, about 3,200 of whom were women.\n\nAfter the war, the organisation was officially dissolved on 15 January 1946. The official memorial to all those who served in the SOE during the Second World War was unveiled on 13 February 1996 on the wall of the west cloister of Westminster Abbey by Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother. A further memorial to SOE's agents was unveiled in October 2009 on the Albert Embankment in London. The Valençay SOE Memorial honours 104 SOE agents who lost their lives while working in France. The Tempsford Memorial was unveiled on 3 December 2013 by Charles, Prince of Wales, in Church End, Tempsford in Bedfordshire, close to the site of former RAF Tempsford.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Clément Duhour", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "13237892", "title": "Gerard Baker", "text": " Baker was educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford, United Kingdom and holds a degree in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics (first class honors). Baker is a British citizen. He was left-of-center during his university years, and was elected as a Labour vice-president of the student union. He subsequently moved towards the right.", "score": "1.5099729" }, { "id": "27737869", "title": "Christopher Paul Baker", "text": " Christopher P. Baker (born in Pontefract, Yorkshire, England, on 15 June 1955) is a professional travel writer and photographer, adventure motorcyclist, tour leader, and Cuba expert, and the 2008 Lowell Thomas Award 'Travel Journalist of the Year.' He is a contributor to magazines and other publications worldwide, and is the author of travel guidebooks for publishers such as Dorling Kindersley, Lonely Planet, Moon Publications, and National Geographic. He is best known for his award-winning literary travelog, Mi Moto Fidel: Motorcycling Through Castro's Cuba. Baker has appeared on dozens of radio and TV outlets as a Cuba expert, including on CCTV, CNN, Fox News Channel, NBC, NPR, and Travel with Rick Steves,. He is a public speaker and has twice addressed National Geographic Live! He is currently partnered with actor-singer David Soul in producing a cinematic documentary about the restoration of Ernest Hemingway's 1955 Chrysler New Yorker convertible, in Havana. He is also well known as an adventure moto-journalist specializing in travel reports on international motorcycling for such publications as Adventure Motorcyclist, CNN Travel, Motorcyclist, National Geographic Traveler, and Robb Report.", "score": "1.5050814" }, { "id": "12939043", "title": "Nathaniel B. Baker", "text": " Baker was a co-owner of a Democratic newspaper, the New Hampshire Patriot. Originally, a Democrat, he served as Clerk of the Merrimack County Court of Common Pleas in 1845. The following year he became Merrimack County Clerk. Baker was also active in the New Hampshire Militia, serving as Quartermaster and later Adjutant of the 11th Regiment. He subsequently served as Aide-de-Camp to Governor John H. Steele with the rank of colonel. In 1851, Baker assumed the position of Chief Fire Engineer for Concord's Fire Department. He also served in the New Hampshire House of Representatives in 1850 and 1851, and was elected Speaker of the House. In 1852 he was a Presidential Elector, and cast his ballot for Franklin Pierce and William R. King. From 1854 to 1859 Baker was a trustee of Norwich University, and he received an honorary Master of Arts degree from Norwich in 1855.", "score": "1.5042682" }, { "id": "13439289", "title": "Joby Baker", "text": " Joseph N. \"Joby\" Baker (born March 26, 1934) is a Canadian-born actor and painter.", "score": "1.5028746" }, { "id": "8204965", "title": "John Holland Baker", "text": " John Holland Baker (4 December 1841 – 5 February 1930) was a New Zealand surveyor and public servant. He was born in Chilcomb, Hampshire, England on 4 December 1841. A son of the Rev. Thomas Feilding Baker, Rector of Cressingham Parish, Norfolk, and Catherine Mathias, he was educated at Yarmouth Grammar School, and in Germany, where he lived with his parents in Königswinter. He left school at 15 after he punched a master. He was sent to New Zealand when his uncle, Octavius Mathias, offered to take one of the Baker sons. He arrived in Lyttelton on the Maori during 1857. In the following year, he started an apprenticeship as ", "score": "1.5007559" }, { "id": "5915828", "title": "Christopher W. Baker", "text": " Christopher William Baker RBA (born 1956) is an English landscape painter, watercolourist, draughtsman and author from Sussex, England.", "score": "1.4973347" }, { "id": "5500662", "title": "Richard Thomas Baker", "text": " Baker was born in Woolwich, England, son of Richard Thomas Baker, a blacksmith, and his wife Sarah, née Colkett. The boy was educated at Woolwich National School and Peterborough Training Institution, later gaining science and art certificates from South Kensington Museum. He was engaged as a senior assistant-master by the School Board for London in 1875 but resigned in July 1879 to emigrate to Australia.", "score": "1.4968141" }, { "id": "27925646", "title": "Carl Baker", "text": " Baker's career was forged at Southport. Spotted playing for Prescot by Southport manager Liam Watson, Baker was quickly snapped up by the Merseyside club, and soon established himself as one of non-league's exciting talents. He was an important member of the Southport Conference North Championship winning team in the 2004–05 season. In 2005, he was a member of the Middlesex Wanderers F.C. that visited Japan. After again playing an important role in helping keep Southport in the Conference National in the 2005–06 season, Baker signed his first full-time contract, for the next season as the club turned fully professional, whilst much of the championship winning, and relegation surviving team, (fan favourites Steve Dickinson, ", "score": "1.4889368" }, { "id": "2401545", "title": "Bart Baker", "text": " Bartholomew Baker (born May 5, 1986), is an American entertainer, web-based comedian, video producer, singer, rapper, and parody artist. He is best known for making parody videos of notable songs, which he would post on his YouTube channel. He was described as one of the most prolific makers of music parodies by Billboard. Besides being active on YouTube, where he has more than 10 million subscribers, (after leaving YouTube, his subscriber count fell back down to 9.95 Million Subscribers), Baker is known for his short videos on Vine and also Live.ly, where he was once a top-earning broadcaster. His videos have been described as 'high-quality parodies that keep to the originals very well'. In 2018, Baker was signed to World Star Hip Hop and released a song called \"Popper\" under the stage name of Lil Kloroxxx and started a life as a rapper.", "score": "1.4877534" }, { "id": "3890054", "title": "Charles S.L. Baker", "text": " Baker was born into slavery on August 3, 1859, in Savannah, Missouri. His mother, Betsy Mackay, died when he was three months old, leaving him to be brought up by the wife of his owner, Sallie Mackay, and his father, Abraham Baker. He was the youngest of five children, Susie, Peter, Annie, and Ellen, all of whom were freed after the Civil War. Baker later received an education at Franklin College. His father was employed as an express agent, and once Baker turned fifteen, he became his assistant. Baker worked with wagons and linchpins, which sparked an interest in mechanical sciences.", "score": "1.4867527" }, { "id": "29453657", "title": "Frank Baker (politician)", "text": " Baker is the 12th child of John and Eileen Baker, and was raised in Saint Margaret's Parish (now St. Teresa of Calcutta) area of Dorchester. He graduated in 1986 from Don Technical High School where he has studied printing trade. Between 1987 and 2010 he worked in the printing department at the City of Boston. He is a member of the CWA/Boston Typographical Union. He is married to his wife Today and they have two children.", "score": "1.484382" }, { "id": "5915829", "title": "Christopher W. Baker", "text": " He trained at West Surrey College of Art and Design and at the University of Exeter, and has been the recipient of several awards and scholarships including a Royal Academy Landscape Scholarship and an Arts Council Grant. He has exhibited extensively in the UK and Canada. Baker has been a regular contributor to The Artist Magazine since 1987, and has contributed to art textbooks on painting technique. He played the part of an artist and painting tutor in Joanna Hogg's film Archipelago, shot on Tresco, Isles of Scilly in 2009. It was shown at the 2010 London Film Festival. and is released in the UK on 4 March 2011. He exhibited works ", "score": "1.4825153" }, { "id": "5698846", "title": "Samuel Baker", "text": " Baker lived as a reputed Victorian Nimrod and was a milestone in the history of modern hunting through his works and deeds. He was proud of his British heritage and was an advocate of the virtues of his nation, and a fighter against slavery. An acclaimed sportsman, he likely started hunting in the Scottish Highlands; his skills were renowned, and he once gave a demonstration to friends in Scotland of how he could, with dogs, successfully hunt down a stag armed only with a knife, he did the same with the large boars in the jungles of Ceylon. He hunted consistently until his last years, in Europe, Asia, Africa and North America. Baker forged his skills chasing Asian ", "score": "1.4786909" }, { "id": "6094860", "title": "Henry Baker (naturalist)", "text": " He was born in Chancery Lane, London, 8 May 1698, the son of William Baker, a clerk in chancery. In his fifteenth year he was apprenticed to John Parker, a bookseller. At the close of his indentures in 1720, Baker went on a visit to John Forster, a relative, who had a deaf-mute daughter, then eight years old. As a successful therapist of deaf people, he went on to make money, by a system that he kept secret. His work as therapist caught the attention of Daniel Defoe, whose youngest daughter Sophia he married on 30 April 1729. In 1740 he was elected fellow of the Society of Antiquaries and of the Royal Society. In 1744 he received the Copley gold medal for microscopical observations on the crystallization of saline particles. He was one of the founders of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce in 1754 (later the Society of Arts), and for some time acted as its secretary. He died in London, and was buried at St Mary le Strand.", "score": "1.4774902" }, { "id": "32639075", "title": "1905 Finsbury East by-election", "text": " The Conservatives selected Nathaniel Cohen as their candidate to defend the seat. He had contested the 1900 general election as Conservative candidate for Penryn and Falmouth. The local Liberal Association re-selected 53-year-old Allen Baker to challenge for the seat. He was a Canadian- born engineer, specialising in machinery for the confectionery and bakery industries. He was a Quaker. Baker followed his father's professional footsteps and entered the family engineering business. In 1879 they set up business in Finsbury. As Quakers, the Baker family tried to run a model business taking a paternal interest in the welfare of their workforce and introducing schemes such as shorter working days, encouraging employees to participate in health and insurance plans and fostering a relaxed approach on the shop floor, perhaps to the detriment of profits. Baker and Sons also had connections to the motor car industry and in around 1902, the company held an agency for the American car manufacturers Stevens-Duryea. Baker had represented East Finsbury on the London County Council (LCC) as a Progressive since 1895. During his time on the LCC he acted as Chairman of the Highways Committee.", "score": "1.4758768" } ]
In what city was Belarmino Mario Chipongue born?
[ "Lubango" ]
place of birth
Mário Belarmino
2,197,943
50
[ { "id": "28483620", "title": "Mário Belarmino", "text": " Belarmino Mário Chipongue (born 22 September 1974 in Lubango) is a former Angolan basketball player. Chipongue, a forward, was part of the Angola national basketball team at the 2000 Summer Olympics and the 2002 FIBA World Championship.", "score": "2.014904" }, { "id": "29065670", "title": "Mario Balotelli", "text": " Balotelli was born Mario Barwuah in Palermo, Sicily to Ghanaian immigrants. The family moved to Bagnolo Mella in the province of Brescia, Lombardy, when he was two. In 1993, when he was three, he was placed in foster care to the Balotelli family when his own family was unable to pay for his health care needs. His foster parents are Silvia, the Jewish daughter of Holocaust survivors, and Francesco Balotelli. They lived in the town of Concesio, Brescia, in northern Italy. At first, he stayed with the Balotelli family during the weekdays and returned to his biological parents on weekends. He later was permanently fostered by ", "score": "1.5566187" }, { "id": "2942135", "title": "Mario Schilling", "text": " Schilling was born on March 9, 1969 in Santiago, to his parents Mario Fernando Schilling Besoaín and María Bernardita Fuenzalida Rioseco. He studied at the Verbo Divino school in Santiago and at the Sagrados Corazones, Padres Franceses and Saint Paul's School, both in Viña del Mar. Later, he studied Journalism at the University of Las Condes (now Universidad del Desarrollo de Santiago) and Law at the Major University. In regards to his legal education, he studied at the Adolfo Ibáñez University a master's degree in Tributary Management. He graduated from the University of Chile with a master's degree in Philosophy. He submitted ", "score": "1.5389149" }, { "id": "10142155", "title": "Mario Taracena", "text": " Taracena was born on 6 May 1957 in Guatemala City. He grew up in an economically well-off family. Both his father and grandfathers were involved in politics. His father was a founding member of the National Liberation Movement, as an opponent of Miguel Ydígoras Fuentes, he was exiled twice. Mario Taracena followed a part of his education at the and later obtained a degree at the Faculty of Economics of the Rafael Landívar University.", "score": "1.5295912" }, { "id": "1912143", "title": "Mario A. Murillo", "text": " Mario A. Murillo is a U.S.-born journalist, author, and teacher from New York City. He has worked in commercial, public, and community radio since 1986. His experience includes previously hosting and producing Wakeup Call on WBAI, a Pacifica-owned station in New York. Professor of Communication and Latin American Studies at Hofstra University, Murillo is also the author of Colombia and the United States: War, Unrest, and Destabilization and Islands of Resistance: Puerto Rico, Vieques and U.S. Policy. His father was born in Subachoque, Cundinamarca, outside of Bogotá, Colombia, and his mother was from Moca, Puerto Rico. Mario was born in New York City. He is Professor of Communication and Latin ", "score": "1.5260653" }, { "id": null, "title": "Mário Belarmino", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Angola men's national under-18 and under-19 basketball team ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Basketball at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's team rosters ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "14499694", "title": "Mario Iriarte", "text": "To Cry\") under the label Palma Records. Iriarte reportedly collaborated with Chilean New Wave artist Luis Dimas during the album production. Mario Iriarte Mario Antonio Iriarte Donoso (born August 8, 1955) is a Chilean musician, singer, songwriter and teacher, originary from Santa Cruz. Iriarte completed his Musical Arts studies in the University of Chile in 1986. He has since worked since as a teacher in Liceo Santa Cruz. In 2004 and 2008, he was part of the jury of the National Competition of Unpublished Cueca Compositions in Santa Cruz (). Iriarte is also a member of the Sociedad Chilena del", "score": "1.4823362" }, { "id": "10934878", "title": "Mario Bencomo", "text": "Mario Bencomo Mario Bencomo b.1953, Cuba, is an artist. As an unaccompanied minor he was sent by his parents to live in Spain. At the age of 14, he left Madrid for the U.S., arriving by himself in New York City in 1968. He often returns to Europe, and for many years now for regular stays in Montreal, Canada. In 1996 he returns to Cuba for the first time, three decades after he left, visiting Cuba periodically since then. An American citizen, he is based in Miami. His work is elegiac in concept; informed by myth, the ambiguity of form", "score": "1.4807273" }, { "id": "2138531", "title": "Mario Polar Ugarteche", "text": " He was born to Miguel Ángel Polar Vargas and Esther Ugarteche. He studied at the National College of American Independence and at the Arévalo Institute in his hometown, completing his secondary studies with honors. His higher studies were completed at the National University of Saint Augustine in Arequipa, where he graduated with a doctorate in Philosophy and Letters. From a very young age he devoted himself to teaching, teaching at various secondary schools in Arequipa (including the Colegio de la Independencia) and, later, at the Faculty of Letters and the Faculty of Economic Sciences of the Universidad San Agustín. He played an important role in the birth of the National Democratic ", "score": "1.5217618" }, { "id": "26047999", "title": "Mário Bastos", "text": " He was born in 1986 in Luanda, Angola.", "score": "1.5185046" }, { "id": "29881514", "title": "Mario Desbordes", "text": " Born in 1968, Desbordes spent part of his childhood in Los Andes, his native town. Then, he moved to Santiago, Chile's capital city, where he lived in La Cisterna commune until 1986. He completed his elementary school education at E–556 public school of that commune, and finished the high school at A–109 Lycée in El Bosque commune.", "score": "1.5150362" }, { "id": "5198982", "title": "Mario Montez", "text": " Montez was born René Rivera in Ponce, Puerto Rico, in 1935. When he was 8, the family moved to East Harlem where he grew up. In New York, he studied print and graphic arts but worked in clerical jobs.", "score": "1.509652" }, { "id": "12428960", "title": "Mario O'Hara", "text": " He was born in Zamboanga City on April 20, 1946. His mother, Basilisa Herrero, was a native of Ozamiz in Misamis Occidental and had Spanish ancestry. His father, Jaime O'Hara was the son of Irish-American Thomasite, and a former member of the University of the Philippines Dramatic club. Mario had eight brothers and three sisters. Because Jaime was the son of an American citizen, Mario's family was eligible to apply for US citizenship; however, Mario rejected any such offers. From Zamboanga City, the O'Haras moved to a middle-class suburb in Pasay; behind their house was a slum area, and Mario claimed that some of his works were inspired by real-life incidents that happened there. He took up Chemical Engineering at the Adamson University, simultaneously auditioning for a radio show sponsored by Procter and Gamble. At the age of 17, Mario stopped attending classes in 1963 to focus on his work in radio drama with the Manila Broadcasting Company (MBC) and DZRH.", "score": "1.5013713" }, { "id": "6302013", "title": "Mário Lúcio", "text": " He was born Lúcio Matias de Sousa Mendes in the town of Tarrafal in the island of Santiago's north in the final decade of Portuguese rule, he is a descendant of Jorge and Garda Brito. Mário Lúcio lost his father when he was 12. At age 15, he and his seven siblings lost his mother. He lived in the barrack buildings of the Cape Verdean forces in his hometown under the care of the military. After finishing the secondary school, he received a state scholarship and attended the high school, the Instituto Superior de Educação (ISE, now part of the University of Cape Verde and is known as the Faculties of Science and Technology and Social Sciences, Humanities and Arts) in the capital city of Praia to study. In 1984, he received a scholarship by the Cuban government in Havana where he studied and graduated six years later. He returned to his country where he practiced law. Between 1996 and 2001, he was member of the Cape Verdean parliament.", "score": "1.4985142" }, { "id": "13378606", "title": "Billo Frómeta", "text": " Luis María Frómeta Pereira was born in Pimentel, Duarte Province, Dominican Republic, on November 15, 1915. He would move with his family to San Francisco de Macorís some years later. The school he attended there had compulsory music lessons, so he learned much of his musical training there. In 1930, at the age of 15, he founded and was the resident conductor of the Banda del Cuerpo de Bomberos de Ciudad Trujillo (Ciudad Trujillo's Fire Brigade's Band). He also founded the Orquesta Sinfónica de Santo Domingo during this time. In 1933, he moved back to Santo Domingo. During these years, he would meet and work with some of his closest friends and associates: Freddy Coronado, Ernesto Chapuseaux and Simó Damirón, whom he already knew from school. The Conjunto Tropical and the Santo Domingo Jazz Band were formed then, as well. Frómeta then began studying Pre-Medicine in the Universidad de Santo Domingo and had to abandon all musical activity during this time. However, he eventually dropped out on his third year to dedicate himself fully to music.", "score": "1.4975812" }, { "id": "27825949", "title": "Mario Azevedo", "text": " Mario Joaquim Azevedo (born 1940) is a Mozambican novelist, historian, professor, and epidemiologist. A refugee, Azevedo, esteemed as one of the most remarkable Mozambican voices during the years of the War of Independence from Portugal, emigrated from his native country to the United States, where he received his B.A. from The Catholic University of America, his M.A., his Ph.D. from Duke University, from American University, and his M.P.H from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In 1980 he became Associate Professor of History at Jackson State University; he passed in 1986 to the UNC Charlotte, where he has become Frank Porter Graham Professor and Chair of the Department of African-American and African Studies. Azevedo was co-coordinator of the Southeastern Regional Seminar in Africa Studies from 1987 to 1989.", "score": "1.4965894" }, { "id": "11725714", "title": "Ricardo Estanislao Zulueta", "text": " Zulueta was born in Havana, Cuba and grew up in Miami, Florida. Since 1985 he has lived/worked in New York City and Miami. Zulueta studied Visual Art, Museum Studies, and Arts Policy at graduate school at New York University where he was selected to be the distinguished Helbein Scholar. Dr. Zulueta earned a M.F.A. in Visual Arts and a Ph.D. in Cinema and Interactive Media Studies, both with Academic Merit Honors at the University of Miami where he was named a McKnight Doctoral Fellow.", "score": "1.4944429" }, { "id": "15454610", "title": "Vicente Ndongo", "text": " Ndongo was born in Malabo. He was moved to Spain at 2. He is based in Bilbao.", "score": "1.4928105" }, { "id": "4568996", "title": "Mario-Philippe Losembe", "text": " Mario-Philippe Losembe Batwanyele was born as Mario-Philippe Cardoso on 29 September 1933 in Stanleyville, Belgian Congo to a Portuguese father and Lokele mother who originated from the Yaokandja sector of the Isangi Territory. He earned his secondary education at St. Joseph's Institute in Léopoldville, graduating in late 1953. The following September he enrolled in the Université catholique de Louvain's Institute of Applied Psychology and Pedagogy. In 1958 he earned a degree in psychology and pedagogy. Losembe subsequently became a research assistant at Lovanium University. He was selected by Patrice Lumumba to lead the Mouvement National Congolais delegation to the economic portion of the Belgo-Congolese Round Table Conference in Brussels from 26 April to 16 May 1960. On his initiative the delegations formed a \"Front National\" to develop a unified negotiating position. Following the independence of the Congo, Losembe served as secretary-general of the Ministry of Education, though he ", "score": "1.491893" }, { "id": "27775117", "title": "Mario Elie", "text": " Elie, who is of Haitian heritage, was born and raised in the Manhattan borough of New York City. He was named \"Mario\" for opera singer Mario Lanza. Elie attended Power Memorial Academy. After being cut from the freshman basketball team, Elie made the junior varsity team the following season; one of his teammates was future NBA star Chris Mullin.", "score": "1.4913034" }, { "id": "8526063", "title": "Belarmino Salgado", "text": " Belarmino Salgado Martínez (born September 27, 1966) is a retired male judoka from Cuba. He competed for his native country at the 1992 Summer Olympics in the Men's Half-Heavyweight (&ndash; 95 kg) division, and won a total number of three medals during his career at the Pan American Games (1987, 1991 and 1995).", "score": "1.489553" }, { "id": "7791736", "title": "Rene Cayetano", "text": " Cayetano was born Renato Luna Cayetano on December 12, 1934, in San Carlos, Pangasinan, Philippines. He was the eldest son of mechanic Pedro Santiago Cayetano of Marilao, Bulacan and public school teacher Julianna Cabrera of Pateros, Rizal. He graduated from Pateros Elementary School and Rizal High School. He earned his bachelor's degree at the University of the Philippines Diliman and three graduate degrees - Master of Public Administration, Master of Laws, and Doctor of Laws at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Mich.", "score": "1.4881477" }, { "id": "26110656", "title": "Fermín Tangüis", "text": " Tangüis' father, Henri Tangüis, emigrated from France to San Juan, Puerto Rico where he met and married a young Spanish Puerto Rican girl by the name of Justa Uncal. Tangüis was born in San Juan, the capital of Puerto Rico, and there he received his primary and secondary education. Tangüis moved to Cuba to pursue a university degree; however when the Ten Years' War (1868–1878) broke out in that island, he decided that it would be best to move to South America. He moved to Lima, Peru in 1873, when he was 22 years old and worked as a mercantile accountant. Tangüis went on to work in the mines of Castrovirreyna and later established his own businesses in Ayacucho and in Huancavelica. In July 1884, he married Isabel Novoa and in 1890, at the age of 39, he purchased land in Valle de Pisco and established a plantation dedicated to cultivation of cotton.", "score": "1.4848692" } ]
In what city was Charles Hammock born?
[ "Philadelphia", "Philly", "City of Brotherly Love", "Cradle of Liberty", "Philadelphia, Pennsylvania", "City of Philadelphia", "Philadelphia, PA" ]
place of birth
Charles Hammock
3,689,273
45
[ { "id": "13031174", "title": "Cicero C. Hammock", "text": " Born in Walton County, Hammock served in the United States Army during the Mexican–American War, where he served with another future mayor, Captain Allison Nelson. After the war, he moved to Oglethorpe County, Georgia where he married, but soon after moved to Atlanta. When the American Civil War began, he entered the Confederate States Army as a commissioned officer. After the war, he returned to Atlanta and began working as a merchant with the firm Langston, Crane & Hammock and later he worked the real estate trade with a prominent office on Whitehall St at Five Points. During his first reconstruction-era term as mayor he inaugurated the city's waterworks system and his second term was the first two-year term after Atlanta adopted a new city charter. He served as president of the city water commission from the mid-1880s until his death.", "score": "1.6331973" }, { "id": "28109648", "title": "Charles Hammock", "text": " Charles Paul Hammock (August 24, 1941 – February 15, 2014) was a former Democratic member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Hammock graduated from Roman Catholic High School in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He them received his bachelor's degree in economics from Villanova University. He died on February 15, 2014.", "score": "1.625759" }, { "id": "31916775", "title": "Thomas Hammock", "text": " A native of Jersey City, New Jersey, Hammock was born on July 7, 1981. He attended Bishop Luers High School in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Hammock is a graduate of NIU and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Hammock is married with one daughter and an infant son.", "score": "1.612197" }, { "id": "13031173", "title": "Cicero C. Hammock", "text": " Cicero C. Hammock (1823 – December 15, 1890) was the 22nd and 24th Mayor of Atlanta, Georgia, during the Reconstruction era.", "score": "1.4923178" }, { "id": "6883833", "title": "Charles S. Trimmier", "text": " Charles Trimmier was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to the former Elma Bross, and her steamfitter husband Buford Trimmier, who had been born in North Carolina. His eldest of three brothers, John Alden Trimmier, had been born 11 years earlier in Ohio, and his eldest of several sisters had been born in West Virginia, as had their mother. By 1930, his mother had moved with four daughters and two sons to Chicago, Illinois, where his 20-year-old daughter Helen supported them by working as a clerk at Bell Telephone company. He married Lucille Elizabeth Anderson, who was active in several clubs in Mobile and survived him by four decades (d. 2007). They had a son, Charles S. Trimmier Jr., who survived them.", "score": "1.4610851" }, { "id": null, "title": "Hammock (disambiguation)", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Charles Hammock", "text": "Charles Hammock\n\nCharles Paul Hammock (August 24, 1941 – February 15, 2014) was a former Democratic member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives.\n\nHe was also active in the Black Catholic Movement and served for a time as president of the board of directors for the National Office for Black Catholics. He was one of five African-American Catholics to take their grievances against US Catholic racism to the Vatican in a bid to meet with Pope Paul VI. Their efforts were ultimately unsuccessful.\n\nHammock graduated from Roman Catholic High School in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He them received his bachelor's degree in economics from Villanova University.\n\nHe died on February 15, 2014.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Christina Koch", "text": "Christina Koch\n\nChristina Hammock Koch ( ; born January 29, 1979) is an American engineer and NASA astronaut of the class of 2013. She received Bachelor of Science degrees in electrical engineering and physics and a Master of Science in electrical engineering at North Carolina State University.\n\nOn March 14, 2019, Koch launched to the International Space Station as a Flight Engineer on Expedition 59, 60 and 61. On October 18, 2019, she and Jessica Meir were the first women to participate in an all-female spacewalk to replace a down power control unit located outside of the International Space Station. On December 28, 2019, Koch broke the record for longest continuous time in space by a woman. She returned from space on February 6, 2020.\n\nKoch was included in \"Time\"s 100 Most Influential People of 2020.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings", "text": "Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings\n\nMarjorie Kinnan Rawlings (August 8, 1896 – December 14, 1953) was an American writer who lived in rural Florida and wrote novels with rural themes and settings. Her best known work, \"The Yearling\", about a boy who adopts an orphaned fawn, won a Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 1939 and was later made into a movie of the same name. The book was written before the concept of young adult fiction, but is now commonly included in teen-reading lists.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ezzard Charles", "text": "Ezzard Charles\n\nEzzard Mack Charles (July 7, 1921 – May 28, 1975), known as the Cincinnati Cobra, was an American professional boxer and World Heavyweight Champion. Known for his slick defense and precision, he is often considered the greatest light heavyweight boxer of all time. Charles defeated numerous Hall of Fame fighters in three different weight classes. Charles retired with a record of 95 wins, 25 losses and 1 draw. He was posthumously inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in the inaugural class of 1990.", "score": null }, { "id": "26349830", "title": "Ali Hammoud", "text": " Hammoud was born in Homs into an Alawite family in 1944.", "score": "1.4422848" }, { "id": "12478687", "title": "Charles Lux", "text": " Lux was born to Nicolas Lux and Marie Anne (Linck) in the commune of Hatten, in Alsace on the Rhine between Strasbourg and Karlsruhe. While yet a boy, he emigrated to New York City, where he found employment as a delivery boy for a retail butcher in Fulton Market. He eventually became a butchers' helper, making six dollars per month. He left New York for San Francisco in 1849; by 1853 he had opened his own S.F. retail butcher shop at 931 Washington Street. In 1856, he bought 1,500 acres of land south of San Bruno Mountain from the children of Jose Antonio Sanchez (a former alcalde of ", "score": "1.4393288" }, { "id": "245453", "title": "Charles Renken", "text": " He was born as Charles Bimbe in the suburbs of Lusaka, Zambia. He moved to the United States in 2003 to live with the Renken family in Edwardsville, Illinois, and was officially adopted by the Renkens in 2005. Renken grew up in the soccer hotbed of Saint Louis, where he played on a number of local youth teams. As a 10-year-old, he dominated his local under-14 league.", "score": "1.4370558" }, { "id": "2169588", "title": "Charles Domingo", "text": " Charles Vincente Domingo was a Kunda born around 1875 in the lower Shire River valley in Mozambique. As a young child, he lived in Quelimane with his father, who was employed there as a cook by the African Lakes Company. He was found in Quelimane in 1881, apparently after his father had died, by the South African Presbyterian evangelist, William Koyi, who was attached to the Livingstonia mission and was returning there from South Africa. Koyi took the boy to the mission and acted as guardian until his death in 1884. Domingo then became a household servant of Dr Robert Laws at Livingstonia, studying ", "score": "1.4341346" }, { "id": "9647987", "title": "Jacqueline Charles", "text": " Charles was born on Grand Turk Island of the Turks and Caicos. She was raised an only child of a Haitian mother and a Cuban stepfather and moved to the United States at the age of seven, where they settled in Miami. She began her career in journalism in 1986 as a 14-year-old high school intern at the Miami Herald. She is a graduate of Miami Jackson High School, Booker T. Washington Junior High and Dunbar Elementary in Overtown, and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's School of Journalism and Mass Communication in 1994. Before assuming the role on foreign issues, Charles' coverage was local, mainly on the impoverished areas of Miami.", "score": "1.4331884" }, { "id": "32729809", "title": "Antonio Frilli", "text": " two years after Frilli's death, his son Umberto took part in the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis, Missouri, where one of his father's works – a sculpture on a \"Woman on a Hammock\" in white Carrara marble – won the Grand Prize and 6 gold medals. In 1999, the same masterpiece was sold by Sotheby's with an auction estimate of $800,000. More recently, Frilli's 1892 sculpture \"Sweet Dreams\", which features a life-sized reclining nude in a hammock and which was exhibited at Panama-Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco in 1915, was sold at a Los Angeles auction house. A 2013 novel by Gary Rinehart, Nude Sleeping in a Hammock, is a fictionalized account of the statue's owners since 1892 and how the sculpture affected their fortunes.", "score": "1.4325299" }, { "id": "33146702", "title": "Charles Gillam Sr.", "text": " Charles Gillam Sr. (born 1945) is a self-taught woodcarver and mixed-media artist from New Orleans. He is the founder and director of the Algiers Folk Art Zone & Blues Museum in New Orleans.", "score": "1.4248781" }, { "id": "28731159", "title": "Charles Frohman", "text": " Charles Frohman was born to a Jewish family in Sandusky, Ohio, the youngest of three Frohman brothers, including Daniel and Gustave. The year of his birth date is generally erroneously reported as 1860, and his birthday is shown as July 16 on his tombstone, but the correct date is July 15, 1856. In 1864, Frohman's family moved to New York City. At the age of twelve, Frohman started to work at night in the office of the New York Tribune, attending school by day. In 1874, he began work for the Daily Graphic and at night sold tickets at Hooley's Theatre, ", "score": "1.4218657" }, { "id": "13884319", "title": "Charles Zadok", "text": " Zadok was born on August 11, 1896 in Thessaloniki, Greece. In 1922, Zadok, who was Portuguese and 25 years old, arrived in Ellis Island, after having lived in Paris, France, where he was a merchant, and the son of Mr Zadok of 38 N. D. de Lorette, Paris.", "score": "1.4207311" }, { "id": "25962519", "title": "John Hambrock", "text": " John Hambrock was born and raised in Fort Wayne, Indiana. The youngest of 3 boys from a working class household, he would call Ft. Wayne his home until leaving for college at the age of 18. Hambrock did not have a career as a cartoonist in mind, initially during his early years it was marine biology. While he was interested in science, it was the arts in which he finally majored.", "score": "1.420074" }, { "id": "10760323", "title": "Donald &quot;Isa&quot; Hamm Bryant", "text": " Donald \"Isa\" Hamm Bryant (January 8, 1943 – 2007) was an artist, an author, a historian and activist in Florida and California. He founded the Florida Black Historical Research Project and worked to preserve the history of Black Seminoles. Bryant was born January 8, 1943, to Florence and Charlie Long Bryant in Ybor City. He was raised by his aunt, Othella Hamm, in West Palm Beach. He married twice and had four sons. In the 1990s he returned to West Palm Beach to care for his father, who taught him about his great-great-grandfather, a Seminole. Bryant helped organize ceremonies at Riverbend Regional Park in Jupiter, Florida to commemorate the Battle of the Loxahatchee, where Florida's Trail of Tears began after the battle between 500 and 700 Seminoles and approximately 1,700 U.S. soldiers. He also helped write the book We R Florida about Seminole life in Palm Beach County. He died in San Francisco after a heart attack at age 64.", "score": "1.4199185" }, { "id": "29825371", "title": "Charles Loloma", "text": " He was born near Hotevilla, Hopi Third Mesa, to Rex Loloma and Rachel Kuyiyesva Loloma, to the Badger clan (his mother's clan). He attended Phoenix Indian High School in Arizona where he began his artistic career as a muralist and painter when he was asked by Fred Kabotie to assist in the reproduction of murals from the Awatovi site on the Hopi reservation for New York's Museum of Modern Art. Loloma later worked with Kabotie and René d'Harnoncourt on murals in the Federal Building on Treasure Island in San Francisco Bay for the Golden Gate International Exposition in 1939. Charles married Otellie Pasiyava, a Hopi potter from Second Mesa, Arizona. ", "score": "1.4189775" }, { "id": "15960228", "title": "Charles Melville Hays", "text": " Charles Melville Hays was born in Rock Island, Illinois, on May 16, 1856. His family moved to St. Louis, Missouri, when he was a child.", "score": "1.4188013" }, { "id": "29425741", "title": "Charles Prudhomme", "text": " Charles Prudhomme, M.D. (1908–1988), an African-American physician and psychoanalyst, entered the field of psychiatry in the 1930s. He served as the vice-president of the American Psychiatric Association in 1970-1971, the first African-American to gain elected office in the organization. Prudhomme was born in Opelousas, Louisiana. When Charles was three years old, his father developed tuberculosis and the family moved to Denver, Colorado. Along the way, the family stopped in Kansas City, Missouri where Charles and his mother stayed while his father continued to Denver. Charles received his schooling in Kansas City, became a baseball player, and graduated from high school, second in his class. Prudhomme entered the University of Kansas but remained only a short time. Due to segregation laws, he was not allowed ", "score": "1.414711" }, { "id": "11919721", "title": "Charles Bock", "text": " Bock was born and raised in Las Vegas, which served as the setting for Beautiful Children. He comes from a family of pawnbrokers who've operated pawn shops in Downtown Las Vegas for more than thirty years. On his website, he reflects upon his upbringing as a source of inspiration for the novel: \"'Sometimes, when my siblings and I were little, my parents, for various reasons, used to have us stay in the back of the shop. This would be after school or during summer vacation, when there wasn’t summer camp, or they didn’t have anybody to watch over us and we ", "score": "1.4142644" } ]
In what city was Izhar Elias born?
[ "Amsterdam", "Mokum", "Amsterdam, NL", "Amsterdam, Netherlands", "A'dam" ]
place of birth
Izhar Elias
3,119,947
74
[ { "id": "28828186", "title": "Izhar Elias", "text": " Izhar Elias (born in Amsterdam, 1977) was the first guitarist to win the Dutch Music Prize. He is specialised in new music for guitar, early and chamber music. By using historical methods and original instruments, Elias has been able to recreate a musical language of the Baroque, Classic and Romantic periods. The Prince Bernard Cultural Foundation made it possible for Izhar to own a 1812 unique Guadagnini guitar. His collaboration with composers, choreographers and film makers has led to over 30 premieres and different multimedia projects. In 2014 Izhar was the feature of a documentary, where he played a classical piece written by death metal guitarist Florian Magnus Maier.", "score": "1.8065839" }, { "id": "28828188", "title": "Izhar Elias", "text": " Izhar has given concerts, lectures and masterclasses in Europa, south-east Asia, Australia and Russia. He has been the soloist in concertos with orchestras such as Residentie Orchestra, the Netherlands Chamber Orchestra, the Netherlands Symphony Orchestra, Radio Filharmonisch Orkest and Combattimento Consort.", "score": "1.7901032" }, { "id": "28828190", "title": "Izhar Elias", "text": " Besides the Dutch Music Prize, Izhar has won many national and international competitions.", "score": "1.7557111" }, { "id": "16238876", "title": "Arieh Elias", "text": " Arieh Elias was born in Baghdad. In 1941, he was the first Jew to be accepted to the drama faculty of Baghdad's Academy of Fine Arts. Elias immigrated to Mandatory Palestine in 1947. He joined the Palmach and fought in the War of Independence. At first he had trouble finding work as an actor due to his pronounced Arabic accent, but his popularity grew after playing the lead in the Israeli film HaYeled Me'ever LaRechov (The Boy Across The Street) in 1965.", "score": "1.6962333" }, { "id": "6136690", "title": "Elias Moadab", "text": " Ilya Mohadab Sasson (إلياس مؤدب) commonly known as Elias Moadab (6 February 1916 – 28 May 1952) was an Egyptian comedy actor, born to a Jewish Syrian father and Jewish Egyptian mother from the city of Tanta. He graduated from the Lycee school in 1923 and lived in the old Jewish quarter of Cairo. Elias began his artistic career as a singer (Monologist) in the famous nightclub «Alooberg» where he was introduced to Bishara Wakim and Ismail Yasin, they opened the doors for him to work in the films. Elias met the famous dancer Beba Izz Al-Din, which also he worked with her for a period. He worked also in several nightclubs, including (Al Ariozna) and (Helmia Palace).", "score": "1.6284192" }, { "id": null, "title": "Izhar Elias", "text": "Izhar Elias\n\nIzhar Elias (born in Amsterdam, 1977) was the first guitarist to win the Dutch Music Prize. He is specialised in new music for guitar, early and chamber music. By using historical methods and original instruments, Elias has been able to recreate a musical language of the Baroque, Classic and Romantic periods. The Prince Bernard Cultural Foundation made it possible for Izhar to own a 1812 unique Guadagnini guitar. His collaboration with composers, choreographers and film makers has led to over 30 premieres and different multimedia projects.\n\nIn 2014 Izhar was the feature of a documentary, where he played a classical piece written by death metal guitarist Florian Magnus Maier.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Erik Bosgraaf", "text": "Erik Bosgraaf\n\nErik Bosgraaf (born 9 May 1980) is a Dutch recorder player and musicologist.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Lex Eisenhardt", "text": "Lex Eisenhardt\n\nLex Eisenhardt (born 1952, in Netherlands) is a performer and recording artist on early plucked instruments, such as the vihuela, the baroque guitar, and the 19th-century Romantic guitar. He studied lute and guitar at the Utrecht Conservatory. In 1981 he was appointed professor of guitar and early plucked instruments at the Sweelinck Conservatorium (later the Conservatorium of Amsterdam). In the forefront of the Historically Informed Performance (HIP) on the guitar, Eisenhardt was the first to make several gramophone recordings (in 1981 and 1984) with music by the Catalan composer Fernando Sor on a period instrument from the early 19th century. He has given solo recitals and lectures in many European countries, Australia, and the United States. Well-known guitarists such as Johannes Moller and Izhar Elias studied with him.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Bram van Sambeek", "text": "Bram van Sambeek\n\nBram van Sambeek (born 1980) is a Dutch bassoon soloist and teacher. \n\nHe was principal bassoonist in the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra (2002–2011) and played as a regular guest principal in the London Symphony Orchestra and Mahler Chamber Orchestra. He has performed as a soloist with many orchestras like the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra, Lahti Symphony Orchestra, and the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra, and has an ongoing cooperation with BIS Records...\n\nVan Sambeek held a professorship at the Hochschule für Musik und Tanz Köln from 2017 until 2021. Since 2019 he teaches exclusively at the Royal Conservatory of The Hague.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Florian Magnus Maier", "text": "Florian Magnus Maier\n\nFlorian Magnus Maier (born 1973), also known as Morean, is a German classical composer, guitarist, producer and vocalist of the bands Alkaloid, Dark Fortress, and Noneuclid. Although born in Munich, he has resided in the Netherlands for over 20 years, his primary occupation being a composer and guitar player within both the contemporary classical and heavy metal communities. Although mostly recognized within the metal community for his vocalist duties with black metal band Dark Fortress, Maier is also a vocalist and guitarist for progressive metal outfits Alkaloid and Noneuclid. Being a classical composer, Maier has also collaborated with Devin Townsend and Paradise Lost on orchestrations.\n\nIn 2014, the Dutch Public Broadcasting channel released a documentary about the life and work of Maier, highlighting his most famous classical piece, Schattenspiel.\n\nAfter the departure of Erick Rutan from Morbid Angel, Maier auditioned for the lead guitarist role, and was one of the 3 runners-up to take the position, eventually delegated to Destructhor of Zyklon.", "score": null }, { "id": "3275248", "title": "Izhar Cohen", "text": " Izhar Cohen was born in Tel Aviv, Israel, and raised in Givatayim, to a family of singers of Yemenite-Jewish descent – Shlomo Cohen, Sarah Cohen, and Hofni, Pini, and Vardina Cohen.", "score": "1.6074123" }, { "id": "26341790", "title": "Elias Farah", "text": " Elias Farah (1927– December 6th, 2013) was a Syrian writer and thinker born in the city of Jisr al-Shughur. He came from a Christian Orthodox family and spent much of his early life in Aleppo. Upon graduating with a degree in literature from Syrian University, he started his teaching career in Aleppo. Later on, Farah pursued his graduate studies at the University of Geneva in Switzerland, where he studied under professor Jean Piaget and earned a doctorate in education and psychology in 1964. In 1947, he became one of the founding members of the Syrian Ba'ath Party. He was also was ", "score": "1.5990539" }, { "id": "29281038", "title": "Isaak Elias", "text": " Isaak Elias (April 27, 1912 &ndash; May 1, 1998 ) was an educator, merchant and political figure in Saskatchewan. He represented Rosthern from 1956 to 1960 in the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan as a Social Credit member. He was born in Rosthern, Saskatchewan. He taught in rural public schools. In 1934, Elias married Annie Epp. In 1946, he retired from teaching due to poor health and entered the retail business. He was manager for the Hepburn Co-operative Association, then managed a store in Langham and later worked in the bankruptcy department of Touche Ross & Company. Elias also served on the local school board. In 1953, he was an unsuccessful candidate for the Rosthern seat in the Canadian House of Commons.", "score": "1.5822301" }, { "id": "12250752", "title": "Jalil Elías", "text": " Born in Argentina, Elías is of Syrian descent.", "score": "1.5725901" }, { "id": "10459020", "title": "Carmel Eliash", "text": " Edward (later Carmel) Eliash was born in Baghdad. His father was an Austrian doctor who arrived in Iraq with a League of Nations delegation. In 1949, he joined an underground Zionist movement, and made Aliyah to Israel illegally through Iran. He joined Kibbutz Ramat David and became a member of the United Workers Party (Mapam). In 1950, he served as the representative of the Kibbutz Movement at the \"Sha'ar Ha-'aliyah\" (\"The Gate of Aliyah\") immigration camp. Afterwards he served as the representative in Atlit. In 1952, he was drafted into the Israeli Defense Forces and stationed at a base close to Tirat Carmel, then a major absorption center for immigrants from Iraq, Morocco and Romania. Eliash met his future wife Badria in Tirat Carmel and decided to settle there permanently. Upon his release from the army he worked in security at a local factory and then moved to Autocars Co., one of the founding car industries in Israel, which manufactured the Susita, Carmel and Sabra. He persuaded the company owner Yitzhak Shovinsky to build a factory in Tirat Carmel, which became an important source of employment for the local inhabitants.", "score": "1.5704007" }, { "id": "28828187", "title": "Izhar Elias", "text": " Izhar has studied early 19th-century performance practice with Carlo Barone and learned the baroque guitar from amongst others Adrián Rodriguez van der Spoel and William Carter. Izhar has studied with Zoran Dukic, Kees Hendrikse, Ton Terra and the Groningen Guitar Duo.", "score": "1.5703163" }, { "id": "26182274", "title": "The Shadow (rapper)", "text": " Yoav Eliasi was born in Safed, Israel. His parents are of both Ashkenazi Jewish (Romanian-Jewish) and Sephardic Jewish (Persian-Jewish) descent. His family relocated to Tel Aviv two years later. By his teenage years he had formed a deep bond with Kobi \"Subliminal\" Shimoni, and the two began performing together at hip-hop shows. After finishing his mandatory military service in the IDF, he decided to stay on. This is where his rap name allegedly derives from. The official TACT Records profile says that Yoav Eliasi was in an elite undercover unit where he could not show his face, though in an interview with Yehoram Gaon on Channel 1, Eliasi claims that he was a M'faked Mishma'at (\"Discipline Officer\"). He was featured with Kobi \"Subliminal\" Shimoni and their colleague, Tamer Nafar in the documentary Channels of Rage. In July 2014, Eliasi was a central organiser of a right-wing confrontation on a demonstration by Israeli left-wing anti-war protesters opposing Operation Protective Edge against Gaza. An editorial in the left-leaning Haaretz described him as \"the dangerous product of incessant incitement by extreme right-wing elements.\" In 2014, he officiated a wedding ceremony in Israel of two gay men.", "score": "1.5567356" }, { "id": "28828191", "title": "Izhar Elias", "text": " In September 2004 Izhar released his debut album ‘Omaggio a Guadagnini’. In 2007 the CD/DVD 'Big Eye' was released together with Erik Bosgraaf, including contemporary music and experimental films. In June 2009 Izhar released the world premiere recording of themes from Rossini’s opera Semiramide, as transcribed by Mauro Giuliani. His album ‘Hommage a Debussy’ was released in November 2011. In September 2012 Cordevento released their debut album ‘La Monarcha’. In September 2013 his album with early 19th-century transcriptions of works by Beethoven has been released.", "score": "1.553441" }, { "id": "6388927", "title": "Elias Karam", "text": " Elias was born Syria in the Northeastern governorate of Al-Hasakah. He learned playing Oud from his father and was inspired by Wadih El Safi at a young age, prompting him to write his first song at 16. After turning professional at the age of 20, Elias started composing music. His wrote the song ‘Amari, Tarab ya kalbi and Koullon ‘anak saalouni. Elias has toured all over the Arab world, Canada, United States, and a number of European countries. He also appeared in some TV series in Syria.", "score": "1.549492" }, { "id": "6388926", "title": "Elias Karam", "text": " Elias Karam (الياس كرم) (born 1960) is an Assyrian singer from Syria, born in the city of Al-Hasakah in the Northeastern governorate of Al-Hasakah.", "score": "1.5487192" }, { "id": "30221670", "title": "Akhteruzzaman Elias", "text": " Elias started his career as a lecturer at Jagannath College and worked there till 1983. He also worked subsequently as Deputy Director, Directorate of Primary Education, Vice-Principal of Music College, and Professor and Head of the Department of Bengali at Dhaka College.", "score": "1.5438869" }, { "id": "14100657", "title": "Elias Khoury (lawyer)", "text": " Elias Khoury was born in the Galilee. His father lost the family land to Israel in the 1948 war, took citizenship in Israel and believed he could work patiently through Israeli law to get his land back. Elias studied law at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and lived in the Beit Hanina and Shuafat neighborhoods of Jerusalem.", "score": "1.5414028" }, { "id": "10528228", "title": "Izhak Graziani", "text": " Izhak (\"Ziko\") Graziani was born in Ruse, Bulgaria, where he studied music and conducting. In 1948, he immigrated to Israel and joined the IDF Orchestra as a trumpet player.", "score": "1.538966" }, { "id": "3449294", "title": "Izhak Weinberg", "text": " a family with her. He had two daughters. Zohar was born in 1967 and served as an infantry instructor, today a doctor in biology. Hila was born in 1969 and served in the Armored Corps in the Golan Heights. And today a teacher at Ma'alot High School. Both are married and have three granddaughters and three grandchildren. Between the years 1964–1977 he worked as an independent in the automotive spare parts industry. Since 1977, he studied art for three years at the University of Haifa and for two more years in the Ein Hod artists village, specializing in weaving wool-wall carpets. In 1981, he was accepted as a member ", "score": "1.5295813" }, { "id": "28378566", "title": "Eli Amir", "text": " Amir was born Fuad Elias Nasah Halschi in Baghdad, Iraq. He immigrated to Israel with his family in 1950, and went to school in Kibbutz Mishmar HaEmek. He is now living in Gilo, Jerusalem. Amir studied at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. From 1964 to 1968 he served as adviser on Arab affairs to the Prime Minister of Israel, and as envoy for the Minister of Immigration Absorption of Israel to the United States. In 1984, he was appointed Director General of the Youth Aliyah department of the Jewish Agency.", "score": "1.5257473" } ]
In what city was Roger McCardell born?
[ "Baltimore County", "County of Maryland", "Baltimore County, Maryland" ]
place of birth
Roger McCardell
5,621,482
78
[ { "id": "455239", "title": "Roger McCardell", "text": " Roger Morton McCardell (August 29, 1932 &ndash; November 13, 1996) was an American professional baseball player. He played in Major League Baseball as a catcher for the San Francisco Giants in.", "score": "2.0104117" }, { "id": "455240", "title": "Roger McCardell", "text": " McCardell was born in Gorsuch Mills in Baltimore County, Maryland, and attended Boston University. He threw and batted right-handed and was listed at 6 ft tall and 200 lb. McCardell's professional career began in 1950 and he spent 11 seasons (and played in 911 games) in minor league baseball. His lone big-league trial occurred at the outset of the 1959 season. McCardell was the starting catcher in his MLB debut on May 8, and went hitless in two at bats against Danny McDevitt of the Los Angeles Dodgers before being removed for a pinch hitter. He went hitless in his two subsequent MLB at bats as well. He was traded by the Giants to the Baltimore Orioles on November 30, in a transaction headlined by Billy O'Dell and Jackie Brandt, but never appeared in a Major League game with his hometown club. McCardell retired from baseball after the 1962 season and died in Wilmington, Delaware, at the age of 64.", "score": "1.8699695" }, { "id": "1058483", "title": "Archie McCardell", "text": " Archie McCardell was born in Hazel Park, Michigan in August 1926. He served in the United States Army Air Forces in World War II. Following his time in the service, he attended the University of Michigan (he was the first person in his family to attend college), where he earned a bachelor's degree and a Master of Business Administration.", "score": "1.7338424" }, { "id": "29076395", "title": "Roger Bushell", "text": " Bushell was born in Springs, Transvaal, South Africa, on 30 August 1910 to English parents, Benjamin Daniel and Dorothy Wingate Bushell (née White). His father, a mining engineer, had emigrated to the country from Britain and he used his wealth to ensure that Roger received a first-class education. He was first schooled in Johannesburg, then aged 14 went to Wellington College in Berkshire, England. In 1929, Bushell then went to Pembroke College, Cambridge, to study law. Keen on pursuing non-academic interests from an early age, Bushell excelled in rugby and cricket and skied for Cambridge in races between 1930 and 1932, captaining the team in 1931.", "score": "1.6578939" }, { "id": "33077467", "title": "Roger Erell", "text": " Erell was born Roger Lelièvre in Mansle (Charente) in 1907.", "score": "1.6308405" }, { "id": null, "title": "Roger McCardell", "text": "Roger McCardell\n\nRoger Morton McCardell (August 29, 1932 – November 13, 1996) was an American professional baseball player. He played in Major League Baseball as a catcher for the San Francisco Giants in .", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "McCardell", "text": "McCardell\n\nMcCardell is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Claire McCardell", "text": "Claire McCardell\n\nClaire McCardell (May 24, 1905 – March 22, 1958) was an American fashion designer of ready-to-wear clothing in the twentieth century. She is credited with the creation of American sportswear.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Billy O'Dell", "text": "Billy O'Dell\n\nWilliam Oliver O'Dell (February 10, 1933 – September 12, 2018), known as Billy O'Dell and also as Digger O'Dell, was an American professional baseball player who pitched in the Major Leagues in thirteen seasons: 1954 and from 1956 to 1967. He was signed by the Baltimore Orioles as an amateur free agent in 1954, and was a bonus baby, never spending a day in the minors. He did not play in 1955 due to service in the military.\n\nO'Dell was an All-Star representative for the American League in 1958 and 1959, and in 1959 had the highest strikeout to walk ratio in all of MLB with 2.69. On May 19, 1959, O'Dell hit an inside-the-park home run for the Orioles in a 2–1 victory over the Chicago White Sox. On November 30, 1959, the Orioles traded him, along with Billy Loes, to the San Francisco Giants for Jackie Brandt, Gordon Jones and Roger McCardell.<ref name=\"baseball-reference.com\"/>\n\nIn 1962, O'Dell won a career high 19 games for the NL champion Giants. O'Dell was the losing pitcher in Game 1 of the 1962 World Series against the New York Yankees. He gave up a two-run double to Roger Maris, an RBI single to Tony Kubek, a solo home run to Clete Boyer, and finally an RBI single to Dale Long before being relieved by manager Alvin Dark for veteran pitcher Don Larsen, thus allowing five earned runs in 7 innings. He did strike out eight, including Hall of Famer Mickey Mantle, who struck out twice.\n\nOn July 23, 1964, O'Dell allowed 12 runs (11 earned) in seven innings in a 13–4 loss to the Cubs. Alvin Dark, the Giants manager, was criticized for leaving O'Dell in so long, but Dark later explained that he thought O'Dell needed to get more work in. O'Dell had not been pitching deep in games that year, and his elbow was getting sore from disuse. While O'Dell's ERA was lower after that game, he only made one further start, working mainly out of the bullpen for the rest of the year.\n\nO'Dell finished his career with the Milwaukee Braves and the Pittsburgh Pirates. He was with the Braves when they moved to Atlanta. After 1963, he pitched mostly in relief. O'Dell's final game was on September 12, 1967, in relief for the Pirates.<ref name=\"baseball-reference.com\"/>\n\nO'Dell attended Clemson University. He died at a hospital in Newberry, South Carolina on September 12, 2018, from complications of Parkinson's disease, aged 85.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Miami Marlins (International League) players", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "9292162", "title": "Roger McClay", "text": " McClay was born in 1945. He attended secondary school at Wesley College, Auckland.", "score": "1.6281705" }, { "id": "1058494", "title": "Archie McCardell", "text": " McCardell was married to Margaret (née Martin). The couple had children: Sandra, Laurie and Clay. He died at his home in Casper, Wyoming on July 10, 2008, of complications from heart failure.; His children and two brothers and a sister survived him.", "score": "1.6170866" }, { "id": "26159108", "title": "John McCardell Jr.", "text": " McCardell was born on June 17, 1949 in Maryland. He graduated from Washington and Lee University in 1971. He earned a PhD in History from Harvard University in 1976. For his dissertation, The Idea of a Southern Nation, he was awarded the 1977 Allan Nevins Prize by the Society of American Historians.", "score": "1.5986376" }, { "id": "2485726", "title": "Roger Brown (artist)", "text": " Roger Brown was born on December 10, 1941, and raised in Hamilton and Opelika, Alabama. He was described in his formative years as a creative child, an inclination his parents are said to have encouraged. Brown took art classes from second to ninth grade, and won first prize in a statewide poster competition in tenth grade. After high school Brown left the South. Although he lived much of his adult life elsewhere, he maintained his connection to the region both in his artwork and research, and later with his plan to purchase the \"Rock House\" in Beulah, Alabama.", "score": "1.5954632" }, { "id": "27885299", "title": "Claire McCardell", "text": " McCardell was the eldest of four children born to Eleanor and Adrian McCardell in Frederick, Maryland. Adrian was a Maryland state senator and president of the Frederick County National Bank. As a child, McCardell earned the nickname \"Kick\" for her ability to keep the boys from pushing her around. Fascinated by fashion from a young age, McCardell wanted to move to New York City to study fashion design at age 16. Unwilling to send a teenager so far away, McCardell's father convinced her to enroll in the home economics program at Hood College instead. After two years of study in Maryland, McCardell moved to New York and ", "score": "1.5933197" }, { "id": "27885298", "title": "Claire McCardell", "text": " Claire McCardell (May 24, 1905 – March 22, 1958) was an American fashion designer of ready-to-wear clothing in the twentieth century. She is credited with the creation of American sportswear.", "score": "1.5768516" }, { "id": "13057232", "title": "Roger McCorley", "text": " Roger McCorley was an Irish republican activist. Roger Edmund McCorley was born into a Roman Catholic family at 67 Hillman Street in Belfast on 6 September 1901, one of three children born to Roger Edmund McCorley, a meat carver in a hotel, and Agnes Liggett; he had two elder brothers, Vincent and Felix. He joined the Fianna in his teens. His family had a very strong republican tradition and he claimed to be the great-grandson of the United Irishmen folk hero Roddy McCorley, who was executed for his part in the 1798 rebellion.", "score": "1.5676775" }, { "id": "28279286", "title": "Henry McCardie", "text": " McCardie was born on 19 July 1869 in Edgbaston to Joseph McCardie, an Irish merchant and button maker, and his English wife Jane Hunt. His father died when McCardie was eight, and as a result he and his six siblings were raised by their mother alone. He was educated at King Edward's School, Birmingham and was noted as intelligent but lazy. He left the school when he was sixteen to get a job and for several years worked in an auctioneers office before being admitted to the Middle Temple in 1891. He was called to the bar on 18 April 1894 and almost immediately began work at the chambers of James Parfit (known as J.J. Parfit) in Birmingham.", "score": "1.5655098" }, { "id": "8419761", "title": "Roger McLachlan", "text": " McLachlan was born on 15 January 1954 in the small town of Riverton, near Invercargill, New Zealand. He came to Australia in 1974 to join the touring band for the stage musical Godspell.", "score": "1.5594482" }, { "id": "27885307", "title": "Claire McCardell", "text": " In 1943, McCardell married the Texas-born architect, Irving Drought Harris, who had two children by an earlier marriage, and established a home base in Manhattan. McCardell’s life and work were cut short by a diagnosis of terminal colon cancer in 1957. With the help of long-time friend and classmate, Mildred Orrick, McCardell completed her final collection from her hospital bed. She checked out of the hospital in order to make the introductions for her final runway show. McCardell died on March 22, 1958 at the age of 52. She is buried in the family plot at Mount Olivet Cemetery, Frederick, Maryland. After her death, McCardell's family decided to close the label. Her brother explained, \"It wasn't that difficult [to close the label]. Claire's ideas were always her own.\"", "score": "1.5562701" }, { "id": "30179709", "title": "Roger Hampson", "text": " Roger Hampson was born in Union Street, Tyldesley, and moved to Johnson Street when he was three. He attended Leigh Grammar School and served in the Royal Navy during World War II. After the war he attended Manchester School of Art before becoming a teacher.", "score": "1.5542355" }, { "id": "5434732", "title": "E. Roger Mitchell", "text": " Mitchell was born in Miami, Florida. He graduated in 1993 from Claflin University in South Carolina with B.A.s in English and Drama. He was named in the Who's Who Among Americas Colleges and Universities in 1992. Mitchell later studied at Alliance Theatre Professional Actor Internship and earned a Master of Fine Arts from City University of New York's Brooklyn campus in 1999.", "score": "1.5529513" }, { "id": "5692486", "title": "Roger Fan", "text": " Fan, a Taiwanese American, was born in Baltimore, Maryland and raised in Southern California, growing up in Upland, California, a suburb of Los Angeles. He graduated from the Webb Schools of California and also graduated with a degree in economics from Brown University. He initially worked on Wall Street and in San Francisco as a financial consultant, but spent his off time acting in theatre.", "score": "1.5465986" }, { "id": "1712763", "title": "Keenan McCardell", "text": " Keenan Wayne McCardell (born January 6, 1970) is an American football coach and former wide receiver who is the wide receivers coach for the Minnesota Vikings of the National Football League (NFL). He previously served as the wide receivers coach for the Jacksonville Jaguars, University of Maryland, College Park and Washington Redskins. McCardell played college football for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV) and was drafted by the Washington Redskins in the 12th round of the 1991 NFL Draft. He played for 17 seasons in the NFL and also played for the Cleveland Browns, Jacksonville Jaguars, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, San Diego Chargers and Houston Texans. A two-time Pro Bowl selection, McCardell won two Super Bowl rings, with the Redskins in 1991 and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2002.", "score": "1.546352" }, { "id": "24963464", "title": "Roger Williams (American politician)", "text": " Williams was born in Evanston, Illinois, in 1949 and raised in Fort Worth. He played college baseball for the Texas Christian University Horned Frogs (TCU) from 1968 to 1971 and was selected in the 25th round of the 1971 MLB Draft by the Atlanta Braves, playing in the farm system and reaching the Class A Western Carolinas League. He coached TCU's baseball team. Williams inherited the family's automobile dealership from his father, who founded the business in 1939.", "score": "1.5409284" } ]
In what city was Antonio Calcagni born?
[ "Recanati" ]
place of birth
Antonio Calcagni
2,737,157
64
[ { "id": "15159315", "title": "Antonio Calcagni", "text": " Antonio Calcagni (1538 in Recanati – 1593) is an Italian sculptor of the Renaissance period. He apprenticed with Girolamo Lombardo in Recanati, where he completed a statue of Pope Gregory XIII (1574) started by Ludovico Lombardi and Ascoli. He also completed a statue of the poet Annibale Caro in bronze. He also completed bronze reliefs for the Basilica of Loreto. He collaborated with a younger Tiburzio Vergelli. He designed the monumental entry doors to the church of Loreto, but these were completed by his nephew Tarquinio Jacometti and his pupil Sebastiano Sebastiani.", "score": "1.6334642" }, { "id": "13978527", "title": "Antonio Mosca", "text": " Mosca was born in Pieve di Cento, and died in Bologna. Born to a humble family, he obtained a stipend from the Pious Legacy or Endowment by the Melloni family to attend the Academy of Fine Arts of Bologna during 1894 to 1896. He refined his ability to paint portraits. By 1900, Antonio had moved to Bologna, and established friendships with Francesco Fabbri and Cesare Mauro Trebbi, with whom he would collaborate in the decoration of the cupola of the church of Church of San Pietro in Castello d'Argile. In 1905, he was employed in collaboration with Domenico Ferri, in the decoration of the cupola and apse of the church of Santa Maria Magdalena in Bologna. He pursued this work in a number of churches in Northeast Italy, including the parish church of Tuenno in Trentino-Alto Adige and in the Chapel of the Immaculate Conception in Borgo Valsugana, Trento. He wrote a treatise on perspective awarded at prizes in Milan, Paris, and Bologna in 1913. In 1912-1913 he painted a portrait of King Nikola I of Montenegro. Pieve di Cento in 1924 commissioned him to decorate the public clock in the Palazzo Comunale.", "score": "1.5676702" }, { "id": "26417113", "title": "Antonio Diego Voci", "text": " By age 12 he was awarded a year scholarship to a design school. Diego proudly recalled that in his youth religious artist Antonino Calcagnadoro (1876–1935) let him help paint a church fresco. Diego studied sculpture and painting for three years at Lyce d'Art, followed by studies of Greek and Latin, as well as tailoring. All three Voci boys were sent to Reggio to study tailoring. In December 1920, four months after Diego's birth, their father took the oldest brother Vincenzo, age 15, to Philadelphia where they both worked as tailors. For 3 ½ years Messina Arcangela raised \"Toto\", her pet name for Diego, until her husband came back to Gasperina with enough money to open a dry goods store. In ", "score": "1.5595773" }, { "id": "27825953", "title": "Antonio Calza", "text": " Antonio Calza (1658–1725) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period. He was born in Verona to a jeweler. He was the pupil of the Bolognese painter Carlo Cignani, then moved to Rome to work under Jacques Courtois. Guglielmo Capodoro (Paganini) and Giovanni Battista Canziani were his pupils. Calza, who worked mostly in Bologna, is known for painting historical and battle paintings. In 1675, he reconciled with his father, and married an 88-year-old widow. He was to marry three times, the last in 1710 to a painter of flower still lifes. He painted in Milan for General Martini, and in Vienna for Prince Eugenie, including portraits of the Prince and the Emperor. He died in Verona on April 18, 1725.", "score": "1.5551727" }, { "id": "27049331", "title": "Domenico Calcagno", "text": " Calcagno was born in Tramontana di Parodi Ligure, in the province of Alessandri on 3 February 1943. After studying arts at the diocesan seminary, he attended the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, earning a degree in dogmatic theology. He was ordained a priest on 29 June 1967 by Cardinal Giuseppe Siri. After several years of parish ministry, he was appointed professor of Theology at the Theological Faculty of Northern Italy and, later, at the Higher Institute of Religious Studies of Liguria. He served as president of the diocesan clergy institute and was the episcopal vicar for \"new activities\". At the national level his assignments included: Secretary of ", "score": "1.5497057" }, { "id": null, "title": "Calcagni", "text": "Calcagni\n\nCalcagni is a surname of Italian origin. Notable people with the surname include:\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Tiburzio Vergelli", "text": "Tiburzio Vergelli\n\nTiburzio Vergelli (1551-1609) was an Italian sculptor and founder.\n\nBorn in Camerino, Vergelli was a highly skilled metal smelter. He trained in the workshop of Antonio Calcagni and Girolamo Lombardo in Recanati. His first work is the statue of Pope Sixtus V, given to his hometown Camerino. In the aftermath of the election of a new Pope, this statue was done around the same time as Calcagni was working on a similar statue for Loreto, Marche (1585–1587) and follows the same compositional scheme. This generated a split between the two, who subsequently contributed separately to the main door of the Basilica della Santa Casa; Calcagni was entrusted to the door of the south side, the north side was given to Vergelli. For the baptismal font, Vergelli worked alongside Sebastian Sebastiani and Giovan Battista Vitali between 1600 and 1608. He died in 1609 in Recanati.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:1536 births", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Antonio Donnarumma", "text": "Antonio Donnarumma\n\nAntonio Donnarumma (; born 7 July 1990) is an Italian professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for club Padova.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Girolamo Lombardo", "text": "Girolamo Lombardo\n\nGirolamo Lombardo, also Girolamo Lombardi (1506–1590), was an Italian sculptor.\n\nLombardo was born in Ferrara, the son of the architect and sculptor Antonio Lombardo, and also was the brother of Lodovico and Aurelio, also sculptors. He studied and began in his father's workshop in Ferrara, then subsequently traveled to Venice to continue training with Jacopo Sansovino, with which, between 1532 and 1540, he worked in the Biblioteca Marciana in the Loggia of the bell tower of Saint Mark's in Venice.\n\nLombardo is documented in Loreto, Marche since 1543, where for some years he was active with his brother Aurelio and where they were in 1550 also reached the third brother, Lodovico. Around 1552 he moved with his brothers and opened their own foundry and workshop in Recanati, passing the Venetian mature technique to all operators of the workshop. The school sculptural continued in subsequent generations with Tiburzio Vergelli, Antonio Calcagni, Sebastiano Sebastiani, Tarquinio Jacometti and Pier Paolo Jacometti.\n\nHis sons Anthony, Peter and Paul, also became sculptors and bronze founders.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "9207678", "title": "Antonio Marziale Carracci", "text": " Carracci was born in the parish of Sta Lucia in Venice, probably in 1583, the product of an affair with a courtesan called Isabella, occurring on his father's first visit to Venice. Giovanni Battista Agucchi, a friend and protégé of Cardinal Odoardo Farnese tells us in a 1609 letter, raised along with Sisto Badalocchio and a near contemporary to Domenichino and Lanfranco. The main Baroque artist biographers of his time, Baglione, Bellori and Malvasia, make some note of him. He first apprenticed with his father. Malvasia recalls his father admired a ‘’Madonna and Child’’ that completed at the age of seventeen. ", "score": "1.5314461" }, { "id": "1737797", "title": "Casa Paoli", "text": " Antonio Paoli was born in this house on April 14, 1871. From a young age, he would accompany his parents to opera performances at the Teatro La Perla, located some six blocks from this house. An inspiring performance there by the Italian tenor Pietro Baccei helped him decide what he wanted to be \"when he grew up\". His parents nurtured his ambition by enrolling him in a voice training school. However, when Antonio was just 12 years old his parents died. Paoli moved to Spain to live with his sister, Amalia, who was also a singer. Amalia also encouraged her younger brother to pursue his dream of becoming an opera singer. After studying at the Royal Monastery of El Escorial in Madrid, Spain, and the Academia de Canto La Scala in Milan, Italy, Paoli made his debut in Paris. He went on to earn numerous ", "score": "1.5288918" }, { "id": "6738153", "title": "Antonino Calcagnadoro", "text": " Antonino Calcagnadoro (February 12, 1876 – 1935) was an Italian painter.", "score": "1.5263582" }, { "id": "25009955", "title": "Antonio Concioli", "text": " Born in Pergola, Marche, to a family of professionals and bureaucrats, he was likely a descendant of the jurist, Antonio Concoli of Cantiano (1602–1680). He initially trained in Bologna under Ercole Graziani and Ercole Lelli, but soon traveled to Rome under the patronage of Cardinal Andrea Negroni. He obtained a post as professor in the Academy of Design at the hospice in San Michele a Ripa, and for which he would also become director of the Tapestry works. In Rome, he was also a pupil of Pompeo Batoni. He became a member of the Academy of St Luke in Rome in 1781. He painted an altarpiece for the church of Sant'Antonio dei Portoghesi in Rome. He painted a portrait of Cardinal Giuseppe Maria Doria Pamphilj Landi. He was also active in Rieti. He died in Rome in 1820.", "score": "1.5260185" }, { "id": "26315813", "title": "Lawrence Calcagno", "text": " Lawrence Calcagno was born on March 23, 1913 in Potrero Hill, San Francisco, CA. His parents, Vincent and Anna de Rosa Calcagno were Italian immigrants. At age ten he moved to the family ranch-homestead in the Santa Lucia Mountains, Monterey County where he spent the following ten years. In 1935 he left the homestead and joined the merchant marines and traveled all the way to Asia.", "score": "1.5212362" }, { "id": "2035981", "title": "Antonio Allocca", "text": " Born in Portici, Naples, Allocca debuted on stage in 1956, then in 1958 he worked with Eduardo De Filippo at the Piccolo Teatro in Milan in the comedy play Pulcinella in cerca della sua fortuna per Napoli. In 1962 he made his television debut in Ditegli sempre di sì and Napoli Milionaria, both directed by De Filippo. Very active both on stage and in films mainly in character roles, Allocca enjoyed a late success as in 1988, with the role of the professor of Italian in the three seasons of the Italia 1 television series I ragazzi della 3ª C. Allocca died on 31 December 2013, aged 76, in Marcianise, Campania, Italy.", "score": "1.5201783" }, { "id": "6738154", "title": "Antonino Calcagnadoro", "text": " Born in Rome, he initially trained with his father, an ornamental painter. He then studied at the Institute of Fine Arts in Rome (1894–1898). He often painted subjects of social discomfort among the poor, including Emigranti, and I disoccupati that won a gold medal at the 1904 Florentine Exposition. In Rieti, he painted a number of fresco decorations, including in the Casa Matricardi, Casa San Rufo, and the Chapel of the Crucifix in the City Cathedral, and the former Courthouse (Palazzo Sanizi). He helped decorate the Foyer of the Flavio Vespasiano Theater in Rieti. Many of his works are exhibited in the Museo Comunale of Rieti. The schools for arts in Rieti, part of the Istituto di Istruzione Superiore Marco Terenzio Varrone are named after Calcagnadoro. He died in Rome in 1935.", "score": "1.5190896" }, { "id": "15159242", "title": "Tiberio Calcagni", "text": " Tiberio Calcagni (1532–1565) was an Italian sculptor and architect. He was born in Florence, and accompanied Michelangelo to Rome, and was active about 1570. He completed or attempted to complete a number of his master's works after his death, including his Deposition. Calcagni died young.", "score": "1.5117875" }, { "id": "664176", "title": "Antonio Candreva", "text": " Candreva was born on 28 February 1987 in Rome. Candreva is of part Arbëreshe descent as his grandfather, on his father's side, is from the Arbëreshë village of Falconara Albanese in Cosenza.", "score": "1.5117574" }, { "id": "8100806", "title": "Antoninus of Florence", "text": " He was born Antonio Pierozzi (also called de Forciglioni) on 1 March 1389 in the city of Florence, then capital of an independent Republic, to Niccolò and Tomasina Pierozzi, prominent citizens of the city, Niccolò being a notary. His mother died when he was about five years of age. As a child, he spent time at the church of Orsanmichele. The young Anthony was received into the Dominican Order in 1405 at the age of sixteen at the new priory of San Domenico in Fiesole and given the religious habit by the Blessed John Dominici, founder of the community, becoming its first candidate. With Fra Angelico and Fra Bartolommeo, the one to become famous as a painter, the other as a miniaturist, he was ", "score": "1.508666" }, { "id": "27384922", "title": "Antonio Baruffaldi", "text": " Antonio Baruffaldi (1793–1832) was an Italian artist. He was born in Ferrara, in (Emilia Romagna) in the north east of Italy, close to Bologna and Venice. He actually trained as a painter in the city of Venice. The gallery of his native city, Ferrara, possesses some of his work: Virgin reading and Tancred and Armida.", "score": "1.5064638" }, { "id": "3876367", "title": "Antonio Scarpa", "text": " Scarpa was born to an impoverished family in the frazione of Lorenzaga, Motta di Livenza, Veneto. An uncle, who was a member of the priesthood, gave him instruction until the age of 15, when he passed the entrance exam for the University of Padua. He was a pupil of Giovanni Battista Morgagni and Marc Antonio Caldani. Under the former, he became doctor of medicine on 19 May 1770; in 1772, he became professor at the University of Modena. For a time he chose to travel, visiting Holland, France and England. When he returned to Italy, he was made professor of anatomy at the University of ", "score": "1.5055468" }, { "id": "1454015", "title": "Antonio Carluccio", "text": " Antonio Carluccio was born in Vietri sul Mare, Salerno in the Campania region, the fifth of six children of Giovanni Carluccio, a stationmaster from a family of Benevento bookbinders, and his wife Maria, née Trivellone. He moved with his father's job when he was young and lived in Castelnuovo Belbo and Borgofranco d'Ivrea. Living in the northwest, an area with great vegetation, as a child he would hunt through the forest for different mushrooms and fungi with his father. After leaving school he did his compulsory one year of military service in the Italian Navy. After leaving the navy, he briefly worked as a journalist with La Stampa in Turin and then as a technician and sales representative for typewriter manufacturer Olivetti.", "score": "1.5039219" }, { "id": "10350034", "title": "Alessandro Carloni", "text": " Born in Bologna, Carloni spent his childhood in Urbino, a walled city and World Heritage site southwest of Pesaro, known for its remarkable legacy of independent Renaissance culture and for being the birthplace of Renaissance master Raphael Santi. But Carloni was not a young artist, at least not officially. Not even though his father worked as an illustrator for magazines, book covers and advertisements. “I was exposed to his work, but he never pushed me to be part of his studio,” Carloni says. “He taught me many things. He wanted me to explore on my own.” He became an artist almost despite himself. Carloni entered ", "score": "1.5030878" }, { "id": "10427356", "title": "Ron Calcagni", "text": " Ron Calcagni (born February 6, 1957) is a former quarterback for the University of Arkansas Razorbacks football team from 1975 to 1978. Calcagni was born in Youngstown, Ohio. An All-State in high school, Calcagni was initially recruited by Bo Rein to play for North Carolina State University. However, Rein left North Carolina State to coach under Frank Broyles at Arkansas and convinced Calcagni to follow him there. Rein would return to North Carolina State as head coach before Calcagni graduated from Arkansas. Calcagni had a record setting career with Arkansas. His 25–4–2 winning record made him the winningest quarterback in Razorbacks history. Calcagni is perhaps best known for ", "score": "1.5029489" } ]
In what city was Philipp Crone born?
[ "Cologne", "Köln", "Kreisfreie Stadt Köln", "Cologne, Germany", "Cologne (Germany)" ]
place of birth
Philipp Crone
324,999
59
[ { "id": "8235359", "title": "Philipp Crone", "text": " Philipp Crone (born 16 March 1977 in Cologne) is a German former field hockey player who competed in the 2000 Summer Olympics and in the 2004 Summer Olympics. After his time in sports, he worked as journalist for different German newspapers like Sueddeutsche Zeitung and for Bayerischer Rundfunk.", "score": "1.8471683" }, { "id": "27306793", "title": "Patricia Crone", "text": " Crone was born in Kyndeløse Sydmark (south of Kyndeløse) 23 km northwest of Roskilde in Roskilde County, Denmark, on March 28, 1945. After taking the forprøve (preliminary exam) at University of Copenhagen, she went to Paris to learn French, and then to London where she was determined to get into a university to become fluent in English. In 1974, she earned her PhD at the University of London, where she was a senior research fellow at the Warburg Institute until 1977. She was accepted as an occasional student at King's College London and followed a course in medieval European history, especially church-state relations.", "score": "1.7286167" }, { "id": "1888363", "title": "Ferd Crone", "text": " Drs. Ferdinandus Johannes Maria Crone (born 19 July 1954) is a Dutch politician. He was born in Dordrecht in 1954. On 15 November 2007 he became mayor of Leeuwarden. He remained mayor until the 26th of August 2019 when he was replaced by Sybrand Buma. As of February 2020 he is a member of the First Chamber of the States General. He was made a knight of the Order of Orange Nassau on 15 November 2007.", "score": "1.7190216" }, { "id": "31268553", "title": "Erik Crone (actor)", "text": " Erik Crone was born in Poppelgade 1, Copenhagen 14 September 1896 as the third child to merchant Vilhelm Valdemar Gerhard Crone and wife Julie Johanne Amelia Crone. Crone lost his father in 1907, when he was 13 years old. In 1910, Crone started a teenage acting career with roles in two silent movies from Nordisk Film. Crone died in Denmark on 27 March 1971.", "score": "1.6949141" }, { "id": "29809849", "title": "Rainer Crone", "text": " Rainer Crone (June 7, 1942, Hamburg - June 2016, Regensburg ) was University Professor emeritus of Contemporary Art and History of Film at Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich and a specialist in the art of Andy Warhol. He previously taught at Yale University, the University of California, Berkeley, Columbia University, and New York University.", "score": "1.6775937" }, { "id": null, "title": "Philipp Crone", "text": "Philipp Crone\n\nPhilipp Crone (born 16 March 1977 in Cologne) is a German former field hockey player who competed in the 2000 Summer Olympics and in the 2004 Summer Olympics.\n\nAfter his time in sports, he worked as journalist for different German newspapers like \"Sueddeutsche Zeitung\" and for Bayerischer Rundfunk.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Moira Crone", "text": "Moira Crone\n\nMoira Crone (born 1952) is an American fiction author. She was born and raised in Goldsboro, in the tobacco country in eastern North Carolina. She is the author of three collections of short fiction and two novels. Her short stories have been classified as \"Southern Gnostic\", and as exemplifying the spirit of the New South. Her work has been compared to Flannery O'Connor's for its spiritual overtones and to Sherwood Anderson's for its depiction of small-town life and characters. She taught fiction writing at Louisiana State University, where she served for a number of years as Director of the MFA Program in Creative Writing and is now Professor Emerita. She also worked as fiction editor for the University Press of Mississippi. Her works have been chosen for the \"Year's Best\" by the award anthology \"New Stories From The South\" five times. In 2009, she was awarded the Robert Penn Warren Award in Fiction from the Fellowship of Southern Writers in recognition of her body of work. In the citation, Allan Gurganus wrote, \"Moira Crone is a fable maker with a musical ear, a plenitude of nerve, and epic heart.\" \nMoira Crone lives in New Orleans. She is married to poet and author Rodger Kamenetz and has two daughters, author Anya Kamenetz and Kezia Kamenetz.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Rainer Crone", "text": "Rainer Crone\n\nRainer Crone (June 7, 1942 - June 2016) was a German art historian. He was University Professor emeritus of Contemporary Art and History of Film at Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich and a specialist in the art of Andy Warhol. He previously taught at Yale University, the University of California, Berkeley, Columbia University, and New York University.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Robert Crone (artist)", "text": "Robert Crone (artist)\n\nRobert Crone (c. 1718 - 1779) was an Irish landscape painter.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Field hockey players at the 2004 Summer Olympics ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "14165852", "title": "Shane Bitney Crone", "text": " Crone was born in Kalispell, Montana. He moved to Los Angeles after high school graduation.", "score": "1.6750562" }, { "id": "30893339", "title": "Neil Crone", "text": " Crone was born on May 29, 1960, in Toronto, Ontario. He attended Sir John A. MacDonald Collegiate Institute and then studied radio and television arts at Ryerson Polytechnical Institute before earning a degree in education from the University of Toronto. He taught English and drama for three years at King City Secondary School before launching his acting career. He would land a role at Toronto’s The Second City Touring Company before moving onto its main stage.", "score": "1.6536182" }, { "id": "10438661", "title": "Rudolf Cronau", "text": " Rudolf Daniel Ludwig Cronau was born in Solingen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Prussia (Germany) on 21 January 1855, the only son of Rudolf Cronau, tax official by Helene Wilhelmine, née Waldeck. He attended between 1866 and 1869 the public school (höhere Bürgerschule) at Solingen. In 1870 Cronau was accepted into the Royal Academy of Art in Düsseldorf receiving formal art training, among others from renowned Andreas Achenbach. For a time he maintained an art studio at Düsseldorf. In 1877 he relocated to Leipzig and began working for Die Gartenlaube, an illustrated magazine. Cronau landed the job as their correspondent to the United States and sailed on the vessel \"Oder\" from Bremen, Germany reaching New York City on 17 January 1881 .", "score": "1.6531253" }, { "id": "3449079", "title": "Otto Miguel Cione", "text": " Otto Miguel Cione was born in Asunción, Paraguay on 15 August 1875. His parents were Italian. His father was Pascual M. Cione and his mother was Angela Flacone. He moved to Uruguay at an early age, and became a citizen of that country. His father was a leading doctor, and insisted that he attend university, but he did not finish his studies. For some time he was Consul of Uruguay in Concordia, Entre Ríos, Argentina. Later he was Section Head of the National Labor Office, and then Librarian in the Secondary Education Section of the Universidad de Montevideo. In 1942 he was Librarian of the \"Alfredo Vázquez Acevedo\" Institute, the University's Section of Secondary and Higher Education.", "score": "1.627323" }, { "id": "3970153", "title": "Victor Crone", "text": " Victor Crone was born and raised in Österåker, Sweden. He started playing guitar and writing songs at the age of 15. When he was 18 he moved to Los Angeles and Nashville to write songs with acclaimed artists such as Diane Warren, Desmond Child and Eric Bazilian. He performed in some international music conference centers of Los Angeles and he also released a song \"Jimmy Dean\" under his name Vic Heart. In 2015, Victor released his debut single \"Burning Man\". He participated in Melodifestivalen 2015, featuring in the Behrang Miri song \"Det rår vi inte för\", which failed to qualify ", "score": "1.6083794" }, { "id": "32484022", "title": "Florian Philippot", "text": " Born on 24 October 1981 at Croix, Nord, he grew up in Bondues, a residential suburb in the Urban Community of Lille Métropole. His father was a public head teacher, and his mother a primary school teacher. His brother, Damien Philippot, a graduate of Sciences Po and ESCP Europe (École supérieure de commerce de Paris), is currently a manager for political studies in the French polling organization (IFOP).", "score": "1.5931606" }, { "id": "10595110", "title": "Günter Philipp", "text": " Born in Sohland an der Spree, Philipp grew up in Riesa, Oppach and Bautzen. Attracted by music and figure drawing, he was instructed by Rudolf Warnecke in nature study and visual art. In post-war Germany, forced labour damaged his left hand. Nevertheless, he became a student in Leipzig in 1947, a pupil of Hugo Steurer (piano) and Wilhelm Weismann (composition). In 1948, he was able to enrol at the University of Music and Theatre Leipzig and begin studying with Heinz Eberhard Strüning. For financial reasons, he had to break off his studies in 1949 and make a living as a freelance artist in Oppach. He completed his studies, which he resumed in 1953, with the Staatsexamen in 1956.", "score": "1.591917" }, { "id": "8510879", "title": "Philipp von Stosch", "text": " Stosch was born in Küstrin (today Kostrzyn in Poland) in the Neumark region of Brandenburg. In 1709, with the blessings of his father, a successful artist who became Mayor (German: Bürgermeister) of Küstrin, Stosch began a tour of Holland, France, and England, which eventually led him to Italy. In Rome, a letter of introduction brought him into the circle of Pope Clement XI, a collector and connoisseur of antiquities. Soon he developed a close friendship with the cardinal-nephew, Alessandro Albani. Called home with the death of his elder brother in 1717, Stosch began a series of broader European journeys. Once again ", "score": "1.5899599" }, { "id": "14607415", "title": "Martha Crone", "text": " Crone was born in Minneapolis on January 29, 1894, as Martha E. Eberlein, to Edward and Amelie Eberlein. She attended formal schooling only through 8th grade, but became a self-taught expert in, botany, horticulture, and writing. She married the dentist Bill Crone (1894-1951), in 1915, She had a daughter (Janet C. Prevey, born 1917, died 1989) and three grandchildren (David Prevey, Judith Prevey, and Linder Wander). At the time of her death in 1989, Crone had three great grandchildren and one great-great grandchild.", "score": "1.5851085" }, { "id": "32804920", "title": "Zeulenroda-Triebes", "text": "Johann Christian Gottlieb Ackermann (1756–1801), physician ; Gustav Schreck (1849–1918), Thomaskantor in Leipzig ; Heinrich Seeling (1852–1932), architect ; Fritz Wächtler (1891–1945), National Socialist politician ; Gerd Schenker (born 1948), percussionist ; Jürgen Raab (born 1958), football player and coach ; Thomas Barth (born 1960), cyclist ; Henning Bürger (born 1969), football player and coach ; Doreen Dietel (born 1974), actress ; Alexander John (born 1986), hurdler ; René Enders (born 1987), track cyclist Paul Herman Geithner (1902–1972), was born in Zeulenroda and immigrated with his parents to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1908. His grandson, Timothy Geithner, was the 75th United States Secretary of the Treasury, serving under President Barack Obama. ", "score": "1.5791876" }, { "id": "26701940", "title": "Philipp Dulichius", "text": " Dulichius Philip was born in Chemnitz, where his father, Caspar Deulich, was a clothier, councillor and mayor. Of his student days it is only known for certain that he was enrolled in the University of Leipzig in 1579. In 1587 he became cantor at the Gymnasium in Stettin. Since 1618 he taught at the same Gymnasium. He was also a teacher at the Marienkirche in Stettin and at the court of the Pomeranian Duke. In 1630 he retired after 43 years of service, and he died in Stettin. The Marienkirche, where he was buried, burnt down in 1789 and was never rebuilt. Philip Dulichius composed 232 motets, which were highly appreciated at his time and earned him the nickname of the Pomeranian Lassus. On the occasion of the Heinrich-Schütz Days in September 2004 in Greifswald a lecture was given on \"Philipp Dulichius - Kantor an St. Marien und am Fürstlichen Pädagogium Stettin 1587-1631\" (Philip Dulichius - cantor at St Mary's and at the Gymnasium of Stettin 1587-1631). In Dulichius' birth town Chemnitz a memorial plaque was placed at the St Jacob's church in November 2008.", "score": "1.5773313" }, { "id": "3970152", "title": "Victor Crone", "text": " Victor Fritz-Crone (born 31 January 1992), also known as Victor Crone, is a Swedish singer and guitarist. He represented Estonia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2019 in Tel Aviv with the song \"Storm\".", "score": "1.5773189" }, { "id": "26770057", "title": "Philipp Förster", "text": " Förster was born in Bretten, and grew up there, where his parents ran a gardening business. He played youth football for Karlsruher SC until 2010, and later for VfB Stuttgart between 2010 and 2014.", "score": "1.5758996" }, { "id": "31044978", "title": "Pforzheim", "text": " (born 1954), economist and a former member of the German Council of Economic Experts ; Tomas Maier (born 1957), fashion designer ; Jürgen Elsässer (born 1957), journalist and political activist ; Stefan Mappus (born 1966), economist and politician (CDU) ; Oliver Forster (born 1968), sports commentator and moderator ; Jan Kopp (born 1971), composer, musicologist and publicist ; Florian Ross (born 1972), composer, jazz pianist and bandleader ; Philipp Mohr (born 1972), German-American architect and designer ; Marcello Craca (born 1974), German-Italian tennis player ; Logan McCree (born Philipp Tanzer 1977), DJ and pornographic actor ; Nicola Thost (born 1977), snowboarder and Olympic champion ; Jeff S. Klotz (born 1990), Author, publisher, museum director and entrpreneur ; Robin Hack (born 1998), footballer ", "score": "1.5707654" }, { "id": "31268552", "title": "Erik Crone (actor)", "text": " Erik Crone (14 September 1896 – 27 March 1971) was a Danish actor from Copenhagen.", "score": "1.566733" } ]
In what city was I.P. Paul born?
[ "Thrissur", "Thrichur", "Thrissivaperur" ]
place of birth
I. P. Paul
4,528,405
44
[ { "id": "8261381", "title": "I. P. Paul", "text": " I.P. Paul is an Indian National Congress politician from Thrissur city, India. He was the fourth mayor of Thrissur Municipal Corporation.", "score": "1.6629479" }, { "id": "9517528", "title": "M. P. Paul", "text": " M. P. Paul was born on the May Day of 1904 at Puthenpally Varapuzha, in Ernakulam district of the south Indian state of Kerala to Poulose and Rosamma. After early schooling locally, he did his high school studies at St. Albert's High School, Ernakulam and though he completed his high school course with scholarship, he could not appear for the Secondary School Leaving Certificate in 1918 as he was under age at the time of the examination. Subsequently, he passed the examination the next year and completed his intermediate course at St. Thomas College, Thrissur before graduating in History from St Joseph's College, Tiruchirappalli in 1924. ", "score": "1.6298802" }, { "id": "16277599", "title": "Daniel N. Paul", "text": " Prior to Paul's birth, his parents Sarah Agnes, née Noel, and William Gabriel were relocated from Saint John, New Brunswick, to Indian Brook 14, Nova Scotia. Paul was born at Indian Brook, the eleventh of fourteen children. During his childhood, he earned money through selling the Star Weekly, Liberty Magazine, seeds, and greeting cards, and painted the interior of houses. He married the love of his life, Victoria (Pat) Oakley, and had three children. He attended the Indian Day School on Shubenacadie Indian Reserve to grade eight. He left home for Boston when he was fourteen and came face to face with the oddities of big-time city life for ", "score": "1.4941003" }, { "id": "11699337", "title": "George S Paul", "text": " George S Paul, also known as G. S. Paul (born 25 January 1947) is an Indian writer, essayist and music journalist. He was born to Rev. K. C. Samuel and Thankamma Samuel in Thiruvalla, Pathanamthitta district of Kerala.", "score": "1.4696574" }, { "id": "25266969", "title": "Paul P.", "text": " Paul P. (born 1977) is a Canadian artist known primarily for his work as an oil painter. He explores topics including identity, beauty, gender and history.", "score": "1.4689059" }, { "id": null, "title": "I. P. Paul", "text": "I. P. Paul\n\nI.P. Paul is an Indian National Congress politician from Thrissur city, India. He was the fourth mayor of Thrissur Municipal Corporation.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Paul Thomas Anderson", "text": "Paul Thomas Anderson\n\nPaul Thomas Anderson (born June 26, 1970), also known by his initials PTA, is an American filmmaker. His films have consistently garnered critical acclaim. Anderson's films are often psychological dramas and characterized by depictions of flawed and desperate characters, explorations of themes such as dysfunctional families, alienation, loneliness and redemption, and a bold visual style that uses moving camera and long takes. Anderson has been nominated for eleven Academy Awards, three Golden Globe Awards, and eight BAFTA Awards (winning one), and has won a Silver Lion at Venice, a Best Director Award at Cannes, and both a Golden and a Silver Bear at Berlin.\n\nHe made his feature-film debut with \"Hard Eight\" (1996). He found critical and commercial success with \"Boogie Nights\" (1997) and received further accolades with \"Magnolia\" (1999) and \"Punch-Drunk Love\" (2002), a romantic comedy-drama film. Anderson's fifth film, \"There Will Be Blood\" (2007), about an oil prospector during the Southern California oil boom, is often cited as one of the greatest films of the 2000s. This was followed by \"The Master\" (2012), \"Inherent Vice\" (2014), \"Phantom Thread\" (2017), and \"Licorice Pizza\" (2021).\n\nAnderson is also known for having directed music videos for artists including Fiona Apple, Radiohead, Haim, Joanna Newsom, Aimee Mann, Jon Brion, and Michael Penn. He directed a documentary, \"Junun\" (2015), about the making of the album \"Junun\" in India. In 2019, he directed a short music film, \"Anima,\" starring Thom Yorke. \n\nHe is noted for his frequent collaborations with actors Philip Baker Hall, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Melora Walters and John C. Reilly, cinematographer Robert Elswit, costume designer Mark Bridges, and composers Jon Brion and Jonny Greenwood.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Paul Goldstein (law professor)", "text": "Paul Goldstein (law professor)\n\nPaul Goldstein (born January 14, 1943) is a law professor at Stanford Law School.\n\nA globally recognized expert on intellectual property law, Goldstein is the author of an influential four-volume treatise on U.S. copyright law and a five-volume treatise on international copyright law, as well as leading casebooks on intellectual property and international intellectual property. He has authored nine books including five novels, \"Errors and Omissions\", \"A Patent Lie\", \"Secret Justice\", \"Legal Asylum\" and \"Havana Requiem\", which won the 2013 Harper Lee Prize for Legal Fiction. Some of his other works include \"Copyright’s Highway: From Gutenberg to the Celestial Jukebox\", a widely acclaimed book on the history and future of copyright, and \"Intellectual Property: The Tough New Realities That Could Make or Break Your Business\".\n\nGoldstein has been regularly included in \"Best Lawyers in America\". He has served as chairman of the United States Office of Technology Assessment Advisory Panel on Intellectual Property Rights in an Age of Electronics and Information, has been a visiting scholar at the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Patent, Copyright, and Competition Law, and was a founding faculty member of the Munich Intellectual Property Law Center. In addition, before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1975, he was a professor of law at the University at Buffalo Law School.\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Paul Mockapetris", "text": "Paul Mockapetris\n\nPaul V. Mockapetris (born 1948 in Boston, Massachusetts, US) is an American computer scientist and Internet pioneer, who invented the Internet Domain Name System (DNS).", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Paul Kruger", "text": "Paul Kruger\n\nStephanus Johannes Paulus Kruger (; 10 October 1825 – 14 July 1904) was a South African politician. He was one of the dominant political and military figures in 19th-century South Africa, and President of the South African Republic (or Transvaal) from 1883 to 1900. Nicknamed \"Oom Paul\" (\"Uncle Paul\"), he came to international prominence as the face of the Boer cause—that of the Transvaal and its neighbour the Orange Free State—against Britain during the Second Boer War of 1899–1902. He has been called a personification of Afrikanerdom, and remains a controversial figure; admirers venerate him as a tragic folk hero.\n\nBorn near the eastern edge of the Cape Colony, Kruger took part in the Great Trek as a child during the late 1830s. He had almost no education apart from the Bible. A protégé of the Voortrekker leader Andries Pretorius, he witnessed the signing of the Sand River Convention with Britain in 1852 and over the next decade played a prominent role in the forging of the South African Republic, leading its commandos and resolving disputes between the rival Boer leaders and factions. In 1863 he was elected Commandant-General, a post he held for a decade before he resigned soon after the election of President Thomas François Burgers.\n\nKruger was appointed Vice President in March 1877, shortly before the South African Republic was annexed by Britain as the Transvaal. Over the next three years he headed two deputations to London to try to have this overturned. He became the leading figure in the movement to restore the South African Republic's independence, culminating in the Boers' victory in the First Boer War of 1880–81. Kruger served until 1883 as a member of an executive triumvirate, then was elected President. In 1884 he headed a third deputation that brokered the London Convention, under which Britain recognised the South African Republic as a completely independent state.\n\nFollowing the influx of thousands of predominantly British settlers with the Witwatersrand Gold Rush of 1886, \"uitlanders\" (foreigners) provided almost all of the South African Republic's tax revenues but lacked civic representation; Boer burghers retained control of the government. The uitlander problem and the associated tensions with Britain dominated Kruger's attention for the rest of his presidency, to which he was re-elected in 1888, 1893 and 1898, and led to the Jameson Raid of 1895–96 and ultimately the Second Boer War. Kruger left for Europe as the war turned against the Boers in 1900 and spent the rest of his life in exile, refusing to return home following the British victory. After he died in Switzerland at the age of 78 in 1904, his body was returned to South Africa for a state funeral, and buried in the Heroes' Acre in Pretoria.", "score": null }, { "id": "30050025", "title": "M. Victor Paul", "text": " Victor Paul was born on 7 April 1935 into a pastoral family in Rajahmundry, East Godavari District in Andhra Pradesh as the eldest of nine children to Smt. Sundaramma and Pastor Mortha Sudarshanam. After undergoing schooling at the Lutheran Boarding in Peddapuram, his parents sent him to the Andhra-Christian College, Guntur. Paul studied Arts (B.A.) in the College when Rao Sahab T. S. Paulus was at the helm of affairs. After completing graduate studies in Guntur, Victor Paul returned to Rajahmundry where he underwent studies in education at the local Government Training College leading to BEd.", "score": "1.4614978" }, { "id": "7285655", "title": "Baselios Marthoma Paulose II", "text": " Kollannur Iype Paul was born on 30 August 1946 as the second son of K. I. Ipe of Kollannur house, Mangad near Pazhanji in Thrissur district of Kerala, India. His mother Kunjeetty belonged to the Pulikkottil family. He was given the name Paul after his grandfather. He was baptized in Pazhanji. He completed his preliminary education at the Mangad Church School until his 7th standard. He completed his high school studies at the Pazhanji Government High School, which was established by the late Pulikkottil Joseph Mar Dionysius II. As a child, Paul attended church services regularly and became an altar boy at a young age. At 13, he was selected by his parish priest to be a part of the Order of the Washing of the Feet which is done on Maundy Thursday by H.G Paulose Mar Severios. In 1963, he completed his SSLC.", "score": "1.4588661" }, { "id": "9892485", "title": "Frank R. Paul", "text": " Paul was born on April 18, 1884 in Radkersburg, Austria-Hungary. His father was from Hungary and his mother from Czechoslovakia. He emigrated to the United States in 1906. He married Rudolpha Costa Rigelsen, a Belgian immigrant, in 1913, and they had four children, Robert S. Paul (born 1915), Francis L. Paul (born 1919), Joan C. Paul (born 1921), and Patricia Ann Paul (born 1929). He studied art in Vienna, Paris, and New York City. He went to work for the Jersey Journal performing graphic design. Publisher Hugo Gernsback hired him in 1914 to illustrate The Electrical Experimenter, a science magazine. He died on June 29, 1963 at his home in Teaneck, New Jersey.", "score": "1.454508" }, { "id": "11809712", "title": "Sunil Paul", "text": " Paul was born in Punjab, India. At the age of 4 his parents immigrated to the United States where he was raised in Nashville, Tennessee. Paul holds a B.E. in Electrical Engineering from Vanderbilt University.", "score": "1.4481347" }, { "id": "25426059", "title": "Paul Householder", "text": " Householder was born on September 4, 1958 in Columbus, Ohio.", "score": "1.4365363" }, { "id": "7688037", "title": "Paul Paul", "text": " Of Armenian descent, Paul Paul was born in Bitlis, Bitlis Vilayet, Ottoman Empire in 1894. His parents were Israel and Bertha Paul. After emigrating to the United States with his family, he eventually arrived in Fresno, California in 1904 with his four siblings; Beatrice, Blanch, Arax, and Nora. The Paul family, who were then shoe repairmen, decided to become full-time farmers. Paul joined the Fresno Municipal Band in 1914 and served as its leader from 1923 to 1948. He was also an amateur wrestler. He worked in the insurance business for a number of years, then became a prominent farmer. From 1960 until his death in 1979, he was a member of the Fresno District Fair Board of Directors. The family started the Pipco Fruit Company in 1952, which grew to 400 acres by the 1960s. The farming operation eventually expanded by ", "score": "1.4294403" }, { "id": "32092546", "title": "K. C. Paul", "text": " Paul was born in 1942 in the Anuliya village of Amta of Howrah. Though he was admitted to a local school, he could not continue his studies due to financial trouble.", "score": "1.4275804" }, { "id": "16553453", "title": "Randolph E. Paul", "text": " Paul, the grandson of a butcher, was born in Hackensack, New Jersey on August 8, 1890, to Charles B. and Martha Evernghim Paul. He worked his way through Amherst College (Class of 1911), and received his law degree from New York Law School in 1913. He began his career as a switchboard operator and, later, as an insurance adjuster.", "score": "1.4255214" }, { "id": "4318533", "title": "Cecil R. Paul", "text": " A Canadian by birth, Paul was born in rural Alberta, in a log cabin with no running water. He would later attend Canadian Nazarene College in Red Deer, Alberta and pursue graduate study at Nazarene Theological Seminary in Kansas City, Missouri before earning a doctoral degree in psychology and pastoral counseling from Boston University.", "score": "1.4246278" }, { "id": "3155369", "title": "PJ Morton", "text": " Morton was born in New Orleans, Louisiana. His father is Canadian-born American gospel singer and Founder of the Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship, Bishop Paul S. Morton. His mother is Dr. Debra Brown Morton, pastor of Greater St. Stephen Full Gospel Baptist Church. Morton graduated St. Augustine High School and majored in marketing at Morehouse College, graduating in 2003.", "score": "1.4228499" }, { "id": "26009175", "title": "D. Babu Paul", "text": " D. Babu Paul was born to Fr. Paulose Cheerothottam Kor Episcopa, a Jacobite priest and headmaster, and Mary Paul, a teacher on 11 April 1941. His brother is K. Roy Paul. He was a rank holder in class X (10th grade) and completed his Pre-degree from Union Christian College, Aluva. After his bachelor's degree in civil engineering from College of Engineering, Trivandrum. He secured 7th rank (All India) in the Civil Service Examination and First rank in South India. He died at 11:30 PM on 12 April 2019, at the age of 78. His death came a day after his 78th birthday, and was caused by a massive heart attack. His wife Anna Babu Paul (Nirmala) (1943–2000), was the former president of YWCA Trivandrum and secretary of The Trivandrum's Women Club. She was also a member of the Censor Board of Film Certification. He is survived by children Cherian Paul and Mariam Joseph.", "score": "1.4134955" }, { "id": "15322599", "title": "Paul Henderson (photojournalist)", "text": " Paul Samuel Henderson was born on October 10, 1899 in Springfield, Tennessee and was the youngest of four children born to Ike A. and Annie L. Henderson. At age 18 he registered for the World War I draft on September 12, 1918 while working as a bricklayer for a steel company in Gary, Indiana. In 1920 his profession changed to driver for a laundry in Gary. At some point during his residence in Gary, he attended the School for Professional Photography.", "score": "1.4103336" }, { "id": "27405991", "title": "Iris Paul", "text": " Iris Grace Rajakumari Walter was born in 1945 in Tamil Nadu, India. The oldest child of four, she and her siblings enjoyed a comfortable childhood in an affluent family. Her father was the Chief Engineer at the Tamil Nadu Public Works Department and moved his family around frequently, including to Tamil Nadu, Chennai, and Delhi, where Iris learned to speak Hindi. As a child, Paul was described as rebellious, headstrong, and boisterous, despite the expectations imposed on her by her parents and the rest of society. Paul grew up in a Christian family and was deeply influenced by her parent's commitment to their religion. During her time at the Women's Christian College, Paul was involved in the Union of Evangelical Studies of India (ESI). After completing her courses in junior college, Paul applied for medical colleges and B.Sc. courses in biology and zoology. Having not ", "score": "1.4082758" }, { "id": "30821224", "title": "Joseph Paul", "text": " Born in Karachi in 1937, he studied at the St Patrick's High School. He obtained a bachelor's degree in 1969, a master's in English in 1972 and a bachelor's in education in 1976. He received his religious training at the Christ the King Seminary (Pakistan) and was ordained a priest at Saint Patrick's Cathedral, Karachi in January 1962.", "score": "1.3938918" }, { "id": "26898154", "title": "John Paul Getty Jr.", "text": " John Paul Jr. was born on board ship in the waters near Genoa, Italy, on 7 September 1932, while his parents Ann and J. Paul Getty were travelling. His birth was registered at La Spezia with the name Eugenio Paul Getty, when the Italian notary misheard the name John. He would legally alter his name with the Italian authorities to John Paul in 1958. He was initially raised in Los Angeles, California, United States. His parents' marriage was troubled by J. Paul's long absences abroad and his emotional distance. Ann Getty divorced J. Paul Getty Sr. in 1936 in Reno, Nevada, claiming emotional cruelty ", "score": "1.3932652" } ]
In what city was Endre Bálint born?
[ "Budapest", "Buda Pest", "Buda-Pest", "Budapešť", "Budapesta", "Budapeszt", "Buda", "Ofen", "Budín", "Budim", "Budon", "Pest", "Pešť", "Pešta", "Óbuda", "Alt-Ofen", "Kőbánya" ]
place of birth
Endre Bálint
6,315,935
72
[ { "id": "664261", "title": "Endre Bálint", "text": " Endre Bálint (1914 – 1986, in Budapest) was a Hungarian painter and graphic artist.", "score": "1.9942505" }, { "id": "31110393", "title": "Endre Alexander Balazs", "text": " He was born in 1920, in Budapest, Hungary. His father was an engineer at the Budapest Waterworks until the communist takeover after World War II. He graduated from the University of Budapest in 1942 and started his research career at the Department of Histology and Embryology of the university. In 1947, he continued his research at the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm. He was the director of ophthalmic research at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, from 1975 to 1982. He died on August 29, 2015 in Saint-Tropez, France.", "score": "1.7360361" }, { "id": "870432", "title": "Benjamin Balint", "text": " Benjamin Balint (born 1976) is an American-Israeli author, journalist, educator, and translator. His 2018 book explores the literary legacy of Franz Kafka. He lives in Jerusalem.", "score": "1.701211" }, { "id": "664262", "title": "Endre Bálint", "text": "My Room at the Bindendorfs 1937 ; Self-portrait 1942 ; Still-life 1946 ; House at Szentendre 1948 ; Root Dance 1952 ; Stone Bird 1952 ; Statue in a Cemetery 1959 ; Houses at Hastings 1959 ; Homesickness 1959 ", "score": "1.6959864" }, { "id": "33033128", "title": "Bálint László", "text": " László was born in Subotica, a city in the northern parts of Serbia, known as Vojvodina. He finished his elementary studies in the Miloš Crnjanski elementary school with a Vuk-degree in his hand. After this he studied and finished his secondary studies at the Svetozar Marković High School as a social science and language specialist. In 2009, he got his degree as a geographer at the University of Szeged. Later, in 2011, he finished his master studies in the same university, and became a Land development geographer. In his university years, he did a lot of student jobs. The situation of Hungarians in Vojvodina is one of his main interests. Since he was 16, he became founder and member of various civil organizations both in Vojvodina and in Hungary. He was founder and chairman of the ", "score": "1.6933686" }, { "id": null, "title": "Bálint", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Stephan Balint", "text": "Stephan Balint\n\nStephan Balint (born \"Bálint István\" 11 July 1943 in Budapest, died 11 October 2007 in Budapest) was a writer, actor, theatre director and playwright. Balint was co-founder of New York's Squat Theatre where he wrote, acted and directed \"L-Train to Eldorado\" and \"Full Moon Killer\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Hungarian painters", "text": "List of Hungarian painters\n\nThis is an incomplete list of Hungarian painters. For sculptors see List of Hungarian sculptors\n\nGyémánt László\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Hungarian Americans", "text": "List of Hungarian Americans\n\nThis is a list of notable Hungarian Americans, including both original immigrants who obtained American citizenship and their American descendants.\n\nMany Hungarians emigrated to the United States during the Second World War and after the Soviet invasion in 1956 during Operation Safe Haven.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of painters by name beginning with \"B\"", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "32758384", "title": "Endre Ady", "text": " Ady was born in Érmindszent, Szilágy County (part of Austria-Hungary at the time; now a village in Satu Mare County, Romania, called Adyfalva in Hungarian and Ady Endre in Romanian). He belonged to an impoverished Calvinist noble family. Endre was the second of three children. The eldest, a girl named Ilona, died at an early age. The author and poet Mariska Ady (1888-1977) was a niece of Endre Ady. Between 1892-1896, Ady attended the Calvinist College in Zilah (today Zalău, Romania). On 22 March 1896, he published his first poem in the Zilah newspaper Szilágy. He later studied law at the Reformed College in Debrecen. After dropping out, ", "score": "1.6904504" }, { "id": "4074879", "title": "Eszter Balint", "text": " Eszter Balint was born in Budapest, Hungary, to Marianne Kollar and Stephan Balint. She was living with the avant-garde Squat Theatre troupe in New York City, founded by her father when she first met Jean-Michel Basquiat. They became involved while he was filming Downtown 81. In 1983, Balint was brought into the studio by Basquiat to play violin on the influential hip-hop record \"Beat Bop\" by Rammellzee and K-Rob. Balint made her cinematic debut in 1984 in director Jim Jarmusch's independent film Stranger Than Paradise. In 1985. she made her TV debut in Miami Vice as Dorothy Bain in the episode \"Buddies\". She appeared in the 1990 film Bail Jumper. Roles in The Linguini Incident (1991), Woody Allen's Shadows and Fog (1991) and Steve Buscemi's ", "score": "1.6797607" }, { "id": "5323475", "title": "György Bálint", "text": " Bálint's parents Braun Izidor and Koch Rozália were Jewish from a long tradition of farming. He graduated from the Royal Hungarian Institute of Horticulture in 1941. His parents and their children were deported to a concentration camp during the Holocaust; only Bálint and one of his sisters survived. He was taken first to Mauthausen and then to the extermination camp in Gunskirchen. He weighed 42 kilos when he escaped in 1945. He was a horticulturist, Candidate of Agricultural Sciences, journalist, author, and politician who served as an MP. He died at 100 years of age in 2020 from COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic in Hungary.", "score": "1.6703819" }, { "id": "664425", "title": "Rezső Bálint (painter)", "text": "Fine Arts in Hungary ", "score": "1.6648251" }, { "id": "664424", "title": "Rezső Bálint (painter)", "text": " Rezső Bálint (14 October 1885 – 18 November 1945, in Budapest) was a Hungarian painter known for his landscape paintings. He began as a printer and later he studied painting under the guidance of Manó Vesztróczy and Ferenc Szablya-Frischauf. In 1906 he continued his studies of painting in Nagybánya (Baia Mare, Romania) and later in Paris. He had his first exhibition in Budapest in 1909. In 1910 and 1911 he rented a studio jointly with A. Modigliani on Montparnasse in Paris. In 1911 and 1912 he worked with an extensive number of artists at Kecskemét. In 1919 he published a portfolio entitled Shapes, Patches and Lines presenting ten stone-drawings preceded by an introduction by the Hungarian poet, Dezső Kosztolányi. After 1920 he lived in Izbég a municipality of Szentendre where he mostly painted landscapes. The Hungarian National Gallery today contains three of his pictures: \"Mother with Her Child\", \"Interieur\", \"A Hospital Scene\".", "score": "1.6598248" }, { "id": "5353550", "title": "Bálint Pásztor", "text": " Pásztor was born in Subotica, Vojvodina, in what was then the Socialist Republic of Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Raised in this community, he later received a bachelor's degree (2002), a master's degree (2011), and a Ph.D (2018) from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Law. He began working as a legal advisor to the Pannon Invest Consortium in Subotica in 2002 and was director of the company from 2004 to 2007.", "score": "1.6505532" }, { "id": "32955399", "title": "Val Biro", "text": " Balint Stephen Biro (Budapest, October 6, 1921 – July 4, 2014) was a children's author, artist and illustrator. He received his education in Budapest and London. His studio was located in Amersham in Buckinghamshire.", "score": "1.6392399" }, { "id": "303131", "title": "Endre Dudich", "text": " Born in Nagysalló, Hungary, he was educated at grammar school in Esztergom until 1913. His father was a doctor who passed on an interest in zoology to his son. His education was interrupted by the First World War where he served three and a half years at the front. He returned to the natural history and geography faculty of the Pázmány Péter University, Budapest, and obtained a teaching diploma in 1920. He obtained his doctorate at the University of Szeged in 1922.", "score": "1.6370778" }, { "id": "13739363", "title": "Michael Balint", "text": " Balint was born Mihály Maurice Bergsmann, the son of a practising physician in Budapest. It was against his father's will that he changed his name to Bálint Mihály. He also changed religion, from Judaism to Unitarian Christianity. During World War I Bálint served at the front, first in Russia, then in the Dolomites. He completed his medical studies in Budapest in 1918. On the recommendation of his future wife, Alice Székely-Kovács, Bálint read Sigmund Freud's \"Drei Abhandlungen zur Sexualtheorie\" (1905) and \"Totem und Tabu\". He also began attending the lectures of Sándor Ferenczi, who in 1919 became the world's first university professor of psychoanalysis. ", "score": "1.6281378" }, { "id": "4074878", "title": "Eszter Balint", "text": " Eszter Balint (born 7 July 1966) is a Hungarian singer, songwriter, violinist, and actress.", "score": "1.6271886" }, { "id": "28306490", "title": "Endre Rozsda", "text": " Endre Rozsda was born in Mohács, a small city along the Danube in Hungary. His childhood memories marked his entire artistic work. The creative method he developed helped him to conjure a unique surrealistic world based on his memories: \"Out of memory and light I weave a dense fabric. I look steadily at it until it comes to life and stares back at me, until it rises up in front of me. It's time that I want to get hold of, arrange and evaluate. Time is that bright, multi-colored oblivion where joys and sufferings turn into precious beads. Around time's beads I twist the ivy of my ", "score": "1.6204634" }, { "id": "33047671", "title": "Rezső Bálint (physician)", "text": " Rezső Bálint (October 22, 1874 – May 23, 1929) was a Jewish-Hungarian neurologist and psychiatrist. He discovered Bálint's syndrome. He was born into a German-Jewish family that had settled in Budapest. Rezso Balint’s first writings, published while he was still a medical student, were case studies examining muscular atrophy in hemiplegia. He went on to study tabes dorsalis and the treatment of epilepsy. In 1907, Dr. Balint recorded his observations of a patient who suffered from a unique constellation of neurologic symptoms including fixation of gaze, neglect of objects in his periphery, and misreaching for target objects. The patient was noted to first experience these symptoms following damage to the posterior parietal lobes. This “triple-syndrome complex” was later named “Balint’s Syndrome.” Bálint studied medicine in Budapest, graduating in 1897. He habilitated in 1910, became extraordinary professor in 1914 and full professor in 1917. He died of thyroid cancer in 1929.", "score": "1.6065512" }, { "id": "31354376", "title": "Endre Misteth", "text": " Mistath was born in Buziásfürdő, Temes County. His father's family was of French Huguenot origin, and his mother's side was of Greek-Serbian descent. After the Treaty of Trianon, the family moved from what became Romanian territory to Hungary. He began his studies at Matyas Hunyadi military academy, originally intending for a career in the army, but eventually graduated from the Budapest Technical University in 1935. He began work in the Ganz rail factory and later took part in the building of roads between Székesfehérvár and Graz. He opened his own practice in 1940. Among his early work was a cable bridge in Szolnok which at the time was the largest of its kind in Europe. He took part in the resistance during the Second World War.", "score": "1.601453" }, { "id": "5332589", "title": "Béla Endre", "text": " He was born in the famous \"Black House (Szeged)\" of Szeged, built by his grandfather, the merchant Ferdinand Mayer (1817–1903). Originally destined for a career in engineering, he chose to pursue art instead; studying painting locally for a few years, then at the Accademia Raffaello in Urbino from 1895 to 1897 and the Académie Julian in Paris from 1898 to 1900. In 1901, he settled in Hódmezővásárhely, where he had a studio that he shared with János Tornyai and Gyulá Rudnay. In 1912, he helped to establish the \"Majolica and Clay Artists' Society\" (Művészek Majolika és Agyagipari Telep-ének) and held his first exhibition in Hódmezővásárhely. He held further exhibits in Makó (1913) and Arad ", "score": "1.5981083" }, { "id": "3923757", "title": "Endre Wolf", "text": " Wolf was born in Budapest to a Jewish family from Chernivtsi in Ukraine and raised in Hungary. His mother was a seamstress and his father a watchmaker from Chernivtsi, Ukraine. When he was four, Wolf persuaded his parents to buy him a violin and he was taught by the well known Hungarian musician Jenő Hubay along with Leó Weiner. He received his musical education at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music and in 1936 was offered a post at the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra in Sweden. The Hungarian police refused to give him a passport but after his aunt showed them a letter from Gothenburg and told them, \"Here is another opportunity to get rid of a Jew\", he was allowed to leave Hungary to spend the war in neutral Sweden and emigrate to England after the war.", "score": "1.5941823" } ]
In what city was Aleksandr Nekrasov born?
[ "Moscow", "Moskva", "Moscow, Russia", "Moskva Federal City, Russia", "Moscow, USSR", "Moskva, Russia", "City of Moscow", "Moscow, Russian Federation", "Moscow, Soviet Union", "Moscow, Russian SFSR", "Muscovite", "Moscovite" ]
place of birth
Aleksandr Nekrasov
3,036,567
80
[ { "id": "8928250", "title": "Maxim Nekrasov", "text": " Maxim Alexandrovich Nekrasov was born on 27 September 2000 in Odintsovo, Russia.", "score": "1.8454224" }, { "id": "28400952", "title": "Nikolai Vladimirovich Nekrasov", "text": " Nekrasov was born in Moscow. A journalist, he worked in the publishing house Moscow worker. He learned Esperanto in 1915.", "score": "1.7723261" }, { "id": "2634364", "title": "Andrei Nekrasov", "text": " Andrei Lvovich Nekrasov (Андре́й Льво́вич Некра́сов; born 26 February 1958 in Saint Petersburg) is a Russian film and TV director from Saint Petersburg.", "score": "1.7317164" }, { "id": "11974357", "title": "Aleksandr Nekrasov (footballer)", "text": " Aleksandr Maksimovich Nekrasov (Александр Максимович Некрасов; born 20 August 1998) is a Russian football player. He plays for FC Dynamo Saint Petersburg.", "score": "1.7027023" }, { "id": "4786895", "title": "Aleksandr Nepomnyashchiy", "text": " Aleksandr Evgenyevich Nepomnyashchiy (Александр Евгеньевич Непомнящий; February 16, 1968 – April 20, 2007) was a Russian poet, singer and bard, as well as a member of the National Bolshevik Party. He was born in Kovrov and died, aged 39, in Ivanovo.", "score": "1.6770744" }, { "id": null, "title": "Aleksandr Nekrasov (footballer)", "text": "Aleksandr Nekrasov (footballer)\n\nAleksandr Maksimovich Nekrasov (; born 20 August 1998) is a Russian football player.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Aleksandr Nekrasov", "text": "Aleksandr Nekrasov\n\nAleksandr Ivanovich Nekrasov (; – 21 May 1957) was a mathematician known for his mathematical contributions to hydromechanics and aeromechanics. The Nekrasov integral equation describing surface waves is named for him.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Alexander Nekrasov (politician)", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Alexander Nekrasov", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Nekrasov", "text": "Nekrasov\n\nNekrasov, also \"Nekrassov\" (), or Nekrasova (feminine; Некра́сова), is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include:\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "15104348", "title": "Nikolai Vissarionovich Nekrasov", "text": " Nikolai Vissarionovich Nekrasov (Никола́й Виссарио́нович Некра́сов) (November 1 1879, Saint Petersburg – May 7, 1940, Moscow) was a Russian liberal politician and the last Governor-General of Finland.", "score": "1.6622653" }, { "id": "11974358", "title": "Aleksandr Nekrasov (footballer)", "text": " He made his debut in the Russian Football National League for FC Zenit-2 Saint Petersburg on 8 July 2017 in a game against FC Shinnik Yaroslavl.", "score": "1.6544435" }, { "id": "923420", "title": "Nikita Nekrasov", "text": " Nikita Alexandrovich Nekrasov (Ники́та Алекса́ндрович Некра́сов; born 10 April 1973) is a mathematical and theoretical physicist at the Simons Center for Geometry and Physics and C.N.Yang Institute for Theoretical Physics at Stony Brook University in New York, and a Professor of the Russian Academy of Sciences.", "score": "1.641577" }, { "id": "8928249", "title": "Maxim Nekrasov", "text": " Maxim Alexandrovich Nekrasov (Максим Александрович Некрасов, born 27 September 2000) is a Russian competitive ice dancer. With his skating partner, Arina Ushakova, he is the 2018 World Junior bronze medalist and 2018–19 Junior Grand Prix Final silver medalist. He has also won six medals on the ISU Junior Grand Prix series, including gold medals in 2017 Italy, 2018 Lithuania and 2018 Armenia.", "score": "1.6344749" }, { "id": "625029", "title": "Nekrasov", "text": "Aleksandr Nekrasov (1883–1957), Russian mathematician and academician ; Alexander Nekrasov (sergeant) (1925–1944), Soviet army officer and Hero of the Soviet Union ; Alexander Nekrassov, Voice of Russia news correspondent in London ; Andrei Nekrasov (born 1958), contemporary Russian filmmaker from St. Petersburg ; Andrei Sergeevich Nekrasov (1907-1987), Soviet writer ; Andrey Nekrasov (sergeant) (1909–1993), Soviet army officer and Hero of the Soviet Union ; Boris Nekrasov (1899-?), Soviet chemist ; Dasha Nekrasova (born 1991) A Belarusian-American actress, filmmaker and podcaster. ; Ignat Nekrasov (c.1660-1737), original leader of Nekrasovites (Nekrasov Cossacks) ; Ivan Nekrasov (1892–1964), Soviet army officer and Hero of the Soviet Union ; Leopold Nekrasov (1923–1945), Soviet army officer and Hero of the Soviet Union ; Nikita Nekrasov (1973- ), Russian-French theoretical and mathematical physicist ; Nikolay Nekrasov (1821–1878), Russian poet ; Nikolay Nikolayevich Nekrasov (1906-?), Soviet economist and academician ; Nikolai Vissarionovich Nekrasov (1879–1940), Russian politician ; Nikolai Vladimirovich Nekrasov (1900–1938), Soviet journalist and esperantist ; Pavel Nekrasov (1853–1924), Russian mathematician ; Viktor Nekrasov (1911–1987), Soviet writer ; Vsevolod Nekrasov (1934–2009), Russian poet Nekrasov, also Nekrassov (Некра́сов), or Nekrasova (feminine; Некра́сова), is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.632342" }, { "id": "9333323", "title": "Aleksandr Nelidov", "text": " He was born in St. Petersburg. He studied law and Oriental languages in St. Petersburg University.", "score": "1.6273311" }, { "id": "29949639", "title": "Mikhail Nekrasov", "text": " Mikhail Vyacheslavovich Nekrasov (Михаил Вячеславович Некрасов; born 17 September 1980) is a former Russian professional footballer.", "score": "1.6138213" }, { "id": "6677885", "title": "Nikolai Galakhov", "text": " Nikolai Galakhov was born May 29, 1928, in Kazan city, Tatar Republic, USSR, on the Volga River. In 1942 he entered in Kazan Art School, and graduated in 1947. In the same year he moved to Leningrad and was admitted to the first course of Department of Painting of the Leningrad Institute of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture named after Ilya Repin. He studied of Leonid Ovsannikov, Joseph Serebriany, Piotr Belousov, Yuri Neprintsev. In 1953 Nikolai Galakhov graduated from the Repin Institute of Arts in Rudolf Frentz workshop. His graduation work was a genre painting named \"Poet Nikolai Nekrasov on the Volga River\", dedicated to Nikolai Nekrasov, ", "score": "1.5993972" }, { "id": "12284467", "title": "Herman Rosenthal", "text": " Rosenthal was born in Friedrichstadt (Jaunjelgava), Courland. He was educated at Bauske (Bauska) and Jakobstadt (Jēkabpils), graduating in 1859. In that year he translated into German several of Nekrasov's poems. In 1869 he engaged in the printing trade at Krementchug, and in 1870 he published a collection of poems, Gedichte. In the Russo-Turkish war he served in the Russian Red Cross Society and received the society's medal for distinguished service (1877–78). Returning to his craft as master-printer, he pursued it in Smyela, government of Kiev, and in the city of Kiev until 1881. He produced a humorous story, \"Die Wunderliche ", "score": "1.5869997" }, { "id": "29949640", "title": "Mikhail Nekrasov", "text": " He played 5 seasons in the Russian Football National League for FC Neftekhimik Nizhnekamsk and FC Avangard Kursk.", "score": "1.5856168" }, { "id": "29558623", "title": "Dasha Nekrasova", "text": " Nekrasova was born in Minsk, Belarus (at that time still part of USSR), to parents who worked as acrobats. She emigrated to the United States with her parents when she was four, settling in Las Vegas, Nevada. She attended high school at Las Vegas Academy of the Arts, graduating in 2008, before attending Mills College, where she studied sociology and philosophy.", "score": "1.5743603" }, { "id": "2634365", "title": "Andrei Nekrasov", "text": " Andrei Nekrasov studied acting and directing at the Russian State Institute of Performing Arts in his native Saint Petersburg. He studied comparative literature and philosophy at the University of Paris, taking a master's degree, and film at Bristol University Film School. In 1985, he assisted Andrei Tarkovsky during the filming and editing of The Sacrifice. Nekrasov then made several internationally coproduced documentaries and TV arts programs (notably A Russia of One's Own, Pasternak, The Prodigal Son, and Children's Stories: Chechnya). His first drama short, Springing Lenin (1993) won the UNESCO prize at the Cannes Film Festival that year, and in 1997 his first feature, Love is as Strong as Death won the ", "score": "1.573168" }, { "id": "10158210", "title": "Pavel Nekrasov", "text": " Nekrasov studied at the Orthodox theological seminary and from 1874 at the University of Moscow. There he was a pupil of the mathematician Nikolai Vasilievich Bugaev. Several years after his graduation, he became a Privatdozent there in 1885 (having received his Russian PhD in the same year, corresponding to a habilitation in the West) and, in 1885 or 1886, an associate professor at Moscow University (where he had been since 1883). In 1890 he received a full professorship. In 1893 he became rector. After his term as rector, he actually wanted to retire, but was not allowed to. He also taught 1885–1891 Probability Theory and Higher Mathematics at the Moscow Institute of Land Surveying. From 1898 he was almost only with ", "score": "1.5668653" }, { "id": "1176958", "title": "Elena Nekrasova", "text": " Elena Nekrasova (Елена Анатольевна Некрасова; born 1964) is a Russian writer, filmmaker and contemporary artist. Exhibitions of her paintings took place in Ukraine, Russia, United States, Japan, Germany, Denmark, Poland and other paintings are in many museums and private collections. Elena Nekrasovа creates documentary films and video art. Documentary series \"Provincial museums of Russia\" and other repeatedly demonstrated on many TV channels in Russia - Culture, TVC etc., has a prize of the festival Kinotavr, Moscow International Film Festival, etc. Since 2005, she writes prose. In 2008 Elena Nekrasovа - finalist of the main Russian literary prize, Russian Booker with the novel \"Schukinsk and Other Places\". The author of the novels \"Gil-Gul\", \"Schukinsk and Other Places\", \"Script Writer\", \"Malenkiye\" and a collection of short stories \"Three dogs of Ada\". In 2010-2012 she traveled around the world on a yacht. According to the video materials of this journey she made documentary series \"From land to land\".", "score": "1.5666602" }, { "id": "15104349", "title": "Nikolai Vissarionovich Nekrasov", "text": " Born in the family of a priest, Nekrasov graduated with a degree in transportation engineering in 1902 and went abroad for graduate studies. After returning to Russia in 1904, he became a professor at the Tomsk Engineering Institute. In late 1905, at the height of the Russian Revolution of 1905, he helped found the Constitutional Democratic Party (aka the Kadet party) and headed its regional office in Yalta, Crimea. He was elected to the 3rd (1907) and 4th (1912) State Dumas. Nekrasov was an active member of the irregular freemasonic lodge, the Grand Orient of Russia’s Peoples. He was the Secretary General from 1912 to 1913 and again from ", "score": "1.5638936" } ]
In what city was Andrian Mardiansyah born?
[ "Indonesia", "Republic of Indonesia", "id", "ID", "INA", "IDN" ]
place of birth
Andrian Mardiansyah
3,332,240
69
[ { "id": "9471356", "title": "Andrian Mardiansyah", "text": "} ", "score": "2.3881483" }, { "id": "9471354", "title": "Andrian Mardiansyah", "text": " Andrian Mardiansyah (born November 14, 1978) is an Indonesian football player and manager who previously plays as midfielder for Persikota Tangerang, Persija Jakarta, Persib Bandung, Deltras Sidoarjo, PSIS Semarang, Persikabo Bogor, Persiba Balikpapan, Persidafon Dafonsoro and the Indonesia national team.", "score": "2.0184033" }, { "id": "9471355", "title": "Andrian Mardiansyah", "text": " He received his first international cap on 31 July 1999 and retired from the Indonesia national football team in 1999, appearing in 5 matches. Andrian scored the first goal for Indonesia in the 1999 Southeast Asian Games football tournament against Cambodia.", "score": "1.8085334" }, { "id": "8582948", "title": "Andjar Asmara", "text": " Andjar was born Abisin Abbas in Alahan Panjang, West Sumatra, on 26 February 1902. He gravitated toward traditional theatre at a young age after visits from the wandering Wayang Kassim and Juliana Opera stambul troupes; he pretended to act with his friends in stage plays which they had seen. After completing his formal education up to the Meer Uitgebreid Lager Onderwijs (junior high school) level – first in Malay-language schools then Dutch ones – he moved to Batavia (modern-day Jakarta). He worked as a reporter for two daily newspapers, Bintang Timoer and Bintang Hindia; he may have also worked on a farm. Around 1925, having had little success in Batavia, Andjar moved to Padang, where he was a reporter for the ", "score": "1.7403662" }, { "id": "9471357", "title": "Andrian Mardiansyah", "text": "Persija Jakarta : ; Liga Indonesia Premier Division champions : 1 (2001) ", "score": "1.7265236" }, { "id": null, "title": "Andrian Mardiansyah", "text": "Andrian Mardiansyah\n\nAndrian Mardiansyah (born 14 November 1978) is an Indonesian football player and manager who previously plays as midfielder for Persikota Tangerang, Persija Jakarta, Persib Bandung, Deltras Sidoarjo, PSIS Semarang, Persikabo Bogor, Persiba Balikpapan, Persidafon Dafonsoro and the Indonesia national team.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Andrian (name)", "text": "Andrian (name)\n\nAndrian is a male given name and a German surname. It may refer to the following people:\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Persidafon Dafonsoro players", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:SEA Games bronze medalists for Indonesia", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Indonesian football midfielder stubs", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "4233169", "title": "Erry Yulian Triblas Adesta", "text": " Erry was born in Palembang, South Sumatra, Indonesia on July 13, 1962. He is the first son, with seven siblings, from Edward Jarjis bin Sutan Malihan and Roslaini binti Anwar Hamzah. His father was a teacher at the vocational school of Sekolah Teknik Menengah Negeri 2 Palembang, and his mother was a nurse at the hospital of PT Stanvac Indonesia at Sungai Gerong, South Sumatra. He completed his high-school education at Sekolah Menengah Atas Xaverius I at Palembang by 1981. He later enrolled to Mechanical Engineering Department at the Faculty of Engineering, Sriwijaya University, before he later left the program after the first year of the enrollment itself. Erry married Tritayana binti M. Yasin on 1987 while he was pursuing his study at Huddersfield, UK. He has three sons, all of whom were born in UK: Dr. Fajar Englando Alan Adesta (born in Huddersfield in 1988), a Postgraduate Student in internal medicine at University of Indonesia; Fadhli Zil Ikram Adesta, BSc (Pharm) (Hons) (born in Birmingham in 1991), a pharmacist at Specialist Compounding Pharmacy Singapore; and Fayez Ghazi Mutasim Adesta (born in Huddersfield in 1999), a law undergraduate student at International Islamic University Malaysia.", "score": "1.7211661" }, { "id": "33104705", "title": "Ravished Armenia", "text": " The author Arshaluys (Aurora) Mardiganian was born in the city of Çemişgezek, near Harput (Kharpert), (present-day Turkish province of Elâzığ), Ottoman Empire. She was the daughter of a wealthy Armenian financier in the city. The story starts in 1915 when Arshaluys was 14 years old. She personally witnessed the murder of her father, mother, brothers and sisters. She was taken to the harem of a number of Turkish pashas, but had remained attached to her Christian Armenian faith despite being tortured repeatedly at the hands of her captors. She found refuge with Frederick W. MacCallum, a Canadian doctor and missionary stationed with the American Board of Commissioners ", "score": "1.7108977" }, { "id": "28166311", "title": "Andrian Raturandang", "text": " Andrian Raturandang (born 29 July 1976) is an Indonesian former professional tennis player. He was a gold medalist for Indonesia at the 1997 Southeast Asian Games. Raturandang reached a career high singles ranking of 484 while competing on the professional tour, mostly in satellite and Futures events. He made one ATP Tour singles main draw, as a wildcard at the 1996 Indonesia Open, where he was beaten in the first round by Chris Wilkinson. He also featured twice in the doubles main draw of the Indonesia Open. A five-time Southeast Asian Games medalist, Raturandang represented Indonesia in 10 Davis Cup ties, between 1996 and 1998 and then in 2001. From his 19 singles rubbers he won only two of them, against Tsai Chia-yen of Chinese Taipei and Sean Karam of Lebanon.", "score": "1.6883429" }, { "id": "8582946", "title": "Andjar Asmara", "text": " Abisin Abbas (26 February 1902 – 20 October 1961), better known by his pseudonym Andjar Asmara, was a dramatist and filmmaker active in the cinema of the Dutch East Indies. Born in Alahan Panjang, West Sumatra, he first worked as a reporter in Batavia (modern-day Jakarta). He became a writer for the Padangsche Opera in Padang, where he developed a new, dialogue-centric style, which later spread throughout the region. After returning to Batavia in 1929, he spent over a year as a theatre and film critic. In 1930 he joined the Dardanella touring troupe as a writer. He went to India in an unsuccessful bid to film his stage play Dr Samsi. After leaving Dardanella in 1936, Andjar established his own troupe. He also worked ", "score": "1.6822771" }, { "id": "27077739", "title": "Rober Haddeciyan", "text": " Rober Haddeciyan was born in 1926 in the district of Bakırköy in Istanbul, Turkey, to Avedis Haddeciyan and Siranush. He graduated from the Pangaltı Armenian Mkhitarist High School in 1944 and is an Istanbul University Faculty of Letters Department of Philosophy graduate. Haddeciyan, who was already working for Marmara as a journalist, became the editor-in-chief of the newspaper in 1967. His columns in Nor Marmara are translated into Turkish by his daughter-in-law Karolin Haddeler and published in the weekly Turkish supplement. He has published 50 to 60 books so far. One of his most famous books is his novel Arasdagh (Առաստաղ, Ceiling), which has also been published in Turkish under the title Tavan.", "score": "1.6764252" }, { "id": "29275148", "title": "Rupen Zartarian", "text": " Zartarian was born in 1874 in the city of Diyarbekir, but moved to Harput (or Kharpert) (Armenian: Խարբերդ) when he was two. He received his education from the educational institutions of that city. Zartarian became a student of Tlgadintsi (Hovhannes Harutiunian, 1910–1912), who was a leading figure in rural Armenian literature. Tlgandintsi was also killed by Ottoman authorities during the Armenian Genocide. Zartarian was greatly influenced by his mentor, and his writing career stemmed from the encouragement he obtained. At the age of 18, he started teaching, and for the following decade, he continued in the field of education. At first, he taught at Tlgandinsti's institution, he then spent three years in French religious institutes. In 1903, Zartarian was arrested by the Ottoman government and subsequently forced to leave ", "score": "1.6690269" }, { "id": "25411251", "title": "Nahapet Rusinian", "text": " Nahabed Rusinian was born in the village of Efkere near Kayseri in 1819 to Armenian parents. His family moved to Constantinople in 1828. He completed his secondary education in Constantinople and in 1840, he was awarded a scholarship to continue his studies in medicine in Paris. While in Paris, Rusinian audited courses on literature and philosophy at the Sorbonne, and was influenced by the ideas of Lamartine, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Montesquieu, Victor Hugo, and other political philosophers. It was at the Sorbonne where Rusinian was confronted, for the very first time, with the principle of popular vote and other constitutionalist ideas. Rusinian returned to Constantinople in 1851 and upon recommendation of Servitchen, he became the family physician of Fuad Pasha. He died in 1879 in Istanbul.", "score": "1.6667051" }, { "id": "8275707", "title": "Wiranto", "text": " Dariyanto, who was at the location. Wiranto's men were also injured in the attack. The suspect is Syahril Alamsyah alias Abu Rara, born in Medan, 24 August 1968, and a woman who is suspected to be with the perpetrator, on behalf of Fitri Andriana, born in Brebes, May 5, 1998, was arrested. The head of the Public Information Bureau of the National Police Headquarters Brigadier General Dedi Prasetyo said the two perpetrators of the attack on Wiranto were suspected of being exposed to radicalism Islamic State of Iraq and Syria and after the incident, he had to be rushed to the nearest hospital for first aid and referred to Gatot Soebroto Army Hospital, Jakarta.", "score": "1.6651613" }, { "id": "3509610", "title": "Ananda Omesh", "text": " Rusdiana was born on August 21, 1986, in Sukabumi, West Java. He is an alumnus of the Faculty of Communication of Padjadjaran University. He married actress and news anchor Dian Ayu Lestari on July 8, 2012. They have one daughter and one son.", "score": "1.663688" }, { "id": "6862604", "title": "Vartan Matiossian", "text": " Matiossian was born in Montevideo, Uruguay on March 6, 1964. He moved to Buenos Aires in 1973. In 1991 he graduated from the School of Economic Sciences of the University of Buenos Aires. From 1992 to 2000, he was associate professor of Armenian History and Religion at the School of Eastern Studies, Universidad del Salvador (Buenos Aires). He has lived in New Jersey, USA since 2000. In 2006 he earned his Ph.D. in history from the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia. He was director of the Armenian National Education Committee (New York) from 2010-2019. His fields of interest cover Armenian history and literature, both ancient and modern. Besides his scholarly work, he is an active contributor to the periodical press in Armenian, English, and Spanish.", "score": "1.6629784" }, { "id": "27910559", "title": "Eka Budianta", "text": " Christophorus Apolinaris Eka Budianta Martoredjo, also known as C. A. Eka Budianta, more commonly known as Eka Budianta (born 1956 in Ngimbang, East Java) is an Indonesian poet. He was born into a Catholic family and was the second child of nine. His grandparents were farmers. His parents were public elementary school teachers. His father later worked at the local office for the Ministry Education and his mother became a school principal. After graduating from St. Albertus high school in Malang (Dempo), he attended the Lembaga Pendidikan Kesenian Jakarta, now known as Institut Kesenian Jakarta but did not complete his studies. From 1975 to 1979, Eka Budianta studied Japanese literature at the Department of East Asian Studies Literature then changed to the Department of History, Faculty of Letters, University of Indonesia. He then studied journalism at Los Angeles Trade-Technical College in the United States from 1980–81. After working ", "score": "1.6533918" }, { "id": "8597602", "title": "Isaac Larian", "text": " Born to a Jewish family in Kashan, Iran, Larians family relocated to Tehran at the age of four where they lived in the Tehran slum known as Narmak. His father had a small textile shop where Larian began working at the age of 9. In search of opportunity, Larian arrived to the United States alone in 1971 at the age of 17, without a place to stay, unable to speak English, and with $750 to his name. He managed to find work as a dishwasher making $1.65 an hour, eventually being promoted to bus-boy and then waiter within the year. After ", "score": "1.6529055" }, { "id": "14022251", "title": "Aram Andonian", "text": " Andonian was born in Constantinople. There he edited the Armenian journals Luys (Light) and Dzaghik (Flower) and the newspaper Surhandak (Herald). Andonian then went on to serve in the department of military censorship of the Ottoman Empire. He was arrested by order of interior minister Talat Pasha of the Ottoman Empire on the eve of April 24, 1915, and joined the large number of Armenian notables who were deported from the Ottoman capital. Andonian was deported to Chankiri, then, halfway there, returned to Ankara and was deported again to the camps in the Ra's al-'Ayn and Meskene. However, Andonian survived in Aleppo in the underground. When British forces occupied Aleppo, a lower-level Turkish official, Naim Bey collaborated with Aram Andonian in publishing his memoirs, an account of the deportation of the Armenians. ", "score": "1.6517494" }, { "id": "3656519", "title": "Erzaldi Rosman Djohan", "text": " Djohan was born on 31 October 1969 in Pangkal Pinang (then part of South Sumatra province) from Rosman Djohan and Melati. He completed his high school education in Pangkal Pinang, before moving to Jakarta, earning a diploma in 1994 from Tarumanegara University. Later, he also obtained a bachelors and masters from an economics institute.", "score": "1.6512698" }, { "id": "7290895", "title": "Vincent Rivaldi Kosasih", "text": " Born in Madiun, Kosasih grew up in Surabaya. He moved to Jakarta while he attended high school. Afterwards, he continued his studies abroad at the Zhejiang University of Science and Technology located in Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China. He finished his studies there in 2017.", "score": "1.6505536" } ]
In what city was Bert Myers born?
[ "Frederick", "Frederick, Maryland", "Frederick, MD" ]
place of birth
Bert Myers
3,485,927
45
[ { "id": "1691398", "title": "Bert Myers", "text": " James Albert Myers (April 8, 1874 &ndash; October 12, 1915) was an American professional baseball player who played in parts of three seasons for the St. Louis Browns, Washington Senators and Philadelphia Phillies. He was born in Frederick, Maryland and died in Washington, D.C. at the age of 41.", "score": "1.8787081" }, { "id": "14894574", "title": "Harry C. Myers", "text": " He was born in New Haven, Connecticut, on September 5, 1882. When he was young, Myers moved to Philadelphia, where he received most of his education. He studied drawing and design at the Philadelphia Art School for three years. Turning from art to drama, he acted for two years with the Girard Avenue Stock Company and with other troupes in subsequent years. Myers had been a theatre actor for 10 years before he went into films as an actor for Siegmund Lubin's Lubin Studios in 1909. By 1914, he was directing his own comedy shorts featuring him and his wife, Rosemary Theby, for Universal, the Vim Comedy Company, and Pathé studios. After 1920 he had many starring roles in feature-length films, the most notable of which was as the eccentric alcoholic millionaire in Charlie Chaplin's City Lights (1931). His career declined after the introduction of sound films. Myers died on December 25, 1938, in Hollywood, California, at age 56, from pneumonia.", "score": "1.6669997" }, { "id": "32924262", "title": "Wilson Myers", "text": " Wilson \"Serious\" Myers (born Ernest Wilson Myers or Wilson Ernestine Myers, October 2, 1906 – July 10, 1992) was an American jazz double-bassist, vocalist, bandleader and arranger, best known for his contributions to New Orleans jazz.", "score": "1.6327035" }, { "id": "7271081", "title": "Scott Myers", "text": " Scott Myers (born 1958, USA) is an American painter and sculptor who lives and works in Texas. He graduated Texas A&M University in 1984 with a doctorate in veterinary medicine. He studied sculpture throughout Italy focusing on Florence, Venice and Rome. Sculpting in Tuscany, he cast his work in bronze at the prestigious Fonderia d'Arte Massimo Del Chiaro in Pietrasanta. In 1994, Myers became an elected member of the National Sculpture Society. On February 12, 2011, Myers was featured in the popular television show Texas Country Reporter. Myers was inducted in the inaugural class of the Haltom City High School Hall of Fame on March 10, ", "score": "1.6282525" }, { "id": "14238214", "title": "Jerome Myers", "text": " Jerome Myers (March 20, 1867 – June 19, 1940) was an American artist and writer associated with the Ashcan School, particularly known for his sympathetic depictions of the urban landscape and its people. He was one of the main organizers of the 1913 Armory Show, which introduced European modernism to America. Born in Petersburg, Virginia and raised in Philadelphia, Trenton and Baltimore, he spent his adult life in New York City. Myers worked briefly as an actor and scene painter. He then studied art for a year at Cooper Union followed by study at the Art Students League over a period of eight years where his main teacher was George de Forest Brush. In 1896 he went to Paris, but only stayed a few months, believing that his main classroom was ", "score": "1.6226747" }, { "id": null, "title": "Burt Myers", "text": "Burt Myers\n\nBurt Myers (born December 30, 1975) is a race car driver on NASCAR's Whelen Southern Modified Tour. In 1999, at the age of 23, he became the youngest Bowman Gray Stadium track champion in history and would go on to win 9 more titles in 2001, 2007, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019. He has won more pole awards than any other driver in the Whelen Southern Modified Tour's history.\nMyers has 19 career wins and won the 2010 and 2016 NASCAR Whelen Southern Modified Tour Championship.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Bert Myers", "text": "Bert Myers\n\nJames Albert Myers (April 8, 1874 – October 12, 1915) was an American professional baseball player who played in parts of three seasons for the St. Louis Browns, Washington Senators and Philadelphia Phillies.\nHe was born in Frederick, Maryland and died in Washington, D.C. at the age of 41.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Bert Blyleven", "text": "Bert Blyleven\n\nBert Blyleven (born Rik Aalbert Blijleven, April 6, 1951) is a Dutch-American former professional baseball pitcher who played 22 seasons in Major League Baseball (MLB) from 1970 to 1992, primarily with the Minnesota Twins. Blyleven recorded 3,701 career strikeouts, the fifth-most in MLB history. He won 287 games, 27th-most all-time and pitched 4,970 innings, 14th-most all-time. A renowned curveball pitcher, Blyleven was also a two-time All-Star and World Series champion. Although under-appreciated during his playing career, he was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2011—his second-to-last year of eligibility.\n\nBlyleven made his major league debut at age 19 for the Twins. In the middle of the 1976 season, he was traded to the Texas Rangers, where he threw a no-hitter in his final start for the team. He won his first World Series with the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1979. Upon being traded to the Cleveland Indians, Blyleven initially struggled with injuries, but then enjoyed a late-career resurgence, finishing third in the Cy Young Award voting in back-to-back years, with Cleveland in 1984 and also the following 1985 season that he split between the Indians and Twins. It was during this second stint with Minnesota that Blyleven became the tenth member of the 3,000-strikeout club in 1986 and won a second World Series title in 1987. He played three seasons for the California Angels before retiring.\n\nBlyleven became the first Dutch-born player to earn induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame. He served as the pitching coach for the Netherlands national baseball team in the 2009, 2013 and 2017 World Baseball Classic. From 1996 to 2020, he was a color analyst for Minnesota Twins television broadcasts.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Fort Myers, Florida", "text": "Fort Myers, Florida\n\nFort Myers (or Ft. Myers) is a city in southwestern Florida and the county seat and commercial center of Lee County, Florida, United States. The Census Bureau's Population Estimates Program calculated that the city's population was 92,245 in 2021, ranking the city the 370th-most-populous in the country.<ref name=ANNRNK/> Together with the larger and more residential city of Cape Coral, the smaller cities of Fort Myers Beach, Sanibel, and Bonita Springs, the village of Estero, and the unincorporated districts of Lehigh Acres and North Fort Myers, it anchors a metropolitan statistical area (MSA) which comprises Lee County and has a population of 787,976 as of 2021.\n\nFort Myers is a gateway to the Southwest Florida region and a major tourist destination within Florida. The winter estates of Thomas Edison (\"Seminole Lodge\") and Henry Ford (\"The Mangoes\") are major attractions. The city takes its name from a local former fort that was built during the Seminole Wars. The fort in turn took its name from Colonel Abraham Myers in 1850; Myers served in the United States Army, mostly the Quartermaster Department, in various posts from 1833-1861 and was the quartermaster general of the Confederate States Army from 1861–1864. Lee County alone suffered an estimated $5.342 billion USD (2022) in total damages, with over 50,000 residential and commercial structures severely damaged or completely destroyed. The city is still currently recovering from the storm.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Verne Troyer", "text": "Verne Troyer\n\nVerne Jay Troyer (January 1, 1969 – April 21, 2018) was an American actor, comedian, YouTuber, and stunt performer. He was best known for his role of Mini-Me in the \"Austin Powers\" film series. He had cartilage–hair hypoplasia and was tall.", "score": null }, { "id": "13931045", "title": "Russell Myers", "text": " Russell Kommer Myers (born October 9, 1938) is an American cartoonist best known for his newspaper comic strip Broom-Hilda. Born in Pittsburg, Kansas, Myers was raised in Oklahoma where his father taught at the University of Tulsa. Myers was interested in cartooning from an early age. After his first strip submission for syndication failed, he began working for Hallmark Cards in Kansas City, MO in 1960 as an illustrator of greeting cards. He continued to submit comic strip concepts for syndication in his free time.", "score": "1.6218705" }, { "id": "32477463", "title": "George Steele", "text": " Myers was born in Detroit on April 16, 1937, and was raised in Madison Heights, Michigan. During high school, he found success in track, baseball, basketball, and football. In 1956, Myers entered Michigan State University as a football player for the Michigan State Spartans, but his career as a football player was immediately cut short as a result of knee problems. In 1961, he was with the Grand Rapids Blazers (UFL). After earning a bachelor of science degree from Michigan State University and a master's degree from Central Michigan University, Myers became a teacher, amateur wrestling coach, and football coach at Madison High School in Madison Heights, Michigan. There he would eventually become a member of the Michigan Coaches Hall of Fame.", "score": "1.6196313" }, { "id": "32061233", "title": "Forrest Myers", "text": " Myers studied at the San Francisco Art Institute, from 1958 to 1960; and moved to New York City in 1961. During the early to mid-1960s he was a founding member of The Park Place Gallery. His large steel Untitled from 1969-1970 is included in the outdoor plaza at The Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller Empire State Plaza Art Collection in Albany, New York. Myers life and career has been interviewed by national and international television personalities. The Art and Times of Frosty Myers, a feature length movie documenting his extraordinary life, is also a unique and fascinating window into the New York art scene of the 60s and 70s. With his wife Debra Arch Myers, Frosty divides his time between homes in Damascus, Pennsylvania, where there is a large museum of his work, and St. Augustine, Florida.", "score": "1.612654" }, { "id": "4918435", "title": "Lon Myers", "text": " Myers was Jewish, and was born in Richmond, Virginia, to Solomon H. Myers, a clerk. He was in the first graduating class of Richmond High School. His father moved the family to Jersey City, New Jersey, in 1875 after he graduated high school, and then to New York City, where he became a bookkeeper.", "score": "1.6104157" }, { "id": "27045125", "title": "Jack Elliott Myers", "text": " Jack Myers was born in Lynn, Massachusetts, to Jewish parents Alvin G. and Ruth L. Myers, and developed an interest in writing and poetry at a young age. In his twenties he worked many odd jobs to support his self-directed study of poetry.", "score": "1.6098169" }, { "id": "32924263", "title": "Wilson Myers", "text": " Myers was born in Germantown, Pennsylvania. He began his professional career in the American South, gaining his nickname \"Serious\" for his love of classical music. He played drums with Bessie Smith in the mid-1920s, and also played guitar and banjo professionally. He first played bass with King Oliver, then with the Bechet-Ladnier New Orleans Footwarmers. In the 1930s he played in Europe in the bands of Django Reinhardt, Lucky Millinder, and Willie Lewis. On his return he played in New York City and Philadelphia with Sidney Bechet and Mezz Mezzrow, as well as leading his own band and contributing arrangements. One of his key recordings, as bassist and vocalist, was \"Preachin' Blues\", first recorded with Bechet's New Orleans Footwarmers in 1940, and described as a precursor of rhythm and blues music. He also worked with the Spirits of Rhythm in the 1930s and 1940s, and in the latter decade played with Jimmy Dorsey, Bob Mosley, Tiger Haynes, Rex Stewart, and for a short time with Duke Ellington. He worked locally in Philadelphia into the 1970s, playing music in addition to working as a preacher. He died in Philadelphia in 1992.", "score": "1.5988728" }, { "id": "14238233", "title": "Charles Samuel Myers", "text": " Myers was born in Kensington, London on 13 March 1873, the eldest son of Wolf Myers, a merchant, and his wife, Esther Eugenie Moses. His family was Jewish. In the 1881 census he is an 8-year-old scholar living at 27 Arundel Gardens, Kensington, London with his parents, 4 brothers and 4 servants. In the 1891 census he was a scholar, aged 18 living at 49 Leinster Gardens, Paddington, London, with his parents, 4 brothers, a visitor, and 4 servants (cook, housemaid, parlourmaid, and ladies' maid).", "score": "1.5953486" }, { "id": "32772469", "title": "Robert Hill Myers", "text": " Robert Hill Myers (March 30, 1856 &ndash; November 16, 1921 ) was a lawyer, judge and political figure in Manitoba. He represented Minnedosa from 1892 to 1903 in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as a Liberal. He was born in Oxford County, Canada West, the son of Robert Myers, a native of England, and Margaret Hill, a native of Scotland. Myers was educated at the Collegiate Institute in Stratford and at Osgoode Hall. He was called to the Ontario bar in 1880, then moved to Manitoba in 1882 and was called to the Manitoba bar the following year. In 1885, Myers married Annie McLeod. He practised law briefly in Winnipeg and Brandon before settling in Minnedosa, where he was in practice for 21 years. In January 1903, he was named county court judge for Winnipeg. Myers died in Winnipeg at the age of 65. His former home in Minnedosa was designated a Manitoba Municipal Heritage site in 1986.", "score": "1.587939" }, { "id": "8950684", "title": "Heavy D", "text": " Dwight Arrington Myers was born on May 24, 1967 in Mandeville, Manchester, Jamaica, the son of nurse Eulahlee Lee and machine technician Clifford Vincent Myers. In the early 1970s, his family moved to Mount Vernon, New York, where he was raised. In an interview, his mother stated that he spent most of his childhood hanging out with his brother Floyd and his childhood friend Mo.", "score": "1.5860612" }, { "id": "9504862", "title": "Joseph Myers", "text": " Joseph William Myers (March 18, 1882 – February 11, 1956) was an American pitcher in Major League Baseball, born in Wilmington, Delaware. He stood at 5ft 10in and weighed 205 lbs. Myers started his organized baseball career on October 7, 1905, with the American League's Philadelphia Athletics. In his only major league start, he pitched a five-inning complete game, allowing two earned runs. Myers then spent 1906 to 1912 in the Tri-State League. He played in York, Reading, Harrisburg, and Trenton before settling in with the Harrisburg Senators for four seasons. In 1911, he set his career-high in wins, with 19. Myers died in 1956 in Delaware City, Delaware.", "score": "1.5844867" }, { "id": "8555005", "title": "Burt Myers", "text": " .", "score": "1.5843143" }, { "id": "3731490", "title": "William Starr Myers", "text": " William Starr Myers (June 17, 1877 – January 27, 1956) was a Princeton University professor, historian, white supremacist, and anti-immigrant activist who chronicled New Jersey and the GOP and argued publicly for the inferiority of African Americans. Myers was the son of J. Norris Myers and Laura Virginia Starr of Baltimore, the family later moving to North Carolina. Myers married Margaret Barr on 8 June 1910. Myers graduated from the University of North Carolina, class of 1897. Myers, the class of '97 poet, evidently felt great pride in his alma mater and was a prolific song writer who wrote several school-related songs which remain famous. \"Hark the Sound\" and \"Tar Heel Born\" are two of his most famous. At ", "score": "1.5812564" }, { "id": "4061446", "title": "Norman Myers", "text": " Myers was born in Whitewell (Lancashire, then Yorkshire) and was raised until the age of 11 on the family farm, without electricity, gas or an internal toilet. He lived in Kenya for over 30 years and later settled in Headington, Oxford, England. He attended grammar school and then the University of Oxford (BA French and German, Keble College 1958, MA 1963) and became a District Officer in the last few years of the Kenya Administration from 1958 to 1961. He then worked as a high school teacher in Nairobi from 1961 to 1966 and a freelance writer and broadcaster until 1969. In 1972, after PhD studies at the University of California, Berkeley (graduated 1973) he became a consultant for the UN, the World Bank and other organisations, remaining in Kenya until the early 1980s. He and Dorothy have a daughter, retired marathon runner Mara Yamauchi, who they raised in Kenya until the age of 8. He died in Oxford on 20 October 2019 after a long illness.", "score": "1.5810387" }, { "id": "9747617", "title": "Bill Myers (baseball)", "text": " William Vandeveer Myers (October 31, 1886 – death date unknown) was an American Negro league catcher between 1908 and 1921. A native of Brooklyn, New York, Myers made his Negro leagues debut in 1908 with the Brooklyn Royal Giants. He played for Brooklyn again in 1910, and went on to play for the Cleveland Tate Stars in 1921.", "score": "1.5803854" }, { "id": "9779164", "title": "LeRoy Myers", "text": " LeRoy Myers (November 10, 1919 – April 26, 2004) was an African American tap dancer and manager of the Copasetics. He was born in North Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and learned to tap dance on the street corners of Philadelphia. When Bill \"Bojangles\" Robinson died in 1949, LeRoy Myers and some close friends were inspired to form the Copasetics, named after Bill Robinsons' favorite expression, \"Everything is Copasetic.\" The Copasetics was a fraternity of black entertainers that were influential in the revival of tap dancing in the late 1970s through the 1980s. LeRoy Myers was elected as the club's first president. The original membership included Billy Strayhorn, ", "score": "1.5800004" } ]
In what city was Scott Fraser born?
[ "Edinburgh", "Edinburg", "Edinburgh, Scotland", "City of Edinburgh", "Edina", "Modern Athens" ]
place of birth
Scott Fraser (orienteer)
298,892
32
[ { "id": "11862446", "title": "Scott Fraser (politician)", "text": " Scott Fraser was born and raised in Ottawa, Ontario, and attended Carleton University. In 1979 he moved to Alberta and worked on the oil rigs throughout the province and in the Arctic. He eventually moved to Vancouver, British Columbia, then, in 1992, to Tofino. With his wife and young daughter, he opened a bed and breakfast business. Only four years later, Fraser became the mayor of Tofino. He was mayor from November 1996 to November 1999, a time when tourism was over-taking logging and fishing as the town's dominant industry. Fraser was supportive of the application to the United Nations to designate Clayoquot Sound as a biosphere site; Clayoquot Sound was listed as a Biosphere Reserve in 2000. Fraser was the subject of a complaint filed at the British Columbia ", "score": "1.7515894" }, { "id": "9346226", "title": "Scott McCaig", "text": " McCaig was born December 12,1965 in Duncan, British Columbia on Vancouver Island. His parents grew up in Northwestern Ontario. He grew up in Kamloops, British Columbia.", "score": "1.614192" }, { "id": "3094938", "title": "Scott Fraser (footballer, born 1995)", "text": " Fraser first started playing competitive football with local boys side Dee Club before moving onto Longforgan Boys Club, along with future teammate Scott Smith. At age 10 he then joined the youth set-up at Dundee United.", "score": "1.590857" }, { "id": "3094937", "title": "Scott Fraser (footballer, born 1995)", "text": " Scott Stewart Fraser (born 30 March 1995) is a Scottish professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for League One club Ipswich Town. He has previously played for Dundee United, Airdrieonians, Burton Albion and Milton Keynes Dons.", "score": "1.5789719" }, { "id": "3094942", "title": "Scott Fraser (footballer, born 1995)", "text": " On 9 September 2020, Fraser signed a two-year contract with fellow League One club Milton Keynes Dons. He made his debut on 19 September 2020 in a 2–1 home league defeat to Lincoln City, and scored his first goal for the club on 10 October 2020 in a 2–1 away league defeat to Portsmouth. Following a successful year in which he scored a career-best 14 goals in 50 appearances, Fraser was named MK Dons Players' Player of the Year for the 2021–22 season.", "score": "1.5659494" }, { "id": null, "title": "Scott Fraser (footballer, born 1995)", "text": "Scott Fraser (footballer, born 1995)\n\nScott Stewart Fraser (born 30 March 1995) is a Scottish professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for League One club Charlton Athletic.\n\nHe has previously played for Dundee United, Airdrieonians, Burton Albion, Milton Keynes Dons and Ipswich Town.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Scott Fraser (orienteer)", "text": "Scott Fraser (orienteer)\n\nScott Fraser (born 25 March 1986 in Edinburgh) is an orienteering competitor from Great Britain. He received a silver medal in the \"sprint\" at the 2013 World Orienteering Championships in Vuokatti.\n\nFraser has also won the JK overall and sprint, as well as the British Orienteering Championships middle once and the Sprint a record three times in a row.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Scott Fraser (racing driver)", "text": "Scott Fraser (racing driver)\n\nScott Andrew Fraser (October 20, 1970March 20, 2004) was a Canadian professional racing car driver from Shubenacadie, Nova Scotia. Fraser was considered by many to be one of the best stock car racers in Canada.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Scott Fraser (ice hockey)", "text": "Scott Fraser (ice hockey)\n\nScott Robert Fraser (born May 3, 1972) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player who played in the NHL with the Montreal Canadiens, Edmonton Oilers, and New York Rangers. He played right wing/centre and shot right-handed.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Scott Fraser (footballer, born 1963)", "text": "Scott Fraser (footballer, born 1963)\n\nScott Fraser (born 24 April 1963) is a Scottish former professional footballer, who played for Rangers, East Fife, Berwick Rangers and Cowdenbeath in the Scottish Football League. He also played in Australia for three years, representing Green Gully, Heidelberg United and Fawkner Blues.\n\nAfter ending his football career in the early 1990s, Fraser became involved in property investment. He co-founded property investment business McEwan Fraser, which subsequently became a main sponsor of Hibernian, as well as McEwan Fraser Legal, an estate agency based in Edinburgh.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "3094943", "title": "Scott Fraser (footballer, born 1995)", "text": " On 14 July 2021, Fraser signed for Ipswich Town for an undisclosed fee, signing a three-year contract. He made his debut for the club on 7 August 2021, where he scored the first of Ipswich's two goals in a 2–2 opening day draw with Morecambe.", "score": "1.5597236" }, { "id": "16130188", "title": "Scott Fraser (ice hockey)", "text": " Scott Robert Fraser (born May 3, 1972) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player who played in the NHL with the Montreal Canadiens, Edmonton Oilers, and New York Rangers. He played right wing/centre and shot right-handed.", "score": "1.5525631" }, { "id": "3094939", "title": "Scott Fraser (footballer, born 1995)", "text": " He progressed through the youth ranks and joined up with the first team for pre-season at the start of the 2011–12 season, but suffered a leg break which kept him out of action for the entire season. After recovering from injury, Fraser was named as Dundee United's U20 Player of the Year for the 2013–14 season. He made his first team debut on 11 May 2014 as a substitute in the final game of the Scottish Premiership season, away to Celtic. On 10 October 2014, Fraser signed for Airdrieonians on loan until January 2015, later extended until May 2015. He scored a goal after two minutes ", "score": "1.5338604" }, { "id": "11862443", "title": "Scott Fraser (politician)", "text": " Scott Kenneth Fraser (born 1957 or 1958) is a Canadian politician that represents the Mid Island-Pacific Rim electoral district in the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia and is a member of the British Columbia New Democratic Party. Since July 2017, during the 41st Parliament, he has been the Minister of Indigenous Relations and Reconciliation and in that role he introduced the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act in 2019 with all party support to implement UNDRIP. He was first elected as a Member of the Legislative Assembly in the 2005 election and re-elected in the 2009, 2013 and 2017 elections. His party formed the official opposition to a BC Liberal majority government from 2005 to ", "score": "1.5316317" }, { "id": "11305319", "title": "Angus Fraser", "text": " Born in Billinge Higher End, Lancashire, Fraser was educated at the Gayton High School in Harrow, London and Orange Hill High School, Edgware, Greater London.", "score": "1.5239744" }, { "id": "31465422", "title": "Scott Fraser (racing driver)", "text": " Fraser made his racing debut in the street stock division at Onslow Speedway in Truro, Nova Scotia at the age of 16, setting the record for wins in a season. He ran off and on at Onslow for the next four seasons. In 1992 he moved on to the Open-Wheel Modified division at Scotia Speedworld in Enfield, Nova Scotia. In his rookie season he won the series championship. Between 1993 and 1994 Fraser ran three American Canadian Tour races, scoring top fives in all three races, including a win at Scotia Speedworld.", "score": "1.5205361" }, { "id": "31465421", "title": "Scott Fraser (racing driver)", "text": " Scott Andrew Fraser (October 20, 1970 – March 20, 2004) was a Canadian professional racing car driver from Shubenacadie, Nova Scotia. Fraser was considered by many to be one of the best stock car racers in Canada.", "score": "1.5178567" }, { "id": "11862534", "title": "James Scott (actor)", "text": " Scott was born in Jesmond, Newcastle Upon Tyne, England. The eldest of four children, he has two brothers and a sister. Initially schooled in Newcastle, Scott moved to an all-boys boarding school in Lancaster. After school, Scott moved to Edinburgh, Scotland on a voyage of self-discovery. His mother is Scottish and he spent a lot of time in Scotland as a boy. His first summer there he managed to get a job working at the famous \"Gilded Balloon Theatre\", one of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe's best-known venues, established by Karen Koren in 1986 in Edinburgh's Cowgate and worked with such actors/comedians as Stephen Fry, Ben Elton, and Eddie Izzard. \"They set me in motion, giving me the drive I needed to move forward. Soon it became apparent that I would need to move to London in order to truly focus on this as a career,\" Scott remembers.", "score": "1.5054785" }, { "id": "29603590", "title": "Angus Fraser (television producer)", "text": " Fraser is a native of Vancouver. His drama Terminal City aired on The Movie Network on October 17, 2005. He was the director-creator, with Rachel Talalay also brought in as a director. Timeout says the show \"prominently counts reality TV among its subjects, but its chief concerns—marriage, family and mortality—are timeless ones that are given fresh urgency by the way screenwriter Angus Fraser approaches them from odd angles.\" Fraser's plot follows a family woman who finds she has cancer and becomes the star of a reality show simultaneously. He was partly inspired by a close call his mother had with cancer, and his own near-death experience when he was stabbed in the heart as a bouncer. In 2008 Terminal City was picked up by Sundance. He also co-wrote the films A Girl Is A Girl, Witnesses and Wiseguys, and A Complicated Kindness.", "score": "1.4994177" }, { "id": "32879902", "title": "Craig Scott (politician)", "text": " Scott was born and raised in Windsor, Nova Scotia. From 1979 to 1981, he attended Lester B. Pearson United World College of the Pacific in Canada, where he gained the International Baccalaureate Diploma. He then earned undergraduate degrees from McGill University and from the University of Oxford where he was a Rhodes Scholar at St John's College. He has a Bachelor of Laws from Dalhousie University and a Masters of Law from the London School of Economics. His academic specialty is international law with a focus on human rights law. Scott was a professor in the University of Toronto Faculty of Law from 1989 to 2001. He was Osgoode Law School's Associate Dean (Research and Graduate Studies) from 2001 to 2004 and has remained on the faculty subsequently. Scott and his partner Kovit Ratchadasri previously owned the Craig Scott Gallery, an art gallery on Berkeley Street near Toronto's Distillery District.", "score": "1.4983811" }, { "id": "3094941", "title": "Scott Fraser (footballer, born 1995)", "text": " On 5 July 2018, Fraser signed a two-year deal with English League One club Burton Albion. He made his debut on 4 August 2018 in a 2–1 home defeat to Rochdale, and scored his first goal for the club on 8 September 2018 in a 1–1 draw away to Accrington Stanley. During the 2018–19 season, Fraser was a key part of the Burton Albion squad that reached the semi-finals of the EFL Cup. On 20 August 2019, Fraser scored a second half hat-trick within 23 minutes in a 4–2 win away to Oxford United. He finished the 2019–20 season with 11 assists – the second highest total in League One for that campaign. Fraser left Burton Albion on 1 July 2020 following the expiry of his contract having declined a new deal.", "score": "1.4954746" }, { "id": "3094944", "title": "Scott Fraser (footballer, born 1995)", "text": "Scottish Challenge Cup: 2016–17 Dundee United U20 Player of the Year: 2013–14 ; Scottish Championship Player of the Month: November 2017 ; Milton Keynes Dons Players' Player of the Year: 2020–21 Dundee United Individual", "score": "1.4950526" }, { "id": "3094940", "title": "Scott Fraser (footballer, born 1995)", "text": " his Airdrie debut, in a 4–0 win against Brechin City. Following his return to his parent club, Fraser made his first start for Dundee United on 8 August 2015, in a 2–0 Premiership win at Motherwell. A season later, he played a key role in the Dundee United team that went on to win the 2016–17 Scottish Challenge Cup, playing in three rounds and scoring in the 3–2 semi-final away win over Queen of the South. He was named the Scottish Championship Player of the Month for November 2017. After three seasons in the United first team, Fraser decided to leave the club in May 2018.", "score": "1.4923468" }, { "id": "25603256", "title": "Gordon Currie (actor)", "text": " Currie was born in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada to American parents. One of his first or breakthrough roles was playing Officer Palone on 21 Jump Street (1987). In 1991, after a couple of years working in locally shot TV and film in Vancouver, he moved to Los Angeles to study acting; his first roommate was Brad Pitt.", "score": "1.4912581" }, { "id": "9251327", "title": "Douglas Fraser", "text": " Fraser was born in Glasgow, Scotland, on December 18, 1916. His father, Samuel, was an electrician and an active and vocal trade unionist. The family was so poor that his father, who worked at a brewery, would sometimes fuel the family stove with stolen whiskey. Samuel Fraser moved to Detroit, Michigan, while his son was still a young boy, in 1922. Samuel, his mother, Douglas, his sister, and his brother sailed to New York City aboard the and were inspected at Ellis Island on April 23, 1923. They travelled to their new home in Detroit by train. Douglas was deeply influenced by the Great Depression. His father was out of work for long periods, and he admitted that the poverty and social disorder that he witnessed changed his life. He dropped out of high school when he was 18, worked in a machine shop, and took several jobs in the automobile industry.", "score": "1.490695" } ]
In what city was Giuseppe Castelli born?
[ "Milan", "Milano", "Milan, Italy", "Milano, Italy", "Milano, Italia", "Mailand", "Milan Records" ]
place of birth
Giuseppe Castelli (footballer)
880,910
40
[ { "id": "30626103", "title": "Giuseppe Castelli (footballer)", "text": " Giuseppe Castelli (born September 14, 1919 in Milan) was an Italian professional football player.", "score": "1.7356805" }, { "id": "12202810", "title": "Castelli (surname)", "text": " Giuseppe Castelli (born 1919), Italian former footballer ; Giuseppe Castelli (footballer) (born 1919), Italian professional football player. ; Guido Castelli (born 1965), Italian lawyer and politician ; Henri Castelli, artistic name of Henri Lincoln Fernandes Nascimento (born 1978), Brazilian actor and model ; Ignaz Franz Castelli, (1780–1862), Austrian dramatist ; Irene Castelli (born 1983), Italian gymnast ; Jeffrey W. Castelli, CIA officer ; Juan José Castelli (1764–1812), Member of the first national government of Argentina ; Laura Castelli (born 1986), Italian politician ; Leo Castelli (1907–1999), American art dealer ; Luciano Castelli (born 1951), Swiss painter, graphic artist, photographer, sculptor ", "score": "1.7084864" }, { "id": "28293629", "title": "Federico Castelluccio", "text": " Born in Naples, Italy, Castelluccio moved with his family to Paterson, New Jersey, when he was three years old. In 1982, Castelluccio was awarded a full scholarship to the School of Visual Arts in New York City, where he earned a BFA in painting and media arts. Prior to winning the scholarship, he received an opportunity to create a painting for actor George Burns.", "score": "1.6433432" }, { "id": "3910411", "title": "Luciano Castelli", "text": " Luciano Castelli (born 28 September 1951 in Lucerne) is a Swiss painter, graphic artist, photographer, sculptor and musician.", "score": "1.6296341" }, { "id": "5934818", "title": "Giuseppe Casti", "text": " Giuseppe Casti was born in Carbonia, Italy in 1964.", "score": "1.628751" }, { "id": null, "title": "Giuseppe Castelli (footballer)", "text": "Giuseppe Castelli (footballer)\n\nGiuseppe Castelli (born September 14, 1919 in Milan) was an Italian professional football player.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Giuseppe Castelli", "text": "Giuseppe Castelli\n\nGiuseppe Castelli (5 October 1907 – 19 December 1942) was an Italian athlete who competed mainly in the 100 metres.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Castelli (surname)", "text": "Castelli (surname)\n\nCastelli is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname include:\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Filomena Delli Castelli", "text": "Filomena Delli Castelli\n\nFilomena Delli Castelli (28 September 1916 – 22 December 2010) was an Italian politician. She was elected to the Constituent Assembly in 1946 as one of the first group of women parliamentarians in Italy. She was subsequently elected to the Chamber of Deputies in 1948, serving (with the exception of a six-month spell in 1953) until 1958.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Leo Castelli", "text": "Leo Castelli\n\nLeo Castelli (born Leo Krausz; September 4, 1907 – August 21, 1999) was an Italian-American art dealer who originated the contemporary art gallery system. His gallery showcased contemporary art for five decades. Among the movements which Castelli showed were Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism, Neo-Dada, Pop Art, Op Art, Color field painting, Hard-edge painting, Lyrical Abstraction, Minimal Art, Conceptual Art, and Neo-expressionism.", "score": null }, { "id": "7025096", "title": "Gaetano Castelli", "text": " Gaetano Castelli (born 1938) is an Italian painter and set designer.", "score": "1.6196196" }, { "id": "12202809", "title": "Castelli (surname)", "text": " Castelli (1577–1643), Italian mathematician ; Bernardino Castelli (1750-810), Italian painter of portraits and religious figures ; Bertrand Castelli (1929–2008), French producer, director, lighting designer, choreographer and painter ; Clino Castelli (born 1944), Italian industrial designer and artist ; Clément Castelli (1870–1959), French painter ; David Castelli (1836–1901), Italian scholar and educator in the field of secular Jewish studies ; Davide Castelli (born 1999), Italian footballer ; Enrico Castelli (1909–1983), Italian basketball player ; Facundo Castelli (born 1995), Argentine professional footballer ; Gaetano Castelli (born 1938), Italian painter and set designer ; Giovanni Paolo Castelli (1659–1730), Italian painter, active in Rome ", "score": "1.617316" }, { "id": "27226035", "title": "Paolo Castelli", "text": " Born in Cittiglio, Lombardy, Castelli started his career at Internazionale. He spent 2 seasons on loan at Lombardy side Pro Sesto, then sold to Cagliari in co-ownership deal. In 2001–02 season, he was loaned back to Lombardy for Varese. And in June 2002 bought back by Inter after an auction between the two clubs. He then left on loan to Serie C1 club Reggiana, where he rejoined ex-Inter teammate Raffaele Nuzzo. With Nuzzo and Luca Mondini, Castelli worked as the 3rd choice keeper and in January 2003 left for Reggiana's league rival Prato, as understudy of Alessio Sarti. Since the left for Sarti, Castelli became the starting keeper for Prato. In 2004–05 season he left for ", "score": "1.6162443" }, { "id": "25688888", "title": "Alfredo Castelli", "text": " Born in Milan, Castelli began his comic book career at an early age, creating the strip Scheletrino, a humor series for Italian comic book Diabolik, when he was only 16 years old. In 1966, with Paolo Sala, he created Comics Club 104, the first Italian fanzine dedicated to comics. A year later Castelli started writing scripts for several Italian comic books, including Pedrito el Drito and Piccola Eva published by Universo, Cucciolo and Tiramolla for Edizioni Alpe, and Topolino for Mondadori. Castelli then expanded into television, writing several advertisements as well as the series Cappuccetto a Pois with Maria Perego and the screenplay for the movie Il tunnel sotto il mondo. In 1969 he contributed to the humor magazine Tilt. A year later, together with Pier Carpi, ", "score": "1.6158165" }, { "id": "1818427", "title": "Giuseppe Montanelli", "text": " Montanelli was born at Fucecchio, then part of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany. As a boy he was an organist and composer. In 1840 was appointed law professor at Pisa after graduating law school when he was 18. He contributed to the Antologia, a celebrated Florentine review, and in 1847 founded a newspaper called L'Italia, the programme of which was \"Reform and Nationality.\" In 1848 Montanelli served with the Tuscan student volunteers at the battle of Curtatone, where he was wounded and taken prisoner by the Austrians. On being liberated he returned to Tuscany, and the grand duke Leopold II, knowing that he was popular with ", "score": "1.6033013" }, { "id": "25053347", "title": "Michelangelo Castelli", "text": " Born in Racconigi into a wealthy family of Jacobin ideas, Castelli studied law at the University of Turin, graduating in July 1835. In October of the same year he was elected, just 27 years old, Mayor of Racconigi, a position he held until 1837. From 1847 collaborated with the Turin-based newspaper Il Risorgimento, working in the political section alongside Camillo Benso, Count of Cavour, the director of the newspaper. Friend and confidant of Cavour, Castelli was elected for the first time Member of Parliament of the Kingdom of Sardinia in its first legislature, in 1848. Deputy for five legislatures (1849-1859) in 1852 he was appointed Secretary of the Ministry of Interior, a position he held until March 1854. In July 1854, he was appointed General Director of the General Archives of Turin. On 29 June 1860, he was appointed Senator of the Kingdom of Sardinia. Castelli was the first secretary of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus.", "score": "1.5985847" }, { "id": "14531633", "title": "Giovanni Paolo Castelli", "text": " Giovanni Paolo Castelli (1659–1730) was an Italian painter, active in Rome painting still-life paintings of bowls of fruit and flowers. Over half a dozen works are collected in the Pinacoteca Civica Fortunato Duranti.", "score": "1.5902016" }, { "id": "8248601", "title": "Giuseppe Galasso", "text": " He was born in Naples in 1929: the son of a glass craftsman, he had lost his mother in 1941 and had done a little bit of everything, even the kitchen boy and the porter, to help run the family. He first took the master's qualification, in 1946, at the Pasquale Villari school, then the year after his high school diploma at Umberto high school, as a private owner\".", "score": "1.5893791" }, { "id": "5222526", "title": "Joseph Castello", "text": " Joseph Castello (or Joseph Castilho) (born ca. 1746 in Leghorn, Italy) was an Italian Jewish physician, son of Rabbi Abraham Isaac Castello. After studying medicine at Pisa, he returned to his native city, where he soon acquired a reputation as a physician. A medical work written by Castello and dedicated to the archduke (afterward Emperor Leopold II), did not appear until after his death, which occurred while he was still in the prime of manhood. Castello's brother Samuel was an eminent physician at Leghorn, and his son Abraham Isaac a lawyer and poet in the same city.", "score": "1.5891318" }, { "id": "5512304", "title": "Giuseppe Mascitelli", "text": " Giuseppe Mascitelli was born on 9 November 1959 in Porto San Giorgio, a small town in Marche overlooking the Adriatic sea. He attended a scientific high school, first in Fermo then in Civitanova Marche, a school that well represented his interests towards humanistic subjects and as well as scientific ones. Strong ties together with constant patronage tie him to his father's land, Abruzzo, whose mountainous harshness and proud population has always fascinated him. He left his family at a young age to dedicate himself to his university studies, which he financed by working in various jobs. He traveled often in Europe and stopped for several months in Northern Germany near Marberg and Essen in order to become more confident ", "score": "1.5831039" }, { "id": "7615023", "title": "Giuseppe Scarabelli", "text": " A fervent patriot, Scarabelli participated in the Risorgimento uprisings until the vote of annexation of the Legation of Romagna to the Kingdom of Sardinia (1859). He was the first mayor of Imola after the proclamation of the Kingdom of Italy (from 1860 to 1866); in 1864 he was appointed senator of the Kingdom. He was also the president of two institutions that still exist in Imola: the kindergarten (founded in 1847, today the Kindergarten) and the Cassa di Risparmio (founded in 1855). He died in Imola in 1905, and is buried in the local Piratello cemetery.", "score": "1.5778772" }, { "id": "3828657", "title": "Giuseppe Penone", "text": " Giuseppe Penone was born on April 3, 1947 in Garessio, Italy. In 1970, he graduated from the Accademia Albertina in Turin, Italy, where he studied sculpture.", "score": "1.5773516" }, { "id": "16253322", "title": "Juan José Castelli", "text": " Castelli was born in Buenos Aires in 1764. He was the first of eight children born to a Venetian doctor, Ángel Castelli Salomón, and Josefa Villarino, who was a relative of Manuel Belgrano. He was trained by the Jesuits shortly before their expulsion, and attended the Real Colegio de San Carlos in Buenos Aires. As was customary, one of the children of the Castelli family was ordained into the priesthood, and Juan José was chosen for this. He was sent to study at the Colegio Monserrat, part of the University of Córdoba. He was influenced by the works of Voltaire and Diderot, and especially by Jean-Jacques Rousseau's The Social Contract. He ", "score": "1.5772142" }, { "id": "28976164", "title": "Reggio Calabria", "text": " politician ; Raffaele Piria (1814–1865), chemist born in Scilla ; Domenico Spanò Bolani (1815-1890), politician, historian and author ; Rocco de Zerbi (1843–1924), born in Oppido Mamertina ; Giuseppe De Nava (1858–1924), politician ; Francesco Cilea (1866–1950), musician and composer born in Palmi ; Gaetano Catanoso (1879–1963), saint, priest born in Choriò ; Alfonso Frangipane (1881–1970), painter and art scholar born in Catanzaro ; Umberto Boccioni (1882–1916), painter/sculptor ; Domingo Periconi (1883–1940), painter ; Goffredo Zehender (1901–1958), Grand Prix driver ; Tito Minniti (1909–1935), pilot ; Leopoldo Trieste (1917–2003), actor and movie director ; Diego Carpitella (1924–1990), ethno-musicologist ; Nik Spatari (born 1929), painter, sculptor, architect and art scholar born in Mammola ; Luigi Malice (born 1937), painter ", "score": "1.5759919" }, { "id": "12202808", "title": "Castelli (surname)", "text": "Annibale Castelli (c. 1570–c.1620), Italian painter, active near Bologna ; Bernardo Castelli (1557–1629), Italian painter of the late-Mannerist style, active mainly in Genoa and Liguria ; Francesco Castelli Borromini (1599-1667), Italian architect ; Giovanni Battista Castelli (1500 or 1509–1569 or 1579), Italian historical painter ; Matteo Castelli (c. 1555- 1632), Swiss architect ; Teramo Castelli (1597-1659), Italian noble and Roman Catholic Theatine missionary ; Valerio Castelli (1624-1659), pre-eminent Ligurian painters Alfredo Castelli (born 1947), Italian comic book author ; Anna Castelli Ferrieri (1918–2006), Italian architect and industrial designer ; Bartolomeo Castelli (1650–1730), Roman Catholic Bishop of Mazara del Vallo ; ", "score": "1.5735142" } ]
In what city was Harold Reetz born?
[ "Watseka", "Watseka, Illinois" ]
place of birth
Harold Reetz
4,335,578
64
[ { "id": "25866030", "title": "Harold Bloom", "text": " Bloom was born in New York City on July 11, 1930, the son of Paula (née Lev) and William Bloom. He lived in the Bronx at 1410 Grand Concourse. He was raised as an Orthodox Jew in a Yiddish-speaking household, where he learned literary Hebrew; he learned English at the age of six. Bloom's father, a garment worker, was born in Odessa and his mother, a homemaker, near Brest Litovsk in what is today Belarus. Harold had three older sisters and an older brother; he was the last living sibling. As a boy, Bloom read Hart Crane's Collected Poems, a collection that ", "score": "1.5870922" }, { "id": "24969626", "title": "Manfred T. Reetz", "text": " Reetz was born in Hirschberg, Lower Silesia, in 1943 and immigrated to the US in 1952. After studying chemistry at Washington University and the University of Michigan, he returned to Germany to obtain his Ph.D. under Ulrich Schöllkopf at the University of Göttingen. He subsequently worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Marburg where he completed his habilitation in 1978. After two years at the University of Bonn, he returned to Marburg as full professor in 1980. In 1991 he was appointed director of the Max Planck Institute for Coal Research in Mülheim, a position that he held until 2011.", "score": "1.5784037" }, { "id": "5419867", "title": "Harold Rosenberg", "text": " Harold Rosenberg was born on February 2, 1906, in Brooklyn, New York. After studying at the City College of New York from 1923 to 1924, he received his LL.B. from Brooklyn Law School (then a unit of St. Lawrence University) in 1927. Later, he often said he was \"educated on the steps of the New York Public Library.\" Rosenberg embraced a bohemian lifestyle upon contracting osteomyelitis shortly after attaining his degree; the condition ultimately necessitated his use of a cane for the rest of his life.", "score": "1.5780964" }, { "id": "14222116", "title": "1984 New York City Subway shooting", "text": " Bernhard Hugo Goetz was born in the Kew Gardens neighborhood of New York City's Queens borough on November 7, 1947, the son of Gertrude (née Karlsberg) and Bernhard Willard Goetz, Sr. His parents were German immigrants who met in the U.S. His father was Lutheran; his mother, who was Jewish, converted to Lutheranism. While growing up, Goetz lived with his parents and three older siblings in Upstate New York, where his father ran a dairy farm and a bookbinding business. At the age of 12, he was sent to Switzerland, where he and his sister attended boarding schools. Goetz returned to the United States in 1965 for college, and earned a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering and nuclear engineering from New York University. By this time, the family had relocated to Orlando, Florida; Goetz joined them and worked at his father's residential development business. He was briefly married. After his divorce, he moved back to New York City, where he started an electronics business out of his Greenwich Village apartment.", "score": "1.5780656" }, { "id": "3475848", "title": "Harold Bell", "text": " Harold Bell was born on October 5, 1919, in Union City, New Jersey. He was one of three sons born to his parents, David and Hilda Rosenthal Belsky. His father worked as an embroiderer. Bell served in the United States Navy during World War II. He moved to Los Angeles, California, following the end of the war.", "score": "1.5676181" }, { "id": null, "title": "Harold Reetz", "text": "Harold Reetz\n\nHarold F. Reetz Jr. (March 10, 1948 – August 15, 2022) was an American agronomist. \nSection::::Early life and education.\nHe was born in 1948 at Watseka, Illinois, and grew up on a dairy/grain farm in the east central part of the state. After receiving his B.S. degree in 1970 at the University of Illinois, he earned his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees at Purdue University in crop physiology and ecology. ", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Reetz", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Watseka, Illinois", "text": "Watseka, Illinois\n\nWatseka is a city in and the county seat of Iroquois County, Illinois, United States. It is located approximately west of the Illinois-Indiana state line on U.S. Route 24.\n\nThe population of Watseka was 5,255 according to the 2010 census, which was a 7.3 percent decrease from the 2000 census.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign people", "text": "List of University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign people\n\nThis is a list of notable people affiliated with the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, a public research university in Illinois.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of active Major League Baseball players by country of birth ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "7524823", "title": "Harold Best", "text": " During his childhood, Best lived in Leeds, the city in which he was born on 18 December 1937 to Fred and Marie Best. He was educated at Meanwood County School and Leeds College of Technology, and worked as an electrical technician.", "score": "1.5610423" }, { "id": "6948430", "title": "Peter Michael Goetz", "text": " Goetz was born in Buffalo, New York, the son of Esther L. and Irving A. Goetz, a construction engineer. Goetz studied at the State University of New York at Fredonia, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, and the University of Minnesota, from which he graduated.", "score": "1.541889" }, { "id": "649516", "title": "Harold Berson", "text": " Berson was born in New York City, grew up in Los Angeles and graduated from the University of California, Los Angeles. He studied art in Paris.", "score": "1.5386987" }, { "id": "5912507", "title": "Willy Reetz", "text": " Willy Reetz was born and died in Düsseldorf, where he started his career as an apprentice with a church painter. After that he attended the renowned Kunstgewerbeschule. After World War I Reetz studied at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf under Professor Schmurr. From 1920 to 1924 he was a student in the master class of Professor Hans Kohlschein. Study trips to the Netherlands, France and Italy followed.", "score": "1.536857" }, { "id": "10674981", "title": "Harold H. Fisher", "text": " Fisher was born in 1901 in Uniontown, Pennsylvania, to Charles and Emma (McCoy) Fisher. He had a difficult childhood, being partially raised in an orphanage when his father was forced to leave the family to look for work and his mother could not feed her children. Fisher was a precocious student who enjoyed drawing and painting.", "score": "1.532408" }, { "id": "7691632", "title": "Charley Retzlaff", "text": " Retzlaff was born in Leonard, North Dakota.", "score": "1.5221436" }, { "id": "5912506", "title": "Willy Reetz", "text": " Willy Reetz (27 May 1892 &ndash; 24 July 1963) was a German painter. Occasionally his first name is given as Wilhelm, but he never used this name by himself and signed all his work as 'Willy Reetz'. He is not related to the painter Wilhelm Reetz (1887–1946).", "score": "1.5208409" }, { "id": "3912377", "title": "Harold Schwartz", "text": " Harold Schwartz was born March 13, 1910, in Chicago, Illinois, the son of Louis and Katherine Schwartz.", "score": "1.5169702" }, { "id": "4927981", "title": "Harold Feinstein", "text": " Feinstein was born in Coney Island, New York, in 1931. He was the youngest of five children born to Jewish immigrant parents. His mother Sophie Reich immigrated to the United States from Austria and his father Louis immigrated from Russia. He began to practice photography in 1946 at the age of 15, borrowing a Rolleiflex camera from a neighbor.", "score": "1.5146036" }, { "id": "13399055", "title": "Reuven Bulka", "text": " Reuven Pinchas Bulka (ראובן פנחס בולקא; June 6, 1944 – June 27, 2021) was a Canadian rabbi, writer, broadcaster, and activist. He was the spiritual leader of Congregation Machzikei Hadas in Ottawa from 1967, first as Rabbi and then as Rabbi Emeritus, and served as co-president of the Canadian Jewish Congress from 2007 to 2009. Bulka's work with Kind Canada led to recognition the third week of February in each and every year as \"Kindness Week\" in Canada.", "score": "1.5076847" }, { "id": "25261334", "title": "Harold Brodkey", "text": " Brodkey was the second child born in Staunton, Illinois, to Max Weintraub and Celia Glazer Weintraub (1899-1932); Samuel Weintraub (1928-2017) was their oldest child. He was Jewish. When their birth mother Celia died, Samuel Weintraub was four and old enough to remain with his father but Aaron Weintraub, only two years old, was adopted by his father's cousin, Doris Rubenstein Brodkey (1896-1949) and her husband, Joseph Brodkey (1896-1946) and renamed Harold Roy Brodkey. Doris and Joseph lived in University City, Missouri, with their daughter, Marilyn Ruth Brodkey (1923-2011). Brodkey would chronicle his life with his adoptive parents and sister in his ", "score": "1.5062255" }, { "id": "7264497", "title": "Harold Kaplan (architect)", "text": " Born 10 September 1895, in Bucharest, Romania, he moved to London at the age of three with his widowed mother, Tillie Hohan. In 1902, they moved to Toronto, and then his mother married Frank Kaplan. During his teenage years, he stayed for a while in Philadelphia with one of his relatives. After returning to Toronto, Kaplan went to Toronto Technical School where he studied architecture and building construction. He married Dorothy Spain in 1923. In 1919–20, he worked at Page & Warrington. In 1922, he founded Kaplan & Sprachman with Abraham Sprachman, which is mostly recognized for designing many movie theaters across Canada from the 1920s to the 1950s, and also for designing synagogues and ", "score": "1.505386" }, { "id": "12022491", "title": "Harold Snyder", "text": " Snyder was born to a Jewish family in Manhattan and attended Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn. He attended New York University for his undergraduate studies and was awarded a master's degree from Columbia University on 1950, majoring in natural science.", "score": "1.5044703" }, { "id": "10241094", "title": "Harold Koplar", "text": " Harold Koplar was born February 27, 1915. His father, Sam Koplar, built the Park Plaza Hotel in 1929. Harold Koplar was raised in St. Louis, Missouri, graduating from Soldan High School before going on to the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he studied architecture and engineering but left without graduating.", "score": "1.5028261" }, { "id": "2578325", "title": "William Goetz", "text": " Born to a Jewish working-class family in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Goetz was the youngest of eight children. His mother died when he was ten years old and shortly thereafter his father abandoned the family. Raised by older brothers, at the age of twenty-one he followed some of his brothers to Hollywood where he found work as a crew hand at one of the large studios. After a few years, he began doing production work and in 1930 was made an associate producer at Fox Films.", "score": "1.501322" } ]
In what city was Fernand Cornez born?
[ "Paris", "City of Light", "Paris, France" ]
place of birth
Fernand Cornez
232,809
60
[ { "id": "12325553", "title": "Fernand Cornez", "text": " Fernand Cornez (19 November 1907 in Paris – 7 December 1997 in Saint-Avertin) was a French professional road bicycle racer. In 1933, he won a stage in the Tour de France and in the Giro d'Italia.", "score": "1.7230332" }, { "id": "175498", "title": "Fernand Point", "text": " He was born in Louhans, Saône-et-Loire, France. His family kept an inn where he started cooking when he was ten. He moved to Paris and worked at some of the capital's best restaurants before working with Paul Bocuse's father at the in Évian-les-Bains.", "score": "1.5865288" }, { "id": "2268033", "title": "Fernand Faniard", "text": " Fernand Smeets, better known under the name Fernand Faniard, 9 December 1894 in Saint-Josse-ten-Noode – 3 August 1955 in Paris) was a tenor of the Paris Opera, born in Brussels and naturalized French in 1949. He was the son of \"cafeteria owner\" Lambert Leopold Jules Steems and Maria Joseph Marguerite Fagniard. Fernand's stage name refers to his mother's surname as a tribute. He received his musical training at the Royal Conservatory of Brussels with Laurent Swofs. His vocal range at the time was baritone. In that capacity he could also be seen and heard in the Royal Monnaie Theatre in Brussels. He left that theatre in 1926 for the Flemish Opera in Antwerp and was retrained as a tenor ", "score": "1.5552896" }, { "id": "12325554", "title": "Fernand Cornez", "text": "1933 ; Tour de France: ; Winner stage 10 ; Giro d'Italia: ; Winner stage 11 ; 1934 ; GP de Cannes ", "score": "1.5458902" }, { "id": "3374", "title": "Ary Fernandes", "text": " Ary Fernandes (March 31, 1931 – August 29, 2010) was a Brazilian playwright, actor, producer and filmmaker. He was born in São Paulo.", "score": "1.5301211" }, { "id": null, "title": "Fernand Cornez", "text": "Fernand Cornez\n\nFernand Cornez (19 November 1907 in Paris – 7 December 1997 in Saint-Avertin) was a French professional road bicycle racer.\n\nIn 1933, he won a stage in the Tour de France and in the Giro d'Italia.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:French cycling biography, 1900s birth stubs", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "1997 in France", "text": "1997 in France\n\nEvents from the year 1997 in France.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "1907 in France", "text": "1907 in France\n\nEvents from the year 1907 in France.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Deaths in December 1997", "text": "Deaths in December 1997\n\nThe following is a list of notable deaths in December 1997.\n\nEntries for each day are listed alphabetically by surname. A typical entry lists information in the following sequence:\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "12834150", "title": "Fernandel", "text": " Fernand Joseph Désiré Contandin (8 May 1903 – 26 February 1971), better known as Fernandel, was a French actor and singer. Born near Marseille, France, to Désirée Bedouin and Denis Contandin, originating in Perosa Argentina, an Occitan town located in the province of Turin, Italy. He was a comedy star who first gained popularity in French vaudeville, operettas, and music-hall revues. His stage name originated from his marriage to Henriette Manse, the sister of his best friend and frequent cinematic collaborator Jean Manse. So attentive was he to his wife that his mother-in-law amusingly referred to him as Fernand d'elle (\"Fernand of her\").", "score": "1.5129545" }, { "id": "16329707", "title": "Fernand Lungren", "text": " Born in Hagerstown, Maryland, of Swedish descent, on November 13, 1857, Fernand Lungren was raised in Toledo, Ohio. He showed an early talent for drawing but his father induced him to pursue a professional career and in 1874 entered the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, to study mining engineering. However, after meeting the painter Kenyon Cox (1856-1919), he was determined to follow a career as a visual artist. At the age of 19, and following a dispute with his father, Lungren was finally permitted to enrol at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia, where he studied under Thomas Eakins (1844-1916) and Robert Frederick Blum (1857–1903). He also studied briefly in Cincinnati and in 1882, he furthered his studies in Paris at the Académie Julian, but only remained there for brief period, abandoning formal study for direct observation of Parisian street life. It was during this period that he painted In The Cafe", "score": "1.511734" }, { "id": "30487500", "title": "Fernand Grenier", "text": " He was born on June 28, 1927 near Lac-Mégantic, Quebec and made a career in education.", "score": "1.5064769" }, { "id": "1469648", "title": "Rashaan Fernandes", "text": " Born in the Netherlands, Fernandes is of Surinamese descent.", "score": "1.5052218" }, { "id": "9594149", "title": "Fernandes", "text": "Ana Rocha Fernandes, Cape Verdian film director, editor and screenwriter ; Erica Fernandes, Indian TV actress and model ; John Fernandes, American musician ; Maria Celestina Fernandes (born 1945), Angolan author, mostly of children's books ; Nomi Fernandes, Swiss glamour model ; Paula Fernandes, Brazilian singer ; Remo Fernandes, Indian musician ; Vânia Fernandes, Portuguese singer ; Vasco Fernandes, known as Grão Vasco, Portuguese painter ", "score": "1.4933617" }, { "id": "2369563", "title": "Mário Fernandes", "text": " Mario was born in São Paulo. Right after signing his first professional contract with Grêmio, Fernandes found it hard to adjust to a new home and fell into depression, prompting him to disappear to his uncle. The police found him in a dishevelled state nearly 700 miles away from Porto Alegre, hungry and exhausted. In a later interview he refused to disclose why he made no attempt to contact the club during this time, but pointed out the difficulties of settling at the beginning of a career, citing the example of Jesús Navas. Mario underwent psychotherapy to deal with his depression, which helped ", "score": "1.4925501" }, { "id": "10231236", "title": "Fernand Ledoux", "text": " Fernand Ledoux (born Jacques Joseph Félix Fernand Ledoux, 24 January 1897, Tirlemont &ndash; 21 September 1993, Villerville) was a French film and theatre actor of Belgian origin. He studied with Raphaël Duflos at the CNSAD, and began his career with small roles at the Comédie-Française. He appeared in close to eighty films, with his best remembered role being the stationmaster Roubaud in Jean Renoir's La Bête humaine (1938), but he remained primarily a theatrical actor for the duration of his career. Married to Fernande Thabuy, with whom he had four children, Ledoux was an amateur painter, and lived for many years at Pennedepie in Normandy. Later he moved to Villerville, where he died and where he is buried.", "score": "1.4825282" }, { "id": "2442899", "title": "Fernandão (footballer, born 1987)", "text": " .", "score": "1.4824715" }, { "id": "9516510", "title": "Pampilhosa da Serra", "text": "António Fernandes (born 1962 in Pampilhosa da Serra) a chess player, became Grandmaster in 2003 ; Tony Carreira (born 1963 in Armadouro) a Portuguese musician. ", "score": "1.4780877" }, { "id": "15548100", "title": "Bruno Fernandes", "text": " Born in Maia, Metropolitan Area of Porto, Fernandes supported Porto, due to his mother being a supporter of the club, and Manchester United as idolized his compatriot Cristiano Ronaldo, Paul Scholes, Ronaldinho, Zinedine Zidane and Stephen Ireland, whom he looked to emulate. During his childhood, Fernandes used to play football on the streets with his older brother Ricardo, who was also a professional football player. His father, who had emigrated to Switzerland, wanted Fernandes to move with him, but he refused, due to the standard of football in Switzerland.", "score": "1.475729" }, { "id": "6022972", "title": "Ana Rocha Fernandes", "text": " Ana Rocha Fernandes is a Cape-Verdian film director, screenwriter and editor. Fernandes was born in Santiago, Cape Verde. She was a teacher in Cape Verde, and then moved to Germany to study architecture at the University of Siegen, before studying film at the Film Academy Baden-Württemberg in Ludwigsburg. She now lives in Stuttgart.", "score": "1.4719702" }, { "id": "13627010", "title": "Fernand Dauchot", "text": " Fernand Dauchot was born in 1898 in Paris. The artist participated to World War I combats in 1917 and lost his left arm. Still, the crippled artist went to Brittany in 1923 and started to paint with other artists in Pont-Aven. The painter is famous for his superb landscapes of France's Brittany region, and his works belong to several public collections, among them the Museum of Art of the city of Quimper.", "score": "1.4705908" }, { "id": "27344924", "title": "Vasco Fernandes (footballer)", "text": " Born in Olhão, Algarve of Guinea-Bissauan descent, Fernandes started his professional career with hometown's S.C. Olhanense, making his debut in the Segunda Liga. Prior to that, he was loaned to FC Girondins de Bordeaux from France, but never appeared officially for the Ligue 1 club. After another loan, now in Spain with UD Salamanca where he teamed up with countryman Zé Tó, Fernandes returned to Portugal after being bought by Leixões SC. He played roughly half of the games during the season, as the Matosinhos team overachieved for a final sixth place in the Primeira Liga. His debut in the competition took place on 24 August 2008, when he played the full 90 minutes in a 1–3 home loss against C.D. Nacional. Fernandes was loaned again for the 2009–10 campaign, also in Spain and in its Segunda División, moving to RC Celta de Vigo. He was much more regularly ", "score": "1.4700186" }, { "id": "7227839", "title": "Fernand Ouellette", "text": " He was born in Montreal, Quebec on 24 September 1930.", "score": "1.4682809" }, { "id": "25877073", "title": "Suella Braverman", "text": " Fernandes was born to Christie and Uma Fernandes of Indian origin, who had emigrated to Britain in the 1960s from Kenya and Mauritius. Her mother was a nurse and a councillor in Brent and her father, of Goan-ancestry in South India, worked for a housing association. She was born in Harrow, Greater London, and grew up in Wembley. Fernandes attended the Uxendon Manor Primary School in Brent and the fee-paying Heathfield School, Pinner, on a partial scholarship. Fernandes read Law at Queens' College, Cambridge. She lived in France for two years, as an Erasmus Programme student and then as an Entente Cordiale Scholar, where she ", "score": "1.4650586" } ]
In what city was Volodymyr O. Kravets born?
[ "Cherkasy Oblast", "Cherkas'ka oblast'", "Cherkashchyna" ]
place of birth
Volodymyr Kravets (diplomat)
3,009,952
32
[ { "id": "14078332", "title": "Volodymyr Kravets (diplomat)", "text": " Volodymyr Kravets (Володимир Олексійович Кравець) (3 May 1930, Uman Raion – 22 July 2011) was a Ukrainian diplomat who served as Permanent Representative of Ukraine to the United Nations and Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Ukrainian SSR.", "score": "1.7813005" }, { "id": "9603478", "title": "Kravets", "text": "Andriy Kravets (born 1990), Ukrainian Go player ; Alla Kravets (born 1973), Ukrainian volleyball player ; Artem Kravets (born 1989), Ukrainian footballer ; Darya Kravets (born 1994), Ukrainian footballer ; Inessa Kravets (born 1966), Ukrainian athlete ; Jean-Jacques Kravetz (born 1947), French musician ; Lyudmyla Kravets (1923–2015), Soviet-Ukrainian combat medic ; Marina Kravets (born 1984), Russian actress and singer ; Mikhail Kravets (born 1963), Russian ice hockey player ; Olena Kravets (born 1977), Ukrainian actress and TV host ; Vasyl Kravets (born 1997), Ukrainian footballer ; Volodymyr Kravets (1930–2011), Ukrainian diplomat ; Volodymyr Kravets (born 1981), Ukrainian boxer Kravets is a Ukrainian-language occupational surname meaning \"tailor\". The surname may refer to:", "score": "1.7728195" }, { "id": "14078334", "title": "Volodymyr Kravets (diplomat)", "text": " In 1953-1954 - he was Instructor of the Kyiv City Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine. In 1956-1961 - he was Lecturer, Senior Lecturer, Department of Marxism–Leninism Kharkiv Aviation Institute, then Umansky Agricultural Institute. In 1961-1965 - He worked as a consultant of the Department of Science and Culture of the Central Committee of the Communist Party. In 1965-1967 - Senior Lecturer of Party History of the Kyiv National University of Construction and Architecture. In 1967-1971 - he was Counsellor Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Ukrainian SSR. In 1971-1979 - he was in office Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the ", "score": "1.7626901" }, { "id": "27292759", "title": "Vasyl Kravets", "text": " Born in Lviv, Kravets is a product of the FC Karpaty Lviv School System. His first trainer was Vasyl Leskiv. He made his debut for FC Karpaty entering as a second-half substitute against FC Chornomorets Odesa on 10 May 2015 in Ukrainian Premier League. On 24 January 2017, Kravets was loaned to Spanish Segunda División side CD Lugo until the end of the season, with a buyout clause. 12 June, Lugo announced that buyout option was activated. On 13 January 2019, Kravets agreed to a four-and-a-half-year contract with La Liga side CD Leganés. He made his debut in the competition on 24 February, starting in a 1–1 home draw against Valencia CF. On 15 January 2020, after appearing in only one cup match for Lega during the campaign, Kravets was loaned to his former side Lugo until June. On 11 September 2020, Kravets moved to Lech Poznań on a season long loan. The following 13 July, he moved to Sporting de Gijón also in a temporary deal.", "score": "1.7483859" }, { "id": "6704363", "title": "Olena Kravets", "text": " Olena Maliashenko was born in Kryvyi Rih in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, she is the only daughter of Yurii Viktorovych Maliashenko and Nadiia Fedorivna Maliashenko. She is best known internationally as the executive director of the Kvartal-95 television and studio production studio since 2000. On 21 September 2002, she married the producer Serhii Kravets and adopted the surname of her husband. From this marriage, they have three children: Mariia, born on February 24, 2003 and twins Ivan and Kateryna, born on August 15, 2016. On the occasion of her second pregnancy, she launched her own line of specialized clothing for pregnant women under the name \"OneSize by Lena Kravets\".", "score": "1.7454321" }, { "id": null, "title": "Volodymyr Kravets", "text": "Volodymyr Kravets\n\nVolodymyr Kravets (born May 31, 1981 in Krasnoarmiisk, Donetsk Oblast) is a male boxer from Ukraine, who competed for his Eastern European country at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. There he was stopped in the first round of the men's lightweight division (– 60 kg) by Pakistan's Asghar Ali Shah.\n\nKravets qualified for the Athens Games by ending up in second place at the 4th AIBA European 2004 Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Baku, Azerbaijan. In the final he lost to Russia's Murat Khrachev.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Volodymyr Kravets (diplomat)", "text": "Volodymyr Kravets (diplomat)\n\nVolodymyr Kravets () (3 May 1930, Uman Raion – 22 July 2011) was a Ukrainian diplomat who served as Permanent Representative of Ukraine to the United Nations and Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Ukrainian SSR.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Kravets", "text": "Kravets\n\nKravets is a Ukrainian-language and Yiddish-language occupational surname meaning \"tailor\".\n\nThe surname may refer to:\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Boxers at the 2004 Summer Olympics", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Lyudmila Kravets", "text": "Lyudmila Kravets\n\nLyudmila Stepanovna Kravets (, ; 7 February 1923 – 23 May 2015) was a medic in the 63rd Guards Rifle Regiment during World War II. For her actions in the war, she was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union on 31 May 1945.", "score": null }, { "id": "6311620", "title": "Lyudmila Kravets", "text": " Kravets was born on 7 February 1923 in the village of Kushuhum, working-class Ukrainian family. After completing her seventh grade of school in 1939 she went on to attend a two-year nursing course in Zaporozhye, graduating in 1941.", "score": "1.7435273" }, { "id": "14078333", "title": "Volodymyr Kravets (diplomat)", "text": " Volodymyr Martynenko graduated from Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv (1953), University of Kharkiv (1956). Ph.D..", "score": "1.7107524" }, { "id": "6704362", "title": "Olena Kravets", "text": " Olena Yuriivna Kravets (Олена Юріївна Кравець, born 1 January 1977) is an actress, producer and television host from Ukraine.", "score": "1.7075658" }, { "id": "28382002", "title": "Volodymyr Kravets", "text": " Volodymyr Kravets (born May 31, 1981 in Krasnoarmiisk, Donetsk Oblast) is a male boxer from Ukraine, who competed for his Eastern European country at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. There he was stopped in the first round of the men's lightweight division (&ndash; 60 kg) by Pakistan's Asghar Ali Shah. Kravets qualified for the Athens Games by ending up in second place at the 4th AIBA European 2004 Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Baku, Azerbaijan. In the final he lost to Russia's Murat Khrachev.", "score": "1.6958137" }, { "id": "14078336", "title": "Volodymyr Kravets (diplomat)", "text": "Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary ", "score": "1.6932961" }, { "id": "26024158", "title": "Artem Kravets", "text": " Artem Anatoliyovich Kravets (Артем Анатолійович Кравець; born 3 June 1989) is a Ukrainian footballer who plays as a striker for Turkish club Konyaspor.", "score": "1.6917" }, { "id": "16239501", "title": "Andrij Kravets", "text": " Andrij Kravets (born December 12, 1990, Rivne) — 1 dan professional Go player from Ukraine; member of numerous international amateur competitions (3rd European Pro Qualification, 2016 ), Champion of Ukraine (2012, 2015).", "score": "1.6785429" }, { "id": "16239502", "title": "Andrij Kravets", "text": " 1999 - started to play. 2002 - 1st place, Youth Go Championship in category under 12, Prague (Czech Republic). 2006 - Become 4 dan. 2008 - Become 5 dan. 2008 - Represent Ukraine in 1st World Mind Sports>, Beijing (China). 2010 - 2nd place in Ukrainian Championship (High League), Kyiv (Ukraine). 2011, 2012, 2013 - third place in the European Team championship. 2012 - Become 6 dan. 2012 - 3rd place in 5th Shusaku Cup, Targu Mures (Romania). 2012 - 3rd place in European Iwamoto Memorial, Amsterdam (Netherlands). 2012 and 2015 - 1st place In Ukrainian Championship (High League), Kyiv (Ukraine). 2017 - 1st place on 4th Pro Qualification Tournament of European Go Federation, received 1st pro dan.", "score": "1.618326" }, { "id": "13708590", "title": "Dmytro Dontsov", "text": " Dontsov was born in Melitopol, Taurida Governorate (today - Zaporizhzhia Oblast) to an old cossack officer's family, and in 1900 moved to Saint Petersburg to study law. In 1905 he joined the USDRP. During that time he was arrested due to his involvement in socialist politics, and soon after that moved to Vienna in 1909. He then moved to Lviv, where in 1917 he completed his doctorate in law. In 1913 he quit the USDRP due to the conflict based on the national question. During the time of the Ukrainian revolution Dontsov served in the government of Hetman Pavlo Skoropadsky, where he became the head of the government's official news agency. During that time together with Vyacheslav Lypynsky and Volodymyr Shemet he created the Ukrainian Democratic-Agrarian Party (Khliboroby-Demokraty). With the fall of the Ukrainian State between 1919 and 1922 he lived in Switzerland, where he headed the press bureau of the Ukrainian People's Republic. In 1922-1932 he was the editor-in-chief of the Literaturno-naukovyi vistnyk (Literary Scientific Herald). From 1933 to 1939 Dontsov was publishing and editing Vistnyk.", "score": "1.6156337" }, { "id": "26024177", "title": "Artem Kravets", "text": " Source:", "score": "1.6124647" }, { "id": "4771996", "title": "Vasyl Khmelnytsky", "text": " Khmelnytsky was born in Kazakhstan, in the village of Bayanaul, Pavlodar Region. His father was a tractor driver, and his mother was a house-painter. In 1984 he graduated from the technical vocational school majoring in \"fitter welder\" in the city of Vatutine, Cherkasy region. In 1987-1991, after a military service in the Soviet Army, he worked as a gas electric welder and a foreman at the construction and assembly department in Leningrad. In 1991-1998 he worked as: Head of the Information-Analytical Department at the Orimi Wood Soviet-American Joint Venture (Leningrad), CEO at JSC Danapris, Head of the Information-Analytical Department at JSC Real-Group. In 2002 he graduated from the Faculty of Law of Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv.", "score": "1.6087983" }, { "id": "27292758", "title": "Vasyl Kravets", "text": " Vasyl Kravets (born 20 August 1997) is a Ukrainian professional footballer who plays as a left-back for Sporting Gijón on loan frm CD Leganés.", "score": "1.5998739" }, { "id": "26024176", "title": "Artem Kravets", "text": " His wife Anna is an economist. He met her in the bowling-club. On 25 November 2017, Kravets become a father for the first time when his wife gave birth to two twin boys. Kravets idol and favourite footballer is former Brazilian midfielder Kaká. He is the reason why Kravets selected number 22 (the birthday of Kaká) jersey while at Dynamo Kyiv, and pointing his fingers in the sky every time he scored.", "score": "1.5948896" }, { "id": "14078335", "title": "Volodymyr Kravets (diplomat)", "text": " SSR. In 1979-1984 - Permanent Representative of Ukraine to the United Nations. From 29 December 1984 - 27 July 1990 - Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Ukrainian SSR. He Participated in the 2 th, 23rd, 24th, 36th and 39th session of the General Assembly of the United Nations; headed the delegation of the Ukrainian SSR on 40-44th session of the UN on 6th, 8th and 9th Emergency Special Session, 3rd Special Session on Disarmament and the 14th Special Session of the UN General of the Namibian problem; In 1985, several presided over the meetings of the Security Council of the United Nations.", "score": "1.5942185" }, { "id": "5490219", "title": "Yuriy Stets", "text": " Yuriy Stets was born on 29 December 1975 at Chortkiv, in Ternopil Oblast. He attended the Sydir Vorobkevych Chernivtsi School of Music from 1992 to 1996. In 2000, he earned a degree in information management from Kharkiv Polytechnic Institute. Stets started his career in journalism in 1990 as a reporter for the Chernivtsi Regional State Television and Radio Company. He them worked for various television channels, including ICTV, a local Chernivtsi-based channel called TBA. He also work for public relations firms. Starting in 2002, Stets served as the chief producer for the Channel 5 television network, which is owned by Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko. He was elected to the Ukrainian parliament on 23 November 2007, and was a member of Our Ukraine–People's Self-Defence Bloc. He was elected again on 12 December ", "score": "1.5938106" } ]
In what city was Yinka Ayenuwa born?
[ "Warri" ]
place of birth
Yinka Ayenuwa
1,360,393
36
[ { "id": "26617209", "title": "Yinka Ayenuwa", "text": " Yinka Ayenuwa (born 2 May 1986 in Warri) is a Nigerian weightlifter. He competed in the men's 69 kg event at the 2014 Commonwealth Games where he won a silver medal. In 2015, he won 3 silver medals at the African Games.", "score": "2.006447" }, { "id": "16207559", "title": "Yinka Elujoba", "text": " Elujoba was born and raised in Lagos, Nigeria to civil servant parents. He has an Engineering degree from Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, and in 2020 received an MFA in Art Writing from the School of Visual Arts, New York.", "score": "1.7668471" }, { "id": "13219153", "title": "Yinka Shonibare", "text": " Yinka Shonibare was born in London, England, on 9 August 1962, the son of Olatunji Shonibare and Laide Shonibare. When he was three years old, his family moved to Lagos, Nigeria, where his father practised law. When he was 17 years old, Shonibare returned to Britain to do his A-levels at Redrice School. At the age of 18, he contracted transverse myelitis, an inflammation of the spinal cord, which resulted in a long-term physical disability where one side of his body is paralysed. Shonibare went on to study Fine Art first at Byam Shaw School of Art (now Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design) and then at Goldsmiths, University of London, where he ", "score": "1.7192142" }, { "id": "13219152", "title": "Yinka Shonibare", "text": " Yinka Shonibare (born 9 August 1962) is a British-Nigerian artist living in the United Kingdom. His work explores cultural identity, colonialism and post-colonialism within the contemporary context of globalisation. A hallmark of his art is the brightly coloured Ankara fabric he uses. Because he has a physical disability that paralyses one side of his body, Shonibare uses assistants to make works under his direction.", "score": "1.6959987" }, { "id": "14974359", "title": "Yinka Durosinmi", "text": " Yinka Durosinmi was born into the royal family of Osolu Kingdom in Irewe, a town in Ojo, Lagos State. He attended his basic education in Apapa Baptist Secondary School, Apapa and his secondary school education at Awori College, Ojo and went on to obtain his National Diploma and Higher National Diploma in Business Administration from Lagos State College of Science and Technology, Isolo now Lagos State Polytechnic. He also holds a Masters in Legal Studies, Administration Law and Public Policy from Lagos State University, Ojo.", "score": "1.6719604" }, { "id": null, "title": "Yinka Ayenuwa", "text": "Yinka Ayenuwa\n\nYinka Ayenuwa (born 2 May 1986 in Warri) is a Nigerian weightlifter. He competed in the men's 69 kg event at the 2014 Commonwealth Games where he won a silver medal. In 2015, he won 3 silver medals at the African Games.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Yinka", "text": "Yinka\n\nYinka is a unisex name in the Yoruba language. It is a contraction of \"Yimika\" meaning \"\"surround me.\"\" It is also a diminutive form of names such as \"Adeyinka\" (crown/royalty surrounds me), \"Olayinka\" (wealth surrounds me), \"Akinyinka\" (warriors/valour surrounds me), \"Oluyinka\" (God/my lord surrounds me), etc.\n\nPeople named Yinka include:\nYinka Ilori Artist \nYinka Bokinini Presenter and radio dj\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ndidi Winifred", "text": "Ndidi Winifred\n\nNdidi Winifred (born 22 September 1988) is a Nigerian weightlifter. She competed in the women's 58 kg event at the 2014 Commonwealth Games where she won a silver medal.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:21st-century Nigerian people", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "17248099", "title": "Yinka Davies", "text": "in Lagos to explore becoming a visual artist. She went to meet Abiodun Olaku a renowned Nigerian painter. Her first love was actually painting and sculpting. She then got caught up in the ambiance of the national theatre. She was later commissioned by the late Bassey Effiong (theatre director) to help him paint the stage for a production of Marriage of Anansewa by Efua Sutherland. It was during this project that she experienced how her 2-dimensional painting dreams began to evolve with their own movement and could take on a life of their own. During her visits to the National", "score": "1.5855329" }, { "id": "14755", "title": "Yinka Jegede-Ekpe", "text": " Yinka Jegede-Ekpe (born c. undefined 1978) is a Nigerian HIV/AIDS activist. After being diagnosed as HIV-positive, she became the first Nigerian woman to publicly announce her status. She experienced discrimination and set up the Nigerian Community of Women Living With HIV/AIDS organisation to raise awareness of HIV/AIDS in Nigeria. In 2006, she gave birth to a healthy HIV-negative baby.", "score": "1.6629452" }, { "id": "26998477", "title": "Yinka", "text": "Yinka Quadri (born 1959), Nigerian actor, filmmaker, producer and director ; Yinka Shonibare (born 1962), Nigerian-British artist ; Yinka Ayefele (born 1968), Nigerian music producer ; Yinka Davies (born 1970), Nigerian vocalist, dancer and lyricist ; Yinka Dare (1972–2004), Nigerian basketball player ; Oluyinka Idowu (born 1972), Nigerian-born British former long jumper nicknamed \"Yinka\" ; Yinka Faleti (born 1976), American veteran ; Yinka Ayenuwa (born 1986), Nigerian weightlifter ; Yinka Olukunga, Nigerian actress Yinka is a unisex name in the Yoruba language. It is a contraction of \"Yimika\" meaning \"surround me.\" It is also a diminutive form of names such as Adeyinka (crown/royalty surrounds me), Olayinka (wealth surrounds me), Akinyinka (warriors/valour surrounds me), Oluyinka (God/my lord surrounds me), etc. People named Yinka include:", "score": "1.6506541" }, { "id": "1156347", "title": "Yetunde Ayeni-Babaeko", "text": " Yetunde Ayeni-Babaeko was born in Enugu, Eastern Region, Nigeria in 1978. Her father was Nigerian and her mother was German. She moved to Germany as a child, attending secondary school there and completing a photography apprenticeship at Studio Be in Greven. In 2005 she returned to Nigeria. In 2007 she opened her own studio, Camera Studios, based in Ikeja. Ayeni-Babaeko's 2014 exhibition 'Eko Moves', in collaboration with the Society for Performing Arts of Nigeria (SPAN), portrayed dancers in public spaces in Lagos. Her 2019 exhibition 'White Ebony' highlighted the situation of people with albinism.", "score": "1.6449378" }, { "id": "871423", "title": "Uzoamaka Aniunoh", "text": " Aniunoh was born in Onitsha. She studied at the University of Nigeria and gained followers to a blog she created. In 2015 she moved to the UK where she studied creative writing at the University of Birmingham gaining a master's degree.", "score": "1.6306822" }, { "id": "30737408", "title": "Niyi Towolawi", "text": " Towolawi is of Yoruba, Nigerian descent and grew up in Canning Town, east London. He is a Mathematics graduate from the University of Manchester, where he played basketball, studied Shaolin Kung fu and was popular on campus for his somewhat eccentric personality and soul train dance moves. He has always been a keen jazz musician and plays several musical instruments.", "score": "1.6303538" }, { "id": "6614068", "title": "Wahab Iyanda Folawiyo", "text": " Chief Abdulwahab Iyanda \"Wahab\" Folawiyo, CON (16 June 1928 – 6 June 2008) was a Nigerian businessman and philanthropist. In 1957, he founded Yinka Folawiyo & Sons, which has become the parent company of the Yinka Folawiyo Group of Companies. He was born in Lagos to Pa Tijani, a wealthy local merchant, during the British colonial era. He attended the University of North London in 1951, where he read Management, specialising in Ship Brokerage. He returned to start Yinka Folawiyo & Sons, an import and export business. Folawiyo was also the first African-descended Principal Member of the Baltic Exchange in London.", "score": "1.6302724" }, { "id": "9581631", "title": "Yinka Quadri", "text": " Yinka, a descent of Igbomina-Owomeje, Kwara State, was born into a middle-class family in September 1959 in Lagos Island, Lagos State.", "score": "1.6258442" }, { "id": "14682921", "title": "Yinka Odumakin", "text": " Odumakin attended St. Augustine Primary School, Ondo State, before proceeding to CAC Grammar School, Edunabon, Osun State and Oduduwa College, Ile-Ife, Osun State. He graduated from Obafemi Awolowo University in 1989 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English Studies, and also graduated from University of Ghana.", "score": "1.615762" }, { "id": "9581630", "title": "Yinka Quadri", "text": " Alhaji Akanni Olayinka Quadri (born 6 September 1959) is a Nigerian Actor, Film-Maker, Producer and Director, born and raised in Lagos Island, Lagos State, but a native of Oro, Kwara State. He recently starred in a new movie titled Apaadi. He is installed as the Agba Akin of Oro Kingdom. He is the President & Co-Founder of a Theatre Art Group called (Odunfa Caucus) which office is Situated in Ebute-Meta, Lagos State.", "score": "1.6084907" }, { "id": "14682920", "title": "Yinka Odumakin", "text": " Yinka Odumakin (10 December 1966 – 3 April 2021), was a Nigerian human rights activist and politician. Until his death, he was the national publicity secretary of Afenifere, a Pan-Yoruba socio-cultural group.", "score": "1.6035297" }, { "id": "11187117", "title": "Aliyu Mai-Bornu", "text": " Mai-Bornu was born in the town of Yola to parents of Kanuri heritage. His father was a councillor in the Lamido Native Authority and initially opposed Mai-Bornu's attendance of school until he was persuaded by the Lamido to give Mai-Bornu a chance. Mai-Bornu attended Yola Elementary School, Yola Middle School, and was admitted to Kaduna College in 1938, graduating in 1942 as an English language teacher. He started his teaching career at his alma mater, Yola Middle School from 1942–1946 before proceeding to another one of his alma mater's, Kaduna College (1946–1952) and soon joined the Northern Teachers Association. In 1952, he returned to Yola as deputy headmaster of the Yola Middle School and later left Yola to be a House Tutor at the Veterinary School in Vom for five months. He earned a government scholarship to travel abroad and studied Economics at Bristol University in the United Kingdom graduating in 1957.", "score": "1.5969405" }, { "id": "10578618", "title": "Yinka Sunmonu", "text": " Yinka Sunmonu was born in 1962 in London. She gained a BA in English, African and Caribbean Studies and a MA in creative and life writing from Goldsmiths' College. Sunmonu contributed a story to the 1999 anthology Afrobeat: New Black British Fiction. Her first novel, Cherish, followed the conflicts of a Nigerian girl privately fostered by a white family. An expert on adoption and fostering in the black community, Sunmonu has also written on dementia care in the black community. She has written for Aspire Magazine, West Africa, Community Care, Woman to Woman, The Voice, Foster Care and Adoption & Fostering.", "score": "1.5864127" }, { "id": "9153184", "title": "Yinarupa Nangala", "text": " Yinarupa Nangala (born c. 1961) (or born c. 1958) is a Pintupi from Western Australia. just west of the Kiwirrkurra community. Her works are held in major art collections including the Art Gallery of NSW, Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, and the National Gallery of Victoria.", "score": "1.5813413" }, { "id": "30033776", "title": "Adesuwa Onyenokwe", "text": " Onyenokwe was born on August 8, 1963, in Ibadan, Oyo state, Nigeria to a family of 11 children. She is the 5th child. She attended Emotan Preparatory School, and Idia College, both in Benin City, Edo State. She then proceeded to study drama at the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) in Ile-Ife, Osun State, Nigeria. After her first degree at OAU, she went further to obtain a master's degree in Language Arts at the University of Ibadan. Whilst at her first degree programme, she was one of the lucky ones to have been tutored by Professor Wole Soyinka, a Nobel Laureate. She married Ikechukwu Onyenokwe an engineer and management consultant from Ndokwa East Local Government Area of Delta State in 1988. The couple have 6 children.", "score": "1.5794904" }, { "id": "29559948", "title": "Yohana Yembise", "text": " Yembise was born in the city of Manokwari, then part of Netherlands New Guinea, on 1 October 1958. The second child of eleven siblings, Yembise's father was a civil servant for Nabire Regency. Yembise was first educated in Jayapura and later studied in public high schools in Nabire, and was involved in a student exchange to Canada as a senior high schooler. After completing high school, Yembise went to Cenderawasih University and studied English education, earning her bachelor's degree in 1985. She later went to Singapore and earned a diploma from the Southeast Asian Ministers of Education Organization - Regional English Language Center (SEAMEO RELC). Further on, she studied at Canada's Simon Fraser University for her education masters, graduating in 1994 and later a PhD from Australia's University of Newcastle in 2007.", "score": "1.5762923" } ]
In what city was Phil Williams born?
[ "Birkenhead" ]
place of birth
Phil Williams (footballer, born 1958)
5,440,620
23
[ { "id": "29193997", "title": "Phil Williams (boxer)", "text": " Phil Williams, alias The Drill, (born July 12, 1977) is an American cruiserweight southpaw professional boxer. Williams was born in Queens, New York City. He moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota as a child, and still lives in Minneapolis where he works as a barber.", "score": "1.8638055" }, { "id": "3859212", "title": "Phil Williams (Welsh politician)", "text": " Williams was born in Tredegar in the industrial valleys of south Wales and grew up in Bargoed, another industrial town. He was educated at Lewis School, Pengam and Clare College, Cambridge, and became a leading space scientist. He was appointed Professor of Solar Terrestrial Physics at the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth, and simultaneously became economic spokesman for Plaid Cymru.", "score": "1.8574611" }, { "id": "3201508", "title": "Phil Williams (footballer, born 1963)", "text": " Philip Williams (born 7 February 1963) is a footballer who played as a midfielder in the Football League for Crewe Alexandra, Wigan Athletic and Chester City.", "score": "1.7895253" }, { "id": "31850028", "title": "Phil Williams (footballer, born 1958)", "text": "For other people of the same name, see Phil Williams Philip Williams (born 5 April 1958, Birkenhead) is an English former footballer. A product of Chester's youth policy, Williams made a solitary appearance in The Football League for the club when wearing the number nine shirt during a 0–0 draw at home to Preston North End on 11 September 1976. He did not make any further first-team appearances for Chester and later played for Cray Wanderers.", "score": "1.7418752" }, { "id": "4087121", "title": "Phil Handy", "text": " Born in San Leandro, California, he grew up in Hayward - Union City, California.", "score": "1.6614459" }, { "id": null, "title": "Phil Williams (footballer, born 1963)", "text": "Phil Williams (footballer, born 1963)\n\nPhilip Williams (born 7 February 1963) is a footballer who played as a midfielder in the Football League for Crewe Alexandra, Wigan Athletic and Chester City.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Phil Williams (presenter)", "text": "Phil Williams (presenter)\n\nPhil Williams (born 2 August 1974) is a British radio news reporter and presenter who worked for 18 years on BBC Radio 5 Live until 2019.\n\nA graduate of the BBC trainee reporters scheme, Williams soon joined the corporation's Greater Manchester Radio (GMR) station as a newsreader and presenter. His time at the station included reporting in the immediate aftermath of a Provisional IRA bombing in the city.\n\nThree years in a similar role at BBC Radio 1 followed before Williams transferred to Radio 5 Live, initially as an entertainment reporter. He formerly hosted the \"Weekend Breakfast\" show, firstly with Anna Foster, and then with Eleanor Oldroyd on Saturdays and with Caroline Barker on Sundays. From 13 May 2013 he switched to the late-night show – presenting the show from Mondays to Wednesdays, 10:30pm1am, and also on Thursdays 10pm1am, when BBC One's political discussion show \"Question Time\" was off-season. He left the station after presenting his final programme on 8 May 2019. In November 2019, he stood in for OJ Borg on BBC Radio 2's late night show.\n\nWilliams previously presented a show on commercial station XFM London, running from 10am to 2pm every Sunday.\n\nBeginning in June 2020, he started presenting an evening show, Monday to Thursday, on the digital radio station Times Radio. He left the station in June 2022.\n\nWilliams supports Aston Villa F.C.\n\nPhil covers shows for BBC Radio 2\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Phil Williams (Alabama senator)", "text": "Phil Williams (Alabama senator)\n\nPhillip W. Williams Jr. (born March 20, 1965) is an American politician, radio show host and attorney from the state of Alabama. A member of the Republican Party, Williams served in the Alabama Senate from 2010 until 2018, representing the 10th district, encompassing Etowah County and parts of Cherokee County. Since leaving the state legislature, Williams has served as a policy director for the Alabama Policy Institute and hosts a conservative radio program, \"Rightside Radio\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Phil Williams (Alabama representative)", "text": "Phil Williams (Alabama representative)\n\nPhil Williams is an American politician and entrepreneur from the state of Alabama. He served as a Republican member of the Alabama House of Representatives representing the 6th District, serving from 2009 to 2018.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Phil Williams", "text": "Phil Williams\n\nPhil Williams may refer to:\n", "score": null }, { "id": "3859211", "title": "Phil Williams (Welsh politician)", "text": " Professor Philip James Stradling Williams (11 January 1939 – 10 June 2003) was a Welsh politician for Plaid Cymru and scientist.", "score": "1.623678" }, { "id": "30826227", "title": "Phil Williams (presenter)", "text": " Phil Williams (born 2 August 1974) is a British radio news reporter and presenter who worked for 18 years on BBC Radio 5 Live until 2019. A graduate of the BBC trainee reporters scheme, Williams soon joined the corporation's Greater Manchester Radio (GMR) station as a newsreader and presenter. His time at the station included reporting in the immediate aftermath of a Provisional IRA bombing in the city. Three years in a similar role at BBC Radio 1 followed before Williams transferred to Radio 5 Live, initially as an entertainment reporter. He formerly hosted the Weekend Breakfast show, firstly with Anna Foster, and then with Eleanor Oldroyd on Saturdays and with Caroline Barker ", "score": "1.6068029" }, { "id": "361209", "title": "Phil Williams (Alabama senator)", "text": " Phillip W. Williams Jr. (born March 20, 1965, in Fort Monmouth, New Jersey) is a Republican politician in the US state of Alabama. He was a member of the Alabama Senate, representing the 10th District, from 2010 until 2019.", "score": "1.5930204" }, { "id": "32426802", "title": "Phil Cushion", "text": " Phil Cushion was born in Wigan, Greater Manchester, England.", "score": "1.5873938" }, { "id": "3531871", "title": "C. K. Williams", "text": " The American poet C.K. Williams was born in Newark, New Jersey, on November 4, 1936. His parents were Paul B. Williams and Dossie Kasdin. His grandparents came to the USA from Kiev, then a Russian city, and Lvov, Ukraine. He went to Columbia High School in Maplewood, attended Bucknell University for one year, then moved on to and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania. He started writing poetry during his second year at Penn, and half-way through junior year he left for Paris. At that time, he wrote \"I fell into a period of lacerating loneliness. I'd always been a little shy but now something, ", "score": "1.5662718" }, { "id": "26470133", "title": "Phil Buckman", "text": " Originally from Queens, New York, Phil Buckman arrived in Los Angeles after living in Baltimore and Boston, and attending college in San Diego.", "score": "1.5623028" }, { "id": "3859213", "title": "Phil Williams (Welsh politician)", "text": " He contested the 1968 Caerphilly by-election, where he came close to unseating Labour in a safe seat, and became the second Chairman of Plaid Cymru in 1970, a post he held until 1976; when he became Vice President of the party. He was responsible for policy and research in the party for many years. From 1999 to 2003, he was a Member of the National Assembly for Wales for the electoral region of South Wales East. Williams also stood for election in Blaenau Gwent in 1999 and got 21% of the vote.", "score": "1.5537972" }, { "id": "9923641", "title": "Phil Popham", "text": " He was born in 1965 in Redditch, Worcestershire, England, and graduated with a BSc (Hons) in management studies from the University of Aston, Birmingham.", "score": "1.5514653" }, { "id": "31651019", "title": "Tad Williams", "text": " Robert Paul \"Tad\" Williams was born in San Jose, California on March 14, 1957. He grew up in Palo Alto, the town that grew up around Stanford University. He attended Palo Alto Senior High School. His family was close, and he and his brothers were always encouraged in their creativity. His mother gave him the nickname \"Tad\" after the young characters in Walt Kelly's comic strip Pogo. The semi-autobiographical character Pogo Cashman, who appears in some of his stories, is a reference to the nickname. Before becoming a full time fiction author Williams held many jobs including delivering newspapers, food service, DJ and station music director for college radio station KFJC, shoe sales, branch manager ", "score": "1.5486782" }, { "id": "5313927", "title": "Phil Costa", "text": " Costa was born on 24 July 1949 at Guildford, New South Wales. Prior to his election he was a primary school teacher and principal of public schools in the Oaks and Buxton. He was named the Citizen of the Year in Wollondilly Shire in 1984.", "score": "1.548553" }, { "id": "9438272", "title": "Phil Curls", "text": " Curls was born in Kansas City, Missouri. His father helped found Freedom, Inc., the oldest African American political club in the country. He graduated from DeLaSalle High School and Rockhurst College in Kansas City.", "score": "1.5470108" }, { "id": "33075105", "title": "Neil Williams (artist)", "text": " Williams was born in Bluff, Utah. He was in the process of moving to Brazil when he died in New York City at the age of 53. Williams graduated from the San Francisco Art Institute in 1959; showed his work in 1959 at the City Lights Bookstore in San Francisco and moved to New York City that same year. He began exhibiting his paintings in New York in 1960. He was a regular patron of Max's Kansas City throughout the period of the mid-1960s and early 1970s when it belonged to his friend Mickey Ruskin. His paintings were exhibited at important art galleries in New York including solo exhibitions at the Green Gallery (1964), and the André Emmerich Gallery (1966 and 1968) both on 57th Street in Manhattan and at the Dwan Gallery in Los Angeles (1966). His work was included in several important group ", "score": "1.5359421" }, { "id": "11418159", "title": "Phil Vischer", "text": " Phil Vischer was born June 16, 1966 in Muscatine, Iowa, United States, and grew up in Chicago, Illinois. For three semesters, Vischer attended St. Paul Bible College (currently known as Crown College); around that time, he also worked at a small Christian video production company.", "score": "1.5314051" }, { "id": "32119613", "title": "Jay Williams (author)", "text": " Williams was born in Buffalo, New York, the son of Max and Lillian Jacobson. He cited the experience of growing up as the son of a vaudeville show producer as leading him to pursue his acting career as early as college. He attended both the University of Pennsylvania (1932–33) and Columbia University (1934), participating in amateur theatrical productions.", "score": "1.526823" }, { "id": "6721492", "title": "Karl Kani", "text": " Carl Williams was born in Costa Rica to a Panamanian father and Costa Rican mother. The family migrated to the United States in the late 1960s, and he grew up in the Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn.", "score": "1.5267334" } ]
In what city was James M. Bingham born?
[ "Perry", "Town of Perry" ]
place of birth
James M. Bingham
4,626,488
98
[ { "id": "6420543", "title": "James M. Bingham", "text": " James M. Bingham (February 3, 1828January 8, 1885) was an American lawyer and Republican politician. He served as the 13th Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin and the 20th speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly.", "score": "1.7442843" }, { "id": "2932003", "title": "James Bingham", "text": " James Bingham (23 January 1925 – 8 December 2009) was a Belfast-based painter. He spent thirty years in London working as a signwriter with his brother. In 1967 he returned to Belfast where he met fellow Belfast artist Daniel O'Neill. They became friends and from 1968 he worked with O'Neill in his studio until O'Neill's death in 1974. Bingham was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland and died there in 2009, after a long illness.", "score": "1.7344368" }, { "id": "13708699", "title": "Henry H. Bingham", "text": " Bingham was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on December 4, 1841. He graduated from Jefferson College in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, in 1862, where he became a member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. He received a LLD degree in 1902 from Washington and Jefferson College in Washington, Pennsylvania.", "score": "1.7241794" }, { "id": "1816596", "title": "George Caleb Bingham", "text": " George Caleb Bingham (March 20, 1811 – July 7, 1879) was an American artist, soldier and politician known in his lifetime as \"the Missouri Artist\". Initially a Whig, he was elected as a delegate to the Missouri legislature before the American Civil War where he fought against the extension of slavery westward. During that war, although born in Virginia, Bingham was dedicated to the Union cause and became captain of a volunteer company which helped keep the state from joining the Confederacy, and then served four years as Missouri's Treasurer. During his final years, Bingham held several offices in Kansas City, while also serving as Missouri's Adjutant General. His paintings of American frontier life along the Missouri River exemplify the Luminist style.", "score": "1.7023323" }, { "id": "7285032", "title": "George G. Bingham", "text": " George Greenwood Bingham (November 25, 1855 &ndash; October 4, 1924) was an American judge and legal educator in the state of Oregon. A native of Wisconsin, his family immigrated to Oregon in his teens, though he returned to the Midwest for his legal education. Bingham served as the second dean at the Willamette University College of Law and was also a judge for Multnomah County after previously serving as a district attorney for Salem and the state. His former home in Salem, the Dr. Luke A. Port House, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.", "score": "1.6848757" }, { "id": null, "title": "James M. Bingham", "text": "James M. Bingham\n\nJames M. Bingham (February 3, 1828January 8, 1885) was an American lawyer and Republican politician. He served as the 13th lieutenant governor of Wisconsin, the 20th speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly, and the 13th mayor of Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "James Bingham (Indiana politician)", "text": "James Bingham (Indiana politician)\n\nJames Bingham (March 16, 1861 – August 19, 1940) was an American lawyer and politician who served as the nineteenth Indiana Attorney General from January 1, 1907, to January 1, 1911.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "James Bingham (artist)", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Bingham (surname)", "text": "Bingham (surname)\n\nBingham is a surname of English origin, ultimately deriving from the toponym of Melcombe Bingham in Dorset.\nThe name was taken to Ireland in the 16th century, by Richard Bingham, a native of Dorset who was appointed governor of Connaught in 1584. \nThere is another Bingham in \nNottinghamshire.\n\nPeople surnamed Bingham include:", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Sam Fifield", "text": "Sam Fifield\n\nSamuel S. Fifield (June 24, 1839February 17, 1915)<ref>", "score": null }, { "id": "6420544", "title": "James M. Bingham", "text": " He was born in Perry, New York, in 1828, and moved to Palmyra, Wisconsin, in 1854, where he practiced law. Bingham served in the 40th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment as a major. A Republican, he served terms in the Wisconsin State Assembly in 1863, 1864, 1869, 1870, and 1874 and was elected its speaker in 1870. He moved to Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin in 1870. In 1878 he was elected the 13th Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin under Governor William E. Smith, an office he held for two terms until 1882. He died in 1885 in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin.", "score": "1.6831608" }, { "id": "7285033", "title": "George G. Bingham", "text": " George Bingham was born in West Salem, Wisconsin, on November 25, 1855, to William Henry Bingham and Maria Bingham (née Kentner) as the first of four children. The family moved to neighboring Barre by 1860 and to Carrollton, Missouri, by 1870. In 1872, the family moved to Oregon and settled in Yamhill County. After receiving his education in the public schools of Yamhill County, he attended what became Linfield College in McMinnville. Bingham attended the University of Michigan Law School in Ann Arbor where he graduated with a bachelor of laws degree in 1880.", "score": "1.6721544" }, { "id": "10118731", "title": "Walter V. Bingham", "text": " Walter Van Dyke Bingham was born in Swan Lake City, Iowa to Lemuel and Martha Bingham. Deemed an exceptional student early on, Bingham skipped the 3rd and 4th grades, graduating high school at the age of 16. He was an industrious youth, selling enough popcorn at the train station to pay his way to Chicago's 1893 World's Fair. Upon graduating from high school, Walter took a job as a rodman on the Burlington, Cedar Rapids and Northern Railway. His first job outside of the home was a printer's devil, inking forms for the weekly edition of the Emmet County Republican. Bingham was ", "score": "1.6718328" }, { "id": "14122636", "title": "Robert Jefferson Bingham", "text": " Bingham was born in Billesdon, Leicestershire, England, where he was baptised in March 1824. His parents were John Cowener Bingham and his wife, Martha. In 1853, at the British Embassy in Paris, he married Emma Reeve, daughter of surgeon John Reed of Kinver, Staffordshire. She died 15 years later at their home on rue de La Rochefoucauld in Paris.", "score": "1.6635523" }, { "id": "28367888", "title": "Andrew Bingham", "text": " Bingham was born in Buxton and was raised there before his family moved to Chapel-en-le-Frith. He attended Long Lane Comprehensive School (now known as Chapel-en-le-Frith High School). He worked as a Director in his father's business before being elected to parliament, supplying engineering equipment to companies across the High Peak and North West England.", "score": "1.6575005" }, { "id": "14764180", "title": "George W. Bingham", "text": " Bingham was born on April 6, 1860 in Friendship, Wisconsin. In 1888, he married Nellie A. Wilbur. He died on March 10, 1947.", "score": "1.655891" }, { "id": "9071600", "title": "Kinsley S. Bingham", "text": " Bingham (whose first name is sometimes spelled Kingsley) was born to the farmer family of Calvin and Betsy (Scott) Bingham in Camillus, New York in Onondaga County. He attended the common schools and studied law in Syracuse. In 1833, while still in New York, Bingham married Margaret Warden, who had recently moved with her brother Robert Warden and family from Scotland.", "score": "1.6503999" }, { "id": "1816597", "title": "George Caleb Bingham", "text": " Born on a farm in Augusta County, Virginia, George Caleb Bingham was the second of seven children that Mary Amend (1789–1851) bore with her husband Henry Vest Bingham (1784–1823). Upon their marriage, Mary's father Matthias Amend gave the Binghams ownership of the family mill, 1180 acre land, and several slaves with the agreement that Matthias could live with the family for the rest of his life. Henry Bingham offered the land and mill as surety for a friend's debt and, when the friend died in 1818, all was lost. In 1819, the Bingham family (including grandfather Amend) moved to Franklin, Howard County, ", "score": "1.6492565" }, { "id": "14164072", "title": "Eugene C. Bingham", "text": " Bingham was born on 8 December 1878 in Cornwall, Vermont. He was awarded the Franklin Institute's Certificate of Merit in 1921 for his variable pressure viscometer. In 1922, as chairman of the Metric Committee of the American Chemical Society, he campaigned for the United States to adopt the metric system. Bingham died on 6 November 1945 in Easton, Pennsylvania.", "score": "1.6446056" }, { "id": "31059445", "title": "Walter Bingham (sportswriter)", "text": " Bingham was born on August 27, 1930, in Orange, New Jersey. He graduated from The Hill School in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, attended Yale University for one semester before moving to Los Angeles where he took courses at UCLA and worked as a copy boy at the Los Angeles Examiner. During the Korean War he enlisted with the United States Air Force.", "score": "1.6294458" }, { "id": "30395009", "title": "Joan Bingham", "text": " Bingham was born in Steubenville, Ohio to Edward and Helen Williamson Stevens. Her father was the chief executive of United Oil Company in Pittsburgh. Bingham graduated in art history from Connecticut College in 1957 and received a master's in European history from Georgetown University in the 1980s. Bingham married Robert Worth Bingham III in 1960. Robert died in a freak accident in 1966. She was briefly married to George Packard in the late 1970s. James Chace was a long time companion of Bingham. Bingham helped found the Grove Atlantic in 1993 and was instrumental in acquiring and publishing writers including Kiran Desai and Kay Ryan. Former colleague Juliet Nicolson described her as \"an indefatigable champion for her authors\". Her son Robert died from a drug overdose in 1999. She died in Manhattan from pneumonia.", "score": "1.6287793" }, { "id": "1816601", "title": "George Caleb Bingham", "text": " remain active throughout his life). He also considered becoming a lawyer. His elder brother Matthias Bingham would travel to Texas to fight for its independence in 1836, and remain in Mexico until his death in 1861, becoming a large landowner in the process but never marrying. By age nineteen, Bingham was painting portraits for $20.00 apiece, often completing the works in a single day. He found clients in Howard and Saline counties and nearby areas. Though his painting abilities were still developing, he impressed his patrons by strong draftsmanship as well as his native ability to capture his subject's likeness, and ", "score": "1.6285795" }, { "id": "1457658", "title": "Henry Bingham Towner", "text": " He was born and raised in Uckfield, Sussex. After giving up on becoming a Roman Catholic priest, he studied architecture.", "score": "1.6269755" }, { "id": "11136467", "title": "Jeremy Bingham", "text": " Jeremy Bingham (Born. 16 March 1936) is an Australian property development consultant, solicitor and New South Wales local government politician who was Lord Mayor of Sydney and an Alderman of the Sydney City Council from 1974 to 1991 and Hunter's Hill Municipal Council from 1965 to 1971.", "score": "1.6178607" }, { "id": "6420545", "title": "James M. Bingham", "text": " His former home, now known as the Cook-Rutledge House, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.", "score": "1.6121864" } ]
In what city was Gustavo Grondona born?
[ "Buenos Aires", "Buenos Ayres", "Autonomous City of Buenos Aires", "CABA", "Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires" ]
place of birth
Gustavo Grondona
4,300,406
56
[ { "id": "3997821", "title": "Gustavo Grondona", "text": " Gustavo Grondona (born 16 June 1968 in Buenos Aires) was an Argentine football midfielder and is currently the assistant manager of Colo Colo football club from Chile. Gustavo Grondona is the son of Héctor Grodona, brother of Julio Humberto Grondona. He made his playing debut in 1989 for the club founded by his father, Arsenal de Sarandí. Unlike his father Gustavo managed to step up to play at the highest level, appearing in the Argentine Primera División for Independiente, Huracán and Deportivo Español in the 1990s. In 1998, he joined Peruvian club Universitario de Deportes where he was part of three championship winning squads between 1998 and 2000. After a short spell with Sporting Cristal in 2001, he returned to Argentina to play out his career with Arsenal during their first ever season in the Argentine Primera.", "score": "1.9008386" }, { "id": "6419026", "title": "Gustavo Moncayo", "text": " Gustavo Guillermo Moncayo Rincón, popularly known as \"'El caminante por la paz\" (Spanish for \"the Walker for Peace\"), (born on November 29, 1952 in Santiago, Putumayo ) is a Colombian teacher who in 2007 walked 1,186 km from his hometown Sandoná, in the department of Nariño in the south of Colombia to the capital city Bogotá, seeking to promote an agreement for the release of his son Pablo Emilio who had been a prisoner of the guerrilla group FARC since 1997.", "score": "1.7407807" }, { "id": "31144459", "title": "Gustavo Mohme Llona", "text": " He was born on April 25, 1930, in the Morropón province, Chulucanas in the Piura region. His parents were Gustavo Mohme and Stella Llona. He was a descendant of the scientist Scipión Llona. After attending high school in Lima, at the San Andrés school (Anglo-Peruvian College), he studied at the National University of Engineering from which he graduated, in 1955, with the title of civil engineer.", "score": "1.7059124" }, { "id": "8784503", "title": "Mariano Grondona", "text": " Mariano Grondona (born 19 October 1932, in Buenos Aires) is an Argentine lawyer, sociologist, political scientist, essayist and commentator. He has been a journalist for several decades, appearing in print media and on television, and has written several books. He has also taught in several universities, both in Argentina and abroad.", "score": "1.6998559" }, { "id": "13174813", "title": "Gustavo Brambila", "text": " He was born in Jalisco, Mexico in 1953 and moved with his family to Rutherford in the Napa Valley in 1957.", "score": "1.6658251" }, { "id": null, "title": "Gustavo Grondona", "text": "Gustavo Grondona\n\nGustavo Grondona (born 16 June 1968 in Buenos Aires) was an Argentine football midfielder and is currently the assistant manager of Colo Colo football club from Chile.\n\nGustavo Grondona is the son of Héctor Grodona, brother of Julio Humberto Grondona. He made his playing debut in 1989 for the club founded by his father, Arsenal de Sarandí.\n\nUnlike his father Gustavo managed to step up to play at the highest level, appearing in the Argentine Primera División for Independiente, Huracán and Deportivo Español in the 1990s.\n\nIn 1998, he joined Peruvian club Universitario de Deportes where he was part of three championship winning squads between 1998 and 2000. \n\nAfter a short spell with Sporting Cristal in 2001, he returned to Argentina to play out his career with Arsenal during their first ever season in the Argentine Primera.\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Start-Class football in Argentina articles", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Sporting Cristal footballers", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Arsenal de Sarandí footballers", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Deportivo Español footballers", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "9173965", "title": "Gustavo Coleoni", "text": " Born in Córdoba, Coleoni was a Talleres youth graduate. During his youth, due to his low height, the club paid a growth hormone treatment similar as to Lionel Messi's, but it never fully worked. After only playing two friendlies in the first team, Coleoni resumed his career with Peru's San Agustín and Chile's Magallanes, aside from lower league sides in his native region.", "score": "1.6651206" }, { "id": "3997822", "title": "Gustavo Grondona", "text": "Primera División Peruana 1998 ; Primera División Peruana 1999 ; Primera División Peruana 2000 ", "score": "1.6646091" }, { "id": "7842192", "title": "Gustavo Arias Murueta", "text": " Gustavo Arias Murueta was born in Los Angeles, California and was of Spanish descent. His parents were Esteban Arias Renovato and Elisa Murueta Andrade. In 1934, he entered primary school in Torreón, Coahuila, but changed schools when the family moved to Mexico City in 1939. He entered the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México in 1946 to study architecture where he met a number of important painters such as Rufino Tamayo, David Alfaro Siqueiros and José Clemente Orozco. He married Lourdes Chávez Correa in 1949. The couple had four children: Lila (1953), Gustavo (1954), Hugo (1956) and Livia (1965). He was an artist, writer, sculptor and poet. He began creating isolated drawings and studies and experimental theater around 1956, with his first exhibitions in the early 1960s. He lived in Europe and the United States and traveled in Asia as well as some other countries, mostly to visit museums and study the works of great masters. However, from 1974 until his death in 2019, he was based in Mexico City. He died on April 15, 2019, aged 95. Among his teachers was Japanese artist Yukio Fukasawa, through a seminar on printmaking in Mexico City.", "score": "1.6618819" }, { "id": "626723", "title": "Enrique Grau", "text": " Grau was born in Panama City, Panama, just like many of the children of his time with Colombian parents, and raised in Cartagena, Colombia. He was the son of Enrique Grau Velez and Carmen Araujo Jimenez.", "score": "1.6500732" }, { "id": "30063357", "title": "Gustavo Ojeda", "text": " Born in Havana, Cuba, Ojeda emigrated with his family in 1967, first to Spain and then to the United States, eventually settling in Fairfax, Virginia. At 17, he moved to New York City to attend Parsons School of Design, where his teachers included the painters William Clutz and Kestutis Zapkus. Upon graduation, he was awarded a fellowship from the Cintas Foundation (see Oscar B. Cintas) allowing him to spend a year painting in Spain, an experience which, according to Ojeda, \"served to get school out of my system.\" It was in Spain that Ojeda first began experimenting with nightscapes, a mode which would come to predominate his work throughout his short life. After ", "score": "1.6394839" }, { "id": "32404894", "title": "Gustavo Santaolalla", "text": " Gustavo Alfredo Santaolalla was born in Ciudad Jardín Lomas del Palomar on 19 August 1951, and grew up during the Dirty War.", "score": "1.6130748" }, { "id": "10136444", "title": "Santiago Grondona", "text": " Santiago Grondona (born 25 July 1998) is an Argentine rugby union player who plays for the Exeter Chiefs. On 21 November 2019, he was named in the Jaguares squad for the 2020 Super Rugby season.", "score": "1.6102326" }, { "id": "9521928", "title": "Julián Cardona (photojournalist)", "text": " Julián Cardona was born in Zacatecas, Mexico on August 18, 1960. His family moved to the city of Juarez when he was a young child. Raised by his grandparents, and with only a ninth grade education, he taught himself to use a camera professionally by age twenty. He worked in the maquiladora industry until 1991, when he moved back to Zacatecas to teach photography.", "score": "1.6068475" }, { "id": "15675120", "title": "Luis Fernando Ochoa", "text": " Luis Fernando Ochoa was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States on August 16, 1968. He lived in Chicago and at age 17 arrived in Medellin. From an early age, he became used to spending whole hours stuck to the sound system in which his parents heard songs from Elvis Presley, Engelbert Humperdinck and cumbias that they received from Colombia. Although not from a family with a great musical vein, his great-grandmother did play the piano very well and it was through that instrument that he began to discover the first notes.", "score": "1.6007525" }, { "id": "28443640", "title": "Gustavo Montoya", "text": " Gustavo Montoya (July 9, 1905 – July 12, 2003) was a Mexican artist considered to be a late adherent to the Mexican School of Painting, most often associated with Mexican muralism. He was born in Mexico City, from a family associated with the Porfirio Díaz regime and who had to hide during part of the Mexican Revolution. He attended the Academy of San Carlos despite his father's objections. He later met and married artist Cordelia Urueta, with whom he lived in Paris, developing his artistic talents. He was not heavily involved in Mexico's artistic circles but was a founding member of the Liga de Escritores y Artistas Revolucionarios and the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana. His best-selling work was that of children in regional traditional Mexican clothing, but he also painted many street scenes in Mexico City as well as portraits and still lifes.", "score": "1.5989046" }, { "id": "29258171", "title": "Gustavo", "text": "Gustavo Angel (born 1968), Mexican singer of Los Temerarios ; Gustavo Assis-Brasil, Brazilian jazz guitarist ; Gustavo Becerra-Schmidt (born 1925), Chilean composer ; Gustavs Butelis (born 1978), Latvian rapper and producer known professionally as Gustavo ; Gustavo Gonzalez, also known as Big Duke, member of American hip-hop group Psycho Realm ; Gustavo Cerati (1959-2014), Argentine artist and songwriter ; Gustavo Cordera (born 1964), Argentine rock musician ; Gustavo Dudamel (born 1981), Venezuelan conductor ; Gustavo Lapis Ahumad, founding member of American goth rock band Bitter Grace ; Gustavo Ramírez Reyes, Mexican musician and composer ; Gustavo Santander, Colombian composer ; Gustavo Santaolalla (born 1952), Argentine musician, producer, and composer ", "score": "1.5887351" }, { "id": "25040209", "title": "Gustavo Esteva", "text": "Terán, Gustavo: Conversations with Mexican nomadic storyteller, Gustavo Esteva : learning from lives on the margins, Dissertation, University of Vermont, 2002. ; Aram Ziai: \"Gustavo Esteva (born 1936). Selbstbestimmte Gemeinwesen statt Entwicklung\" in: eins. Entwicklungspolitik. Information Nord Süd, No. 23/24, 2005, 48-50 ", "score": "1.5863075" }, { "id": "104042", "title": "Gustavo Santander", "text": " He was born in Santiago de Cali, Colombia and he raised in La Flora, a typical upper-middle-class neighborhood of Cali. His father was doctor, poet and guitarist Flavio Santander and his mother is Judith. His brother is composer and producer Kike Santander. Gustavo Santander began his career as a composer in 2000. He was awarded three times by the American Society of Composers (ASCAP), at the Nokia Theatre Times Square in New York. In 2002 he was awarded for the song \"Azul\" (in Spanish: Blue), performed by Cristian Castro, in 2004 for the song \"Entre el Delirio y la Locura\" (Between Delirium and Madness), sung by Jennifer Peña, and in 2007 he received an award Regional Mexican ", "score": "1.5858867" }, { "id": "6187442", "title": "Francisco Gabilondo Soler", "text": " Gabilondo was born in the city of Orizaba, Veracruz. Both his parents were children of Spanish immigrants to Mexico. During his childhood he read the stories of the Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Andersen, as well as the adventure stories of such writers as Jules Verne and Emilio Salgari. He also taught himself to play the pianola. In 1928, he entered the National Observatory of Mexico to study astronomy but, unfortunately, his studies were cut short by a lack of resources. Before dedicating himself to music full-time, he practiced boxing, bullfighting and swimming. He also worked for a time as a linotypist. When he was 25 years old, he began performing as a professional musician, interpreting humorous subjects of his inspiration. At first he played in public ", "score": "1.5823205" }, { "id": "28443641", "title": "Gustavo Montoya", "text": " He was born in Mexico City on July 9, 1905, to Adolfo Montoya and Concepción Carranco. His father was part of the Porfirio Díaz government, so when that government fell at the beginning of the Mexican Revolution, the family went into hiding from Mexico City into the state of Morelos. At this time, Gustavo was only seven years old, but he remembered hearing that the Zapatistas had killed two neighboring families. To protect the family, the father moved them frequently, often going to one house at night and Gustavo waking up in another. At one point, they were at the house of a ", "score": "1.577085" } ]
In what city was Ricardo Maliandi born?
[ "La Plata" ]
place of birth
Ricardo Maliandi
4,320,975
36
[ { "id": "32946339", "title": "Ricardo Maliandi", "text": " Ricardo Guillermo Maliandi (born in La Plata, 1930, died 12 February 2015) Argentine writer and philosopher, devoted to ethics. He was professor in many Argentine universities and researcher in CONICET. Doctor in Philosophy for Mainz University, Germany. He received Konex Prize in 1986 for his labor on ethics. As well he is chairman of Argentine Association of Ethical Researches, fellow of National Academy of Sciences and honorary member of Argentine Association of Bioethics. His researches started on axiology, especially the works of Nicolai Hartmann, from who he has translated many books. Afterward he made an approach to Discourse Ethics and became friend of one of his founders, Karl-Otto Apel. From many years he works in an original propose which he call \"ethics of convergence\".", "score": "1.8411748" }, { "id": "11725714", "title": "Ricardo Estanislao Zulueta", "text": " Zulueta was born in Havana, Cuba and grew up in Miami, Florida. Since 1985 he has lived/worked in New York City and Miami. Zulueta studied Visual Art, Museum Studies, and Arts Policy at graduate school at New York University where he was selected to be the distinguished Helbein Scholar. Dr. Zulueta earned a M.F.A. in Visual Arts and a Ph.D. in Cinema and Interactive Media Studies, both with Academic Merit Honors at the University of Miami where he was named a McKnight Doctoral Fellow.", "score": "1.6394675" }, { "id": "28389933", "title": "Federico Fong", "text": " Born in Northern California's Bay Area in 1967 to a Panamanian father of Chinese descent and an American mother, Fong relocated at a young age with his family to Mexico City where he has lived for the majority of his life. He was a resident of Brooklyn, New York for a few years and then relocated to Mexico City to continue working mainly with band La Barranca.", "score": "1.5692995" }, { "id": "32946345", "title": "Ricardo Maliandi", "text": " Cristina Ambrosini (editor) ''Ética. Convergencias y divergencias''. Homenaje a Ricardo Maliandi, Remedios de Escalada, Ediciones de la UNLa, 2009, 443 pp., ISBN: 978-987-1326-38-9. Michelini, Dorando; José San Martín y Jutta Wester (editores) Ética, discurso, conflictividad. Homenaje a Ricardo Maliandi, Universidad Nacional de Río Cuarto, Argentina, 1995, ISBN: 978-950-665-019-3.", "score": "1.5692738" }, { "id": "7893037", "title": "Ricardo Migliorisi", "text": " Ricardo Migliorisi, (January 6, 1948 – June 14, 2019) born in Asunción, Paraguay, on January 6, 1948 to Isolina Salsa Ferraris and Salvador Migliorisi Tumino, of Italian origin. Migliorisi was a Paraguayan painter, costume designer, scenery designer and architect. Migliorisi won national and international awards. Migliorisi showed his work in many countries including The United States of America and Europe.", "score": "1.5619702" }, { "id": null, "title": "Ricardo Maliandi", "text": "Ricardo Maliandi\n\nRicardo Guillermo Maliandi (born in La Plata, 1930, died 12 February 2015) Argentine writer and philosopher, devoted to ethics.\n\nHe was professor in many Argentine universities and researcher in CONICET. Doctor in Philosophy for Mainz University, Germany. He received Konex Prize in 1986 for his labor on ethics.\n\nAs well he is chairman of Argentine Association of Ethical Researches, fellow of National Academy of Sciences and honorary member of Argentine Association of Bioethics.\n\nHis researches started on axiology, especially the works of Nicolai Hartmann, from who he has translated many books. Afterward he made an approach to Discourse Ethics and became friend of one of his founders, Karl-Otto Apel. From many years he works in an original propose which he call \"ethics of convergence\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "La Revolución de Emiliano Zapata", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Wikipedia requested images of people of Argentina ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "6552536", "title": "Ricardo Lemvo", "text": "Ricardo Lemvo Ricardo Lemvo (born September 3, 1957) is a singer of Angolan descent who lives in Los Angeles, California. His music is a blend of African soukous, kizomba, samba and Cuban salsa. Lemvo grew up in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, where he first encountered and enjoyed Cuban music. He moved to the United States at age 15 to continue his education. He graduated from Lawndale High School and later from California State University, Los Angeles with a bachelor's degree in Political Science. His family is from M'banza-Kongo in northern Angola. His grandfather, João Mantantu Dundulu N'lemvo, was", "score": "1.5314698" }, { "id": "12988491", "title": "Alfredo Jaar", "text": "Jaar received Chile's National Prize for Plastic Arts in 2013. Alfredo's son Nicolas Jaar is a musician and composer. Alfredo Jaar Alfredo Jaar (born 1956) is a Chilean-born artist, architect, and filmmaker who lives in New York City. He was born in 1956 in Santiago de Chile. From age 5 to 16, he lived in Martinique before moving back to Chile. He is mostly known as an installation artist, often incorporating photography and covering socio-political issues and war - the best known perhaps being the 6-year-long \"The Rwanda Project\" about the 1994 Rwandan genocide. He has also made numerous public", "score": "1.5223545" }, { "id": "29776252", "title": "Ricardo de Jaxa Malachowski", "text": " Ricardo de Jaxa Malchowski was born on May 14, 1887 in Odessa at the very southwest of the Russian Empire (current day Ukraine). He is the son of Agusto de Jaxa Malachowski and Malwina Kulisicz. His Father was Agusto (Pole) and his mother was Malwina (Slovakian). At age 13, Ricardo traveled to Saint Petersburg and applied to the Navy Academy of Odessa. However, he was not admitted into the program because of his poor vision. He then continued his education in a secondary school in Odessa, where he graduated in 1905. He traveled to Paris shortly after to attend the École des Beaux-Arts and pursued architecture. The architect Malachowski ", "score": "1.5613394" }, { "id": "26489429", "title": "Ricardo Rodríguez Marengo", "text": " Ricardo was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina and moved at the age of 9 to Santiago, Chile after his father was transladed. He would join the inferior of Universidad Catolica at the age of 12, after his soccer trainer of school recommended him so.", "score": "1.5478258" }, { "id": "15898218", "title": "Ricardo Chávez", "text": " Ricardo Chávez was born in Mexico City on November 24, 1965, to a middle-class family. He is the youngest of three brothers. His father is an engineer and his mother is a housewife, and were both in the entertainment business before getting married. His father sang Mexican music and opened concerts for Pedro Infante and his mother worked as a model. At the age of 16 when he was studying bachelor’s to become a Classical Dance Performer at the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes of México, Ricardo started working in theater.", "score": "1.5470481" }, { "id": "14164099", "title": "Ricardo Araujo (musician)", "text": " Ricardo Araujo was born in 1978 in Bogota (Colombia). Since his very youth, he evolved in the abstract universe of painting and music. He began his musical studies in 1989 with pianist Lile Tiempo, and in 1990, as Marie-Louise Toupouzien's student, he was awarded by Belgium Superior Jury in the excellence category. At 12, he gave his first piano recital in Brussels, playing Bach and Mozart. Seven months later, he made his debut with Brussels' Royal Conservatoire chamber orchestra, when Martha Argerich noticed him. In 1991, back in Colombia, he simultaneously went on with his pianist, music director and composer training. He quickly ", "score": "1.5261741" }, { "id": "32589780", "title": "Ricardo Darín", "text": " Darín was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on January 26, 1957, to actor Ricardo Darín Sr. and actress Renée Roxana. His family is of Italian and Lebanese origin, and has held strong ties to the Argentine showbusiness community. His parents divorced in 1969 when he was 12 years old, and his father died of cancer on January 5, 1989.", "score": "1.5235023" }, { "id": "1737480", "title": "Mike Amigorena", "text": " He was born in Maipú, Mendoza Province to a Basque Argentine father and an Italian Argentine mother. Amigorena was especially restless as an adolescent and was expelled from a number of secondary schools. He left Maipú for Buenos Aires in search of fame in 1992, and initially struggled in a variety of menial jobs, living hand-to-mouth in a tenement for a number of years.", "score": "1.5216696" }, { "id": "9031253", "title": "Álvaro Saieh", "text": " Álvaro Saieh was born on 14 September 1949, in Villanueva, La Guajira, Colombia. Of Palestinian and Lebanese ancestry, his parents are Chilean José Saieh and Colombian Elena Bendeck. At the age of three his family moved to Talca, Chile, where they started Casa Saieh, a family business that offered from electrical appliances to clothing. In this city, he started his education, finishing high school at Liceo Abate Molina. At 17 years old he moved to Santiago to pursue a degree in commercial engineering at Universidad de Chile, from which he graduated in 1972. In 1973 he started a postgraduate degree in Economics at the same university. Later, he attended The University of Chicago, where he pursued a master's degree in arts (1976) and a PhD in economics. His first years as a professional he worked in the public sector, being an economic adviser for the Ministerio de Vivienda y Urbanismo and the Ministerio de Obras Públicas. He was also an economic adviser for the Banco Central de Chile and delegate of the Superintendencia de Bancos at Banco Continental.", "score": "1.520187" }, { "id": "29184828", "title": "Ricardo Ramina", "text": " Ricardo Ramina was born in Curitiba, Brazil, where he studied medicine at the Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Paraná. After graduating he moved to Hannover, Germany, in order to do a Neurosurgery residency under Prof. Majid Samii at the KRH Klinikum Nordstadt. After concluding his residency, Ricardo Ramina, continued to work at the KRH Klinikum Nordstadt, where he eventually became senior attending physician. In 1986 Ramina moved back to Curitiba, Brazil where he founded the Institute of Neurology of Curitiba. Ramina has written numerous scientific publication and books.", "score": "1.5147443" }, { "id": "5001004", "title": "Marcos Losekann", "text": " Marcos Losekann was born in Independência, a small town in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. He is the only child of Elaine Ciechowics Losekann and Ary Losekann, a truck driver. Losekann was a law student when, as he said, “The journalism chose him”. One night, he was invited by friends to go to a pizzeria, \"I had already eaten dinner, there was no reason to be there, and I had no money to pay for the pizza. But I went. And right at the entrance, one person became ill, had a seizure and collapsed. This person was called Flavio Damiani. He was the chief reporter of local TV. \" Damiani TV was an affiliate of TV Globo, RBS Cruz Alta. Losekann began making visits to his new friend and became accustomed to the ", "score": "1.5062634" }, { "id": "1464552", "title": "Ricardo Graziano", "text": " Born in Mogi das Cruzes, Brazil, he showed an early interest in dance, following his sister to her jazz classes from the age of eight. His mother then sent him to the Marcela Campos Escola de Bailados until he was 16. He completed his training at the Academy of Dance in Mannheim, Germany, where he spent two years.", "score": "1.5020576" }, { "id": "6881045", "title": "January 1974", "text": " Pico Rivera, California. ; Born: ; Mehdi Ben Slimane, Tunisian footballer; in Le Kram, Tunisia ; Mario Benetton, Italian Olympic track cyclist; in Padua, Italy ; Cadu (born Ricardo Frederico Rodrigues Antunes), Brazilian footballer; in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil ; Constantinos Carydis, Greek conductor; in Athens, Greece ; Abha Dawesar, Indian novelist; in New Delhi, Delhi, India ; Ivone De Franceschi, Italian footballer; in Padua, Italy ; Derek Kilmer, member of the United States House of Representatives from Washington; in Port Angeles, Washington ; Reem Maged, Egyptian journalist ; Samukeliso Moyo, Zimbabwean Olympic long-distance runner; in Gwanda, Matabeleland South Province, ", "score": "1.4979742" }, { "id": "28528394", "title": "Monchi Balestra", "text": " Ramón Marcelo Balestra was born on October 8, 1967, in Casilda, a city in the province of Santa Fe, Argentina. He's worked for several radio stations since he was thirteen. When he was eighteen he got his own radio station called FM TOP. At the age of 20 he went to California, United States, where he worked for many Latin radio stations. Then he came back to Santa Fe Province where he became a local celebrity. At this stage of his career he received his first nominations for Broadcasting and Martín Fierro Awards.", "score": "1.4912221" }, { "id": "29173775", "title": "Ricardo Moniz", "text": " Moniz was born in the Netherlands to a Surinamese father, and an Indonesian mother of Chinese descent.", "score": "1.4911988" }, { "id": "6660241", "title": "Ricardo Zurita", "text": " Zurita was born in Quito, Ecuador and moved to New York City at the age of 5. Growing up in Queens, Zurita attended the prestigious Stuyvesant High School. He attended College of Architecture, Art, and Planning at Cornell University afterwards, graduating with a Bachelor of Architecture in 1984. After graduation he practiced in New York, including tenures with Rafael Viñoly Architects and Beyer Blinder Belle, and in Madrid, Spain as a designer for the National Training Center for the 1992 Olympics. In 2002, he founded his eponymous firm RZAPS, located in New York.", "score": "1.4889858" }, { "id": "12966774", "title": "Ricardo Garcia (musician)", "text": " in Malawi. Garcia returned to Europe in 1999 and settled in Barcelona. Julie Gunn became his manager in 2001. He performs worldwide as well as in Spain, France and in Scotland, where he has played in the Edinburgh Festival for nineteen years running. He has performed in many other countries in Europe, Asia, Africa and North America. He regularly tours East Africa and has worked there supported by the Spanish Embassy on various tours. He toured to Montreal and Vancouver in 2005-8, and performed in many locations in the USA. From May 8–19, 2006, Garcia was Artist-in-Residence with his group Flamenco Flow at ", "score": "1.4889553" } ]
In what city was Annika Billstam born?
[ "Uppsala", "Upsala" ]
place of birth
Annika Billstam
3,075,565
90
[ { "id": "25681475", "title": "Annika Billstam", "text": " Annika Billstam (born 8 March 1976) is a Swedish orienteering competitor living in Uppsala. Formerly competing for OK Linné in Uppsala, Annika moved to Stockholm and switched to IFK Lidingö in the winter of 2007 before switching back to OK Linné in January 2012. She earned a silver medal in the relay at the 2007 World Orienteering Championships in Kyiv. She followed that with bronze medals in the long distance and the relay at the 2008 World Orienteering Championships in the Czech Republic. In 2012 Billstam won the Swedish mountain marathon Vértex Fjällmaraton.", "score": "2.0978994" }, { "id": "30901207", "title": "Annika Billström", "text": " Annika Billström (born 7 April 1956 in Härnösand, Västernorrland County) is a Swedish social democratic politician. She was the first female mayor of Stockholm, serving between 2004 and 2006.", "score": "1.9513416" }, { "id": "14783976", "title": "Annica Edstam", "text": " Annica Edstam (born 22 March 1969) in Stockholm, is a Swedish actress and singer.", "score": "1.7861652" }, { "id": "30901208", "title": "Annika Billström", "text": " Billström's background was as the chief financial officer of Handels, the Swedish Commercial Employees' Union between 1987 and 1994. She was elected to the Stockholm City Council serving as road commissioner in 1994–98 and commissioner in opposition from 1998 to 2002.", "score": "1.6733903" }, { "id": "25547624", "title": "Annicka Engblom", "text": " Annicka Engblom (born 1977 in Västerås, Sweden), is a Swedish politician of the Moderate Party who has been a member of the Riksdag since 2006. In addition to her committee assignments, Engblom has been a member of the Swedish delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) since 2017, where she has served on the Committee on Rules of Procedure, Immunities and Institutional Affairs (since 2020); the Committee on Culture, Science, Education and Media (since 2019); the Sub-Committee on Media and Information Society (since 2019); Committee on Equality and Non-Discrimination (2017-2019).", "score": "1.6596584" }, { "id": null, "title": "Annika Billstam", "text": "Annika Billstam\n\nAnnika Billstam (born 8 March 1976) is a Swedish orienteering competitor living in Uppsala. Formerly competing for OK Linné in Uppsala, Annika moved to Stockholm and switched to IFK Lidingö in the winter of 2007 before switching back to OK Linné in January 2012. She earned a silver medal in the relay at the 2007 World Orienteering Championships in Kyiv. She followed that with bronze medals in the long distance and the relay at the 2008 World Orienteering Championships in the Czech Republic.\n\nIn 2012 Billstam won the Swedish mountain marathon Vértex Fjällmaraton.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Thierry Gueorgiou", "text": "Thierry Gueorgiou\n\nThierry Gueorgiou (; born 30 March 1979) is a French orienteer who has won more than 20 gold medals in international competitions, including the World Orienteering Championships (WOC) middle distance event eight times: 2003–2005, 2007–2009, 2011 and 2017.\nIn November 2016 it was announced he will become the Swedish national team head coach following the 2017 World Championships.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Sofie Johansson", "text": "Sofie Johansson\n\nSofie Johansson (born 1 July 1985) is a Swedish orienteering competitor. She won a bronze medal in the \"relay\" event at the 2008 World Orienteering Championships in Olomouc, together with Annika Billstam and Helena Jansson. She finished 6th in the \"long distance\" at the same championship.<ref name=sof/>\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:World Orienteering Championships medalists", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of orienteers", "text": "List of orienteers\n\nThis is a list of all orienteering competitors found in Wikipedia and notable within the orienteering sport.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "29354175", "title": "Ann-Margret", "text": " Ann-Margret Olsson was born in Stockholm, Sweden, the daughter of Anna Regina (née Aronsson) and Carl Gustav Olsson, a native of Örnsköldsvik. The family moved back to Valsjöbyn, Jämtland. She later described Valsjöbyn as a small town of \"lumberjacks and farmers high up near the Arctic Circle\". Ann-Margret and her mother joined her father in the United States in November 1946, and her father took her to Radio City Music Hall on the day they arrived. They settled in Wilmette, Illinois, outside of Chicago. She became a naturalized American citizen in 1949. Ann-Margret took her first dance lessons at the Marjorie Young School of Dance, showing natural ability from the start, easily mimicking ", "score": "1.61462" }, { "id": "27067358", "title": "Ann-Cathrine Wiklander", "text": " Ann-Cathrine Wiklander, born 4 July 1958 in Sollefteå, Sweden, is a Swedish female singer, scoring dansband successes during the 1990s. She has scored Svensktoppen hit songs like Kärleken (1993), Vänd inte ryggen åt en vän (1994), Alla stunder (1995), Julklockor över vår jord (1995–1996), Liksom svalorna kommer med solen (1996), Min tanke är hos mig (1998) and Gamla vänner (2000). On 12 July 1994, she appeared as a guest at Allsång på Skansen. Ann-Cathrine Wiklander participated with the song Som en dröm, at \"Schlager-SM\" i TV3 1994, together with Keith Almgrens orkester at Sandgrund in Karlstad. In late 2012, she began touring with Erik Lihm. She also works as a diabetics nurse at Österåsens hälsohem in Sollefteå.", "score": "1.6057988" }, { "id": "29278200", "title": "Ann Henning Jocelyn", "text": " Ann Margareta Maria Henning was born in Gothenburg in 1948. She was raised in Dalsland, on the Norwegian border, and Molndal, outside Gothenburg. While in school she discovered that her love of literature got her bullied, but her ability to write plays which entertained her classmates ensured that even her worst bully was more interested in her next work. She went on to attend Gothenburg University in 1968, where she got a degree in classical architecture and drama. On graduation she got a job there as a junior lecturer in art history. But Jocelyn decided she didn't want to settle down and went to London to study theatre at Studio 68. When she left school there Jocelyn got a position in the Open Space Theatre in London, working with Charles Marowitz. When getting a permit to work in ", "score": "1.6020949" }, { "id": "12853147", "title": "Annika Hallin", "text": " Annika Susanne Hallin (born February 16, 1968) is a Swedish actress. She was born in Hägersten, Stockholm, and studied at the Swedish National Academy of Mime and Acting 1995 &ndash; 1999. In 2001 Hallin was one of those who started Teater Nova. She was married to Lars Norén (2007-2013), when they worked together at Riksteatern and Judiska teatern with the play Stilla vatten, and they have a daughter together, Hallin has two daughters from an earlier relationship.", "score": "1.5979139" }, { "id": "30901209", "title": "Annika Billström", "text": " Billström was appointed mayor of Stockholm in 2002 by the City Council after winning the municipal election and forming a majority with the Left party and the Green party. Two of her decisions as mayor in particular were controversial, the first being the new entry toll that was introduced for vehicles entering the centre of Stockholm. The toll was decided on a state-level to ensure support by the Green Party for the newly formed Social democratic cabinet and Billström was forced to honor this agreement even though she had promised not to in the run up to the 2002 election. In 2006 a referendum was held to let the people of Stockholm determine whether they wanted the entry tolls permanented or not, with more than 51% voting yes. The entry tolls were thus enforced by the conservative majority ruling 2006–10. Billström's other decision was to turn a central building in Stockholm (Skatteskrapan på Södermalm) into student housing, which was criticised for being expensive for taxpayers. After losing the election in 2006, Billström stepped down and was replaced by Carin Jämtin.", "score": "1.5862036" }, { "id": "15867377", "title": "Eva Moltesen", "text": " Born in Joroinen, Finland, Eva Elisabeth Hällström was the daughter of the pharmacist Frans Algoth Hällström (1835–1878) and Olga Elisabeth Hasintytär Nyman (1843–1912). While still a small child, after losing both her father and her siblings, she moved with her mother to Helsinki where she attended the Swedish-language Latin School. After matriculating, she studied zoology at Helsinki University, graduating with a master's degree in 1894. In 1896, she received a scholarship which allowed her to continue her education in Denmark at Askov Højskole, a folk high school. It was there she met her husband to be, the church historian Laust Jevsen Moltesen (1865–1950). They married in 1898 and their first child was born the following year.", "score": "1.5858691" }, { "id": "8908206", "title": "Annika Saarikko", "text": " Saarikko was born in Oripää, Finland. She has a bachelor's degree in educational science and a master's degree in philosophy (majoring in media studies) from the University of Turku.", "score": "1.5842102" }, { "id": "4156843", "title": "Annika Idström", "text": " Ilse Annika Idström was born to a Swedish-speaking family in Helsinki, and went to school at the private, Swedish language Laguska Skolan, graduating in 1968. Afterwards, she studied scriptwriting at the University of Art and Design Helsinki (now part of the Aalto University School of Arts, Design and Architecture), graduating in 1974.", "score": "1.5837786" }, { "id": "13754210", "title": "Eva Billow", "text": " Born on 2 May 1902 in Övre Ullered, Värmland, in west central Sweden, Eva Hildegard Maria Forss was the youngest child of the factory owner and agronomist, Johan Albin Forss and Gerda Ingeborg Tereseia née Kjellmark. After completing her school education, she attended the Technical School in Stockholm where she trained as a drawing instructor and advertising artist. She remained at the school teaching calligraphy from 1925 to 1968. In parallel, in 1925 she became an illustrator for Svenska Journalen, creating the children's series Kajsa och Snurran with rhyming text, published in book form in 1929. She became particularly productive and creative ", "score": "1.5830377" }, { "id": "15775744", "title": "Annica Risberg", "text": " Annica Risberg (born 27 March 1941) is a Swedish actress and singer. Annica Risberg was born Annika Margareta Risberg in Engelbrekt Parish in Stockholm. Her parents were the accordionist Thore Risberg and Ella Margareta, née Lennbom. When she was 16, she came second in an Aftontidningen talent show, and in 1963 she was in the production of Stop the World – I Want to Get Off at the Scala in Stockholm. In the 1970s she was one of the busiest backup singers in Sweden, both live and in recordings. She often worked in the group Dolls with Kerstin Dahl and Kerstin Bagge, and also made a number of her own recordings. In 1975 ", "score": "1.5738437" }, { "id": "12701749", "title": "Maria Lundqvist", "text": " Annika Maria Lundqvist (born 14 October 1963) is a Swedish actress and comedian. Born in Gothenburg, Lundqvist studied acting at the Gothenburg Theatre Academy and has since been acting at various Swedish theatres, including the Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm. Her breakthrough as a comedian came when she portrayed a comic character named Sally in a TV-show with the same name in 1998. She has also starred in musicals in Sweden. For her film acting, she has received two Guldbagge awards. She had a leading role in the 2015 comedy film En underbar jävla jul. She has four children, one of them is actor Anton Lundqvist.", "score": "1.5640125" }, { "id": "10458483", "title": "Ann-Sofie Hermansson", "text": " Born on the island of Tjörn in 1964, Hermansson began working at Volvo Cars at the age of 19, working in parts transport. There, she joined the metalworkers’ union and the Social Democrats’ youth wing. She would go on to serve as official at Swedish Trade Union Confederation from 1996 to 2002 before serving as political secretary to the Gothenburg Municipality executive board from 2003 to 2008 and as ombudsman at the European Parliament to the Social Democrats political group from 2012 to 2016.", "score": "1.5639158" }, { "id": "4695015", "title": "Annika Ström", "text": " Ström studied at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts Copenhagen between 1991 and 1997. During her second year, 1993, she moved to Berlin and commuted to school. She remained in Berlin until she moved to the UK in 2005.", "score": "1.5552814" }, { "id": "11416070", "title": "Annika Thörnquist", "text": " Thörnquist grew up in Karlstad. Thörnquist moved to Stockholm.", "score": "1.5542219" }, { "id": "760096", "title": "Annita á Fríðriksmørk", "text": " Annita á Fríðriksmørk grew up in Strendur on the island Eysturoy. She became a school teacher from Føroya Læraraskúli in 1992. She has worked as a teacher since 1992 in the Faroe Islands and in Denmark.", "score": "1.5452604" } ]
In what city was Eric Defoort born?
[ "Ypres", "leper" ]
place of birth
Eric Defoort
467,655
44
[ { "id": "30838521", "title": "Eric Defoort", "text": " Eric Defoort (27 June 1943 in Ypres – 16 or 17 December 2016). was a Flemish Belgian politician and president of the European Free Alliance. Between 2007 and 2009, Defoort was the president of the Flemish Popular Movement (Vlaamse Volksbeweging - VVB), a non-party linked movement advocating Flemish autonomy. In 1982 he became the chief librarian and a professor of history at the Catholic University of Brussels. At the EFA-General Assembly in Venice, March 2010, he was elected the new President of the European Free Alliance. As historian he studied in depth the history of nationalism and published on topics like identity. Defoort was a member of the Nieuw-Vlaamse Alliantie (N-VA), a party that became a full member of EFA in 2010. They supported his candidacy. As president, he saw to the organisation and strategy of the European Free Alliance.", "score": "1.7250309" }, { "id": "15836482", "title": "Kris Defoort", "text": " Kris Defoort is a Belgian avant-garde jazz pianist and composer. He was born on 30 November 1959 in Bruges. He also teaches at the Brussels conservatory. His brother is Bart Defoort (saxophonist and composer). He entered in 1978 the Antwerp conservatory to study early music and recorder. He graduated 4 years later and he then decided to study contemporary music and jazz at the Liège conservatory. Frederic Rzewski, Henri Pousseur and Garrett List were among his teachers. In 1986 Defoort released his first recording with his quintet Diva Smiles. The next year, he went to New York to study at New York Long Island University, Brooklyn. He recorded there with Vincent Herring and Jack DeJohnette. On his return in 1991, he founded his own ensemble named K.D.'s Pretty Big Basement Party. The following year, he recorded the first CD for ", "score": "1.6639689" }, { "id": "30899403", "title": "Eric de Kuyper", "text": " Eric de Kuyper was born and spent his early childhood in Brussels and then, as he put it, his teenage years of choices swayed by \"faith, sexuality, and the future\" in Antwerp. According to him, his family mostly spoke Dutch while they \"thought in French and felt the more subtle emotions\" in that language. After graduating from Notre Dame Jesuit High School, he returned to the city of his birth to study in the Department of Audiovisual and Dramatic Arts and Techniques (Rits), Erasmus University College Brussels, and took courses in philosophy and mass communication at the Free University of Brussels. While in college, he began to work as a producer at the Flemish Radio and Television Network. ", "score": "1.6116803" }, { "id": "4276082", "title": "Eric Tinkler", "text": " Tinkler was born in Roodepoort.", "score": "1.5499985" }, { "id": "2019158", "title": "Eric Goode", "text": " Born in Rhode Island in 1957 and raised in New York City until the age of 8, Eric V. Goode relocated with his family to California. He is the second of five children born to Marilyn Goode, a naturalist and conservationist, and Fredrick Goode, a painter and teacher. He has lived in New York City since 1977. Eric began his career as an artist, educated at the Academy of Art University in San Francisco, and Parsons School of Design. Much of his early work was displayed in group shows with other upcoming artists of the day, the earliest in 1981 which was curated by Keith Haring. He continued to make and show his art throughout the 1980s and into the early 1990s. In 1983, Goode formed the nightclub Area. ", "score": "1.5422338" }, { "id": null, "title": "Defoort", "text": "Defoort\n\nDefoort is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "François Alfonsi", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Fernand Brouez", "text": "Fernand Brouez\n\nFernand Brouez (1861, in Wasmes – 1900, in Brussels) was the founder and publisher of \"La Société Nouvelle\" (The New Society). He initially edited the magazine with Belgian-born Arthur James, whom he met at the Université Libre de Bruxelles', and after 1889 with various other individuals. \n\nThe second son of Jules Brouez and Victorine Sapin, Fernand and his older brother Paul both enrolled at the Université Libre de Bruxelles, where Fernand initially failed at his studies. Switching between philosophy, law and medicine, he had still not placed his candidacy for a doctorate by the age of 29. Yet he managed to surround himself with the elite of Belgian, international intellectuals and artists of the time. He believed in socialism and social conscience. On 20 November 1884, the first edition of \"La Société Nouvelle\" was published, financed by his father Jules Brouez. It would become the most important magazine on social issues, arts, sciences and literature of the epoch. Fernand Brouez's contribution to French speaking Europe remains unparalleled. He fell victim to syphilis, either by sexual contact, his future wife being a possible silent carrier given her past, or according to several credible sources, from a cut at a course in anatomy when studying medicine. In 1896 he married Cornelia Hubertina Doff (1858-1942), the later Neel Doff. The character of André in her second book, \"Keetje\", is based upon Fernand Brouez. Fernand Brouez was buried in the Brouez family vault at the Ixelles Cemetery on 3 July 1900. \n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Seppe Gebruers", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Erik Vermeulen", "text": "Erik Vermeulen\n\nErik Vermeulen (born 15 October 1959 in Ypres, Belgium) is a Belgian jazz pianist. He entered the Belgian jazz scene when he was 22 with his trio. At the time, it featured Heyn Van de Geyn on bass and Dré Pallemaerts on drums. Soon after that, he started performing with different jazz bands and musicians including the Frank Vaganée Quartet, Erwin Vann Quartet and Peter Hertmans.\n\nHe performed with international stars like Slide Hampton, Clark Terry, Joe Lovano, Steve Grossman, David Schnitter, Art Farmer, Bob Mover, Teddy Edwards, Toots Thielemans, Philip Catherine, Michael Moore and Barre Phillips.\n\nHe was often a soloist with the BRT jazz orchestra. In 1998, he represented Belgium in the European Radio Union Big Band in Stockholm.\n\nDuring his career, the musicians from his trio have changed: Jean-Louis Rassinfosse and Félix Simtaine, then Philippe Aerts and Dré Pallemaerts, Otti Van Der Werf and Eric Thielemans.\n\nSince 1995, Erik has toured and recorded with the following bands: Bart Defoort Quartet, Ben Sluijs Quartet, Manu Hermia Quartet and Marta Mus.\n\nSince 1995, he has been a member of the Ben Sluijs Quartet, with whom he recorded four CDs. The last one, \"Flying Circles\", is part of the CD box \"The Finest in Belgian Jazz\" (released on De Werf).\n\nIn 1997, he recorded a CD with his band Icarus Consort (consisting of Erwin Vann, Pierre Bernard, Nicolas Thys and Stéphane Galland). The project emphasis is on improvisation.\n\nPerforming solo or in duo with Pierre Bernard, Daniel Stokart or Eric Thielemans, led to the founding of the \"Groundwork\" collective (2000).\n\nIn 2001, he recorded his CD \"Songs of Minutes\" with Salvatore La Rocca and Jan De Haas. In the same year, he recorded the album \"Stones\" with Ben Sluijs and made recordings with the project \"Rrauw\" of Eric Thielemans, with Barre Philips and Jean-Yves Evrard.\n\nIn 2002, he got to know Eric Surmenian (double bass) and Marek Patrman (drums). With this trio, he recorded \"Inner City\" from the CD box \"The Finest in Belgian Jazz\".\n\nThese days, Erik Vermeulen is teaching jazz piano at the Antwerp and Ghent conservatories.\n\nIn November 2003, he received the Belgian Golden Django for musician of the year.\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "15836484", "title": "Kris Defoort", "text": " In 1998, Defoort became a composer-in-residence at LOD, a production company specialising in contemporary music theatre in Ghent. His first work for them was the dance piece Passages with Fatou Traoré, premiered in 2001. His brother the famous Wim \"Dj Willie\", \"the living pop encyclopedia\" Defoort and Koen Defoort. Dj Willie became famous with his first remix of Willie Nelson. His first opera, created in collaboration with director Guy Cassiers was The Woman Who Walked into Doors, after the novel of the same name by Roddy Doyle. It premiered in November 2001 at deSingel in Ghent, before a very successful tour of Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, and the Festival d'Automne in Paris, the Musica festival in Strasbourg and the Ruhrtriennale in Germany. In October 2003, there were three performances in Dublin ", "score": "1.5376755" }, { "id": "11797016", "title": "Éric Zemmour", "text": " Éric Zemmour was born on 31 August 1958 in Montreuil, at that time in the Seine department, now part of Seine-Saint-Denis. His parents were Berber Jews from Algeria with French citizenship who came to metropolitan France during the Algerian War. He grew up first in Drancy and later in the Paris Château Rouge quarter. The son of Roger Zemmour (a paramedic) and his wife Lucette, a housewife, he has said he admires his mother and grandmother, as his father was often absent; he was raised by women \"who taught [him] to be a man\".", "score": "1.531404" }, { "id": "30527457", "title": "Eric Kierans", "text": " Born in Montreal, Kierans grew up in the working-class Saint-Henri neighbourhood. His father worked at Canadian Car and Foundry, and his mother came to Canada as a domestic. From 1927 to 1935, he attended Loyola College.", "score": "1.5218215" }, { "id": "28168433", "title": "Ericus Verkade", "text": " Ericus Gerhardus Verkade was born on 20 November 1835 in Vlaardingen in the Netherlands. He was named after his father, the notary Ericus Gerhardus Verkade Sr (1801–1835), who died one month before he was born. Verkade's mother, Geertruida van Gelder, was from Wormerveer and moved her family back to her birthplace shortly after Ericus Jr's birth. Soon after school, Verkade started a vegetable oil factory, which burned out in 1875. The next eight years he and his brother-in-law traded in grains. On 2 May 1886, he started a steam-powered bakery, which company he first named \"De Ruyter\" for the first mill in Zaandam ", "score": "1.5211728" }, { "id": "32800552", "title": "Eric Shanower", "text": " Eric Shanower was born on October 23, 1963. Upon his graduation from Novato High School in 1981, he attended The Kubert School in Dover, New Jersey, graduating in 1984.", "score": "1.5169029" }, { "id": "30460918", "title": "Eric Deis", "text": " Born in Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia, Eric Deis received a BFA from Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design in 1999, and an MFA from the University of California, San Diego in 2004. Deis is currently lives and works in Vancouver, B.C..", "score": "1.5104051" }, { "id": "30626035", "title": "Éric Elmosnino", "text": " Elmosnino was born in the Paris suburbs to a Sephardic Jewish (Moroccan-Jewish) father who was an industrial designer at Thomson CSF, and to an Alsatian mother who left EDF to raise her children.", "score": "1.5080602" }, { "id": "10338905", "title": "Marien Defalvard", "text": " The son of an economist, Marien Defalvard was born on 20 February 1992 in the 14th arrondissement of Paris. He spent his childhood in Orléans, and attended school at Saint-Charles College (2001-2005), then at Jean-Zay High School (2005-2008). He graduated at the age of 16 in 2008, before starting his first term at Pothier5 and Louis-le-Grand high schools.", "score": "1.5065228" }, { "id": "7474394", "title": "Aart Staartjes", "text": " Aart Staartjes was born in Nieuwendam, a neighbourhood of Amsterdam-Noord. He had an older brother, and a younger sister. They lived in a house on the Nieuwendammerdijk. His father, his grandfather, and an uncle of his worked in a carpentry shop located behind the house. Staartjes started his primary education at the age of eight. After that, he went to the mulo in Amsterdam, followed by the Kweekschool, a teachers' college. He dropped out of the Kweekschool in 1958, and went to the theatre school instead. He graduated in 1961.", "score": "1.505018" }, { "id": "26922007", "title": "Eric Benét", "text": " Benét was born on October 15, 1966 in Mobile, Alabama and raised in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He is the youngest of five siblings.", "score": "1.5048083" }, { "id": "31741285", "title": "Éric Toussaint", "text": " Born in Namur in 1954, Éric Toussaint lived in the mining village of Retinne, near Liège (Belgium), where his parents were teachers. Retinne had a population of 2,500 people of more than thirty different nationalities. At the age of thirteen, already present in the struggles of that time (opposition to the war in Vietnam and racism, and supporting workers’ struggles and the Prague Spring among others), he joined the students’ union branch of the FGTB. In 1968 he took part in launching a pupils’ movement that spread to several schools. It was the start of many struggles. In 1970 Éric joined the IVth International and helped to create the \"Workers Revolutionary League\" (Ligue révolutionnaire des travailleurs – LRT) in May 1970 and became a member of the Politburo alongside Ernest Mandel. Since 1980 he has been a member of the 4th International's United Secretariat and International Committee.", "score": "1.504251" }, { "id": "13854049", "title": "Eric Verdonk", "text": " Verdonk was born in Taihape, New Zealand to Dutch parents, and his native language was Dutch. He was married and had a son and a daughter. Verdonk died of cancer on 3 April 2020 in Auckland, at the age of 60.", "score": "1.4975841" }, { "id": "176537", "title": "Wilrijk", "text": "Toby Alderweireld (born 1989) footballer ; Kathleen Van Brempt (born 1969), politician ; Bruno Brokken (born 1953), high jumper ; Mousa Dembélé (born 1987), footballer ; Mark Dedrie (born 1962), sculptor ; Gabriel Fehervari (born 1960), businessman and CEO of the former Alfacam Group ; Frans Grootjans (born 1922), politician and minister for the PVV ; Victor Guidalevitch (1892–1962), engineer and photographer ; Paul Lemmens (born 1954), judge at the European Court of Human Rights ; Brian Lesher (born 1971), baseball player ; Jan Leyers (born 1958), singer ; Rik Van Linden (born 1949), cyclist ; Linda Mertens (born 1978), singer ; Mohamed Messoudi (born 1984), footballer ; Kristof Snelders (born 1982), footballer ; Rudy Trouvé (born 1967), musician ; Dirk Verbeuren (born 1975), heavy metal drummer ; Carl Verbraeken (born 1950), president of the Union of Belgian Composers ; Koen Vervaeke (born 1959), diplomat ; Marcia De Wachter (born 1953), economist ; Ronald de Witte (born 1946), cyclist ; Constant de Deken (1852-1896), missionary and explorer ", "score": "1.4934485" }, { "id": "9256608", "title": "Eric Linden", "text": " Eric Linden was born in New York City to Phillip and Elvira (née Lundborg) Linden, both of Swedish descent. His father was a professional pianist and an actor on stage with the Theater Royal when he lived in Stockholm, Sweden. When Eric was six, Phillip Linden deserted his family in New York City. To help support his mother, sister and two brothers, he began washing dishes at a cafe after school when he was 7 years old. He also sold newspapers on Tenth Avenue. Linden attended Angela Patri elementary school and participated in school plays at DeWitt Clinton High School. After graduation, he worked his way through Columbia University. His first job after graduating from Columbia was being a runner for a bank.", "score": "1.4930768" }, { "id": "14450010", "title": "Eric Biddines", "text": " Eric Biddines was born in the city of Ocala, Florida. At the age of six he moved to Delray Beach, Florida in Palm Beach County, where he was raised by his mother in a strict religious Jehovah's Witness household. At a young age he and his three siblings listened to modern R&B and early Motown artists such as Al Green and Luther Vandross. He also listened to hip hop at a young age. As a teenager he was inspired to change his lifestyle by lyrics in the OutKast album ATLiens, where Andre 3000 raps \"No drugs or alcohol so I can get the signal clear.\" Recollected Biddines, when he first heard the lyrics \"I was 13 and I grew up in the projects, like government assistance. Being bad was the cool thing so when Andre said that at a time when the South was struggling to establish an identity, it just threw me off and inspired me so much that — not that I was supposed to at 13 — but I haven't gotten into any of those activities ever since.\"", "score": "1.4901471" } ]
In what city was Reinaldo Dalcin born?
[ "Canoas" ]
place of birth
Reinaldo Dalcin
1,141,201
87
[ { "id": "1658768", "title": "Reinaldo Dalcin", "text": " Reinaldo Dalcin is a Brazilian model, mechanical engineer and the winner of the Mister Brazil 2013. He was announced the winner of Mister Brazil during the annual event held in Rio de Janeiro on April 5 of that year. At 1.80m, he represented the Delta do Jacuí Islands and was represented Brazil in Mister World 2014 on June 15, 2014, an event to be held in Torbay, England.", "score": "1.8156364" }, { "id": "12156681", "title": "Reinaldo (footballer, born 1976)", "text": "Notes ", "score": "1.6117077" }, { "id": "27116696", "title": "Residente", "text": " René Pérez Joglar was born in a hospital in Hato Rey, a sector within the San Juan area. His mother, Flor Joglar de García, is a Puerto Rican actress who was part of the theatrical company called Teatro del 60 (Theater of the 60s). In her student years, she belonged to Juventud Independentista Universitaria or JIU (Independentist Youth of the University). René's father, Reinaldo Pérez Ramírez, is a labor lawyer, musician and writer. He studied in the Escuela Libre de Música (Free School of Music). When he was 17, together with Louis García, a trombonist and arranger, they founded the band, Latin Tempo. Reinaldo studied Political Science and Law at the University of Puerto Rico ", "score": "1.5999506" }, { "id": "13916602", "title": "Reinaldo (footballer, born 1984)", "text": " During the 2012 January transfer window, it was announced that Chinese Super League club Beijing Guoan had bought the striker from Saudi Club Al-Raed for a reported $2 million over two years. In January 2013, it was reported that Reinaldo was loaned to China League One side Chengdu Blades for one year. However, he eventually stayed in Beijing for the 2013 season.", "score": "1.5402286" }, { "id": "25404978", "title": "Reinaldo Rivera", "text": " Born in Madrid, Spain in the family of a doctor, Reinaldo and his family moved to Puerto Rico when he was seven years old. At age 19, he joined the United States Navy, serving in Orlando, Florida and San Diego, California. As an adult, between December 1986 and March 1991, Rivera worked for the Joint Chiefs of Staff in Washington, D.C., attending the University of South Carolina, where he earned a degree in office administration. He previously resided in Graniteville, Columbia and Fayetteville, North Carolina, before settling in North Augusta. On Valentine's Day in 1993, he married Tammy Lisa Bonnette and had two children. By 1998 Rivera acquired a job as a tire inspector for the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company in Aiken.", "score": "1.5253072" }, { "id": null, "title": "Reinaldo Dalcin", "text": "Reinaldo Dalcin\n\nReinaldo Dalcin is a Brazilian model, mechanical engineer and the winner of the Mister Brazil 2013.\n\nHe was announced the winner of Mister Brazil during the annual event held in Rio de Janeiro on April 5 of that year. At 1.80m, he represented the Delta do Jacuí Islands and was represented Brazil in Mister World 2014 on June 15, 2014, an event to be held in Torbay, England.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Dalcin", "text": "Dalcin\n\nDalcin is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:WikiProject Brazil articles", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Low-importance Brazil articles", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:BLP articles lacking sources from May 2014", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "16454036", "title": "Carlos Prado Pampín", "text": " Carlos Prado Pampín was born in Marín, Pontevedra, in 1982. At the age of 15 he started recording his own domestic films. At the age of 18 he starts audiovisual studies in Vigo, and shortly after he starts his studies of journalism at Universidade de Santiago de Compostela.", "score": "1.5186174" }, { "id": "2134782", "title": "Renato del Prado", "text": " Born Renato Natividad-Mateo on March 17, 1940 in Manila.", "score": "1.5120223" }, { "id": "14338628", "title": "Reinaldo Gargano", "text": " Born in Paysandú, Uruguay on July 26, 1934, Gargano went into exile in Spain in 1974 following a coup d'état. He returned to Uruguay several years later.", "score": "1.5075374" }, { "id": "29519687", "title": "Diego Capusotto", "text": " Diego Capusotto was born in Castelar, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina on September 21, 1961, but moved to the Villa Luro neighborhood of Buenos Aires when he was 7, where he lived for three decades. At 25, he began to study acting at the Arlequines Theater. He has starred in several movies. The first, Zapada, una comedia beat (1999), was not released commercially. He followed up with Mataperros (2001), India Pravile (2003), Soy tu aventura (2003), Dos ilusiones (2004) and Regresados (2007), also known as D-Graduated. His most recent film was Pajaros Volando (2010). His television career began in 1992 with De la ", "score": "1.5059531" }, { "id": "15897818", "title": "Délfor Dicásolo", "text": " Dicásolo was born on April 25, 1920 in Chivilcoy, Buenos Aires, Argentina. His parents were from Naples, Italy.", "score": "1.5056765" }, { "id": "16529337", "title": "Reinaldo Giudici", "text": " Reinaldo Giudici (1853, Lenno &ndash; 30 August 1921, Buenos Aires) was an Italian-born Argentine painter, best known for his early genre works in the Costumbrismo style.", "score": "1.5046391" }, { "id": "13916604", "title": "Reinaldo (footballer, born 1984)", "text": " Reinaldo is primarily a target man, holding up the ball to bring others into play. However, he possesses more flair than the typical target man and frequently dribbles and runs at defenders. He is well known for his trade-mark back flip celebrations and his Robinho-like thumb sucking celebration.", "score": "1.4990076" }, { "id": "11006205", "title": "Oskar D'Amico", "text": " Oskar Maria D'Amico (February 22, 1923 – May 3, 2003) was an active Italian artist in Rome, Naples, Lanciano, Cisterna, Milan, Gallarate, Torino, Zagabria, Paris, Toulouse, Melun, Carenac, Maubeuge, Madrid, Barcelona, Zaragoza, Budapest, Győr, Mexico City, Cuernavaca, Morelia, Toronto, New York City, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Miami, Denver, Santa Fe, Albuquerque and Socorro, between 1943 and 2003. He is considered a Nomad artist because of his ability to work in various styles. He had three major periods in his artistic life: Figurative, Materic and Geometric. He also was an outstanding art director for more than 75 epic movies. D'Amico had a very outgoing personality. He was a non-conformist, which was reflected in his work throughout his life. D'Amico was born in Castel Frentano, Italy, a small village in Abruzzo. At a young age, he felt he had to leave and dive into the big world. After being a seminarist with the Salesiani during World War II, he left Naples, where he studied architecture, and began a great adventure in Rome.", "score": "1.4912299" }, { "id": "7602962", "title": "Gian Paolo Dallara", "text": " Dallara was born in Parma.", "score": "1.4909025" }, { "id": "28660993", "title": "Daladier Arismendi", "text": " Dala was a percussionist and singer for the Colombian reggae band Alerta Kamarada. His early life was influenced by the art of his father Samuel Gonzalez. His talents emerged through his illustrations during his 10 years at De La Salle University. Dala Arismendi was born in Bogotá in 1975, he grew up living with both parents and his grandmother. In 1982, his father died due to health problems. In 1998 he decided to form the reggae musical group Alerta Kamarada. During that year he choose to live in the La Candelaria area, along with his band. The area is heavily influenced by Rastafari culture, and its principles of peace and love. In 2009, he separated from Alerta. In search of a better life, he decided to go to San Agustín, located in the southern state of Huila. Francisco started a new life in \"San Agus\" as he called it, choosing a life dedicated to the land and nature. In 2011, his first CD as a solo artist was released, \"San Agusthink\"; it had 8 songs, 3 of which were dedicated to his country and the others focused on love and a strong critique of the system of oppression.", "score": "1.489496" }, { "id": "31787432", "title": "Paolo Dal Molin", "text": " Born in Yaoundé, Cameroon, by Cameroonian mother and father from Belluno, Italy, he moved to Italy at the age of 10 years. He won two times his country's senior national championship and in 2013, at 3 February 2013, ranked at the 8th place in the IAAF world list.", "score": "1.4883788" }, { "id": "15373459", "title": "Ángel Faretta", "text": " He was born in Buenos Aires on April 21, 1953. He is from a traditional Italian family. His father, Donato (1900-1988), emigrated to Argentina in 1926, where he engaged in rural work in the region of the family property in Saladillo and then in industry and construction. His mother, Lisa Pingitore (1914-1988), born in Argentina, also descended from a very traditional family from the south of Italy of noble ancestry, especially through the maternal line of the Di Renzo family. Faretta did his primary and secondary studies with the Piarist Fathers at the Calasanz School in Caballito. He studied philosophy, theology, aesthetics, history of art and religion, ", "score": "1.487474" }, { "id": "32794896", "title": "David Arroyo", "text": " Arroyo was born in Talavera de la Reina, Province of Toledo.", "score": "1.4831407" }, { "id": "2632051", "title": "Elena Jacinto", "text": " Jacinto was born in Barcelona in 1985. Around 2002, Jacinto tried to commit suicide by jumping in front of a metro train in Barcelona. She survived the attempt but was left a paraplegic. Following the accident, she got treatment for mental illness. Some of her physical rehabilitation took place at Instituto Guttmann. In 2012, she worked for DKV Seguros.", "score": "1.4789444" }, { "id": "2268484", "title": "Ramón Torres Braschi", "text": " Ramón Torres Braschi was born in Ponce on October 18, 1917, the youngest son of Prosecuting attorney Libertad Torres Grau and Mrs. Aida Braschi Paoli. Ramón grew up in Ponce, Yauco, and Santurce. He completed his first years of grade school education in the latter, graduating from Matienzo Elementary School in 1930 and the Santurce Central High School in 1934.", "score": "1.4788741" } ]
In what city was Bob Cremins born?
[ "Pelham Manor", "Pelham Manor, New York" ]
place of birth
Bob Cremins
3,531,642
51
[ { "id": "26279623", "title": "Bob Cremins", "text": " Robert Anthony Cremins (February 15, 1906 – March 27, 2004) was a pitcher in Major League Baseball who played briefly for the Boston Red Sox during the 1927 season. Listed at 5ft 11in, 178 lb., Cremins batted and threw left-handed. He was born in Pelham Manor, New York. In four relief appearances, Cremins posted a 5.04 earned run average without a decision in 5 ⅓ Innings pitched. According to Baseball Almanac, Cremins faced Babe Ruth once and retired him on a grounder to first base. His career ended in 1928 due to an arm injury. Following his baseball career, Cremins served in the military during World War II. After that, he worked as town supervisor and tax receiver for Pelham. Cremins died in his homeland of Pelham at the age of 98. At the time of his death, he was the second-oldest surviving person having been a baseball player; Ray Cunningham is No. 1.", "score": "1.7286587" }, { "id": "4095984", "title": "Bobby Cremins", "text": " Cremins attended All Hallows High School in the Bronx, New York, where he was born to Irish immigrants from County Kerry. In 1966, he entered the University of South Carolina on a basketball scholarship, where he played under coach Frank McGuire. While Cremins was there, the South Carolina team won 61 games, with 17 losses, while Cremins was the starting point guard for three years for the Gamecocks. Cremins, known as \"Cakes\", was also the captain of South Carolina's 1969-70 team which went 25–3. He graduated from South Carolina in 1970 with a B.S. degree in marketing, before playing professional basketball for one year in Ecuador.", "score": "1.66311" }, { "id": "27810534", "title": "Gus Cremin", "text": " Cremin was born in Lisselton in north Kerry where he lived with wife Celia and their extended family. He died on 13 November 2014.", "score": "1.6490376" }, { "id": "32684127", "title": "Bob Koester", "text": " Koester was born in Wichita, Kansas, on October 30, 1932. He began collecting and trading classic 78 rpm records when he was in high school. He studied business and cinematography at Saint Louis University starting in 1951.", "score": "1.6279976" }, { "id": "4095983", "title": "Bobby Cremins", "text": " Robert Joseph Cremins Jr. (born July 4, 1947) is an American retired college basketball coach. He served as a head coach at Appalachian State, Georgia Tech, and, most recently, the College of Charleston.", "score": "1.6054382" }, { "id": null, "title": "Bobby Cremins", "text": "Bobby Cremins\n\nRobert Joseph Cremins Jr. (born July 4, 1947) is an American retired college basketball coach. He served as a head coach at Appalachian State, Georgia Tech, and, most recently, the College of Charleston.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Bob Cremins", "text": "Bob Cremins\n\nRobert Anthony Cremins (February 15, 1906 – March 27, 2004) was a pitcher in Major League Baseball who played briefly for the Boston Red Sox during the 1927 season. Listed at , 178 lb., Cremins batted and threw left-handed. He was born in Pelham Manor, New York.\n\nIn four relief appearances, Cremins posted a 5.04 earned run average without a decision in 5 ⅓ Innings pitched. According to \"Baseball Almanac\", Cremins faced Babe Ruth once and retired him on a grounder to first base. His career ended in 1928 due to an arm injury.\n\nFollowing his baseball career, Cremins served in the military during World War II. After that, he worked as town supervisor and tax receiver for Pelham.\n\nCremins died in his homeland of Pelham at the age of 98. At the time of his death, he was the second-oldest surviving person having been a baseball player; Ray Cunningham is No. 1.\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Basketball coaches from New York (state)", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:American baseball pitcher, 1900s births stubs", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Murder of Deanna Cremin", "text": "Murder of Deanna Cremin\n\nDeanna J. Cremin (March 26, 1978 – March 30, 1995) was a 17-year-old American girl from Somerville, Massachusetts, found sexually assaulted and strangled to death near her home. No charges have ever been filed. The case deeply shocked the local community, and a $70,000 reward is being offered for evidence leading to an arrest and prosecution.", "score": null }, { "id": "26279624", "title": "Bob Cremins", "text": "Nicknamed \"Lefty\" or \"Crooked Arm\" ", "score": "1.5872664" }, { "id": "14905895", "title": "Bob Stefik", "text": " Stefik was born Robert Mathias Stefik on October 8, 1923, in Madison, Wisconsin.", "score": "1.5781488" }, { "id": "7494315", "title": "Bob DiLuca", "text": " DiLuca was born in Italy and was raised in Belgium and Canada.", "score": "1.5567651" }, { "id": "29881114", "title": "Robert Niemi", "text": " Robert James \"Bob\" Niemi (born April 1955 in Fitchburg, Massachusetts) is an American literary scholar, literary critic and author. Since 1990 he is professor of English at Saint Michael's College in Colchester.", "score": "1.5518636" }, { "id": "30626091", "title": "Bob Regan", "text": " Regan was born in Sacramento, California, was raised in South Lake Tahoe.", "score": "1.5430458" }, { "id": "9285320", "title": "Bob Wade (artist)", "text": " Robert Schrope Wade was born in Austin, Texas on January 6, 1943. Son of a hotel manager, Wade grew up in several Texas cities. This early hotel life contributed to Wade's interests in the American road and highway kitsch. As a boy he was able to visit with his cowboy hero, Roy Rogers, who was a first cousin of his mother. During high school in El Paso, Wade joined a car club and would go south of the border to Juarez to enlist skilled technicians to customize his hot rod. When Bob arrived Austin in 1961 to attend the University of Texas he was driving a decade-old, ", "score": "1.5293776" }, { "id": "12025069", "title": "Delmark Records", "text": " Born in 1932 in Wichita, Kansas, Bob Koester was the son of a petroleum engineer. While in the hospital with polio when he was a child, he listened to the radio and was cheered up when he heard Eddie Condon and Benny Goodman. In his teens, he was a dedicated jazz fan who began buying old records from a Salvation Army store. At concerts in Kansas City, he heard Red Allen, Count Basie, Jimmy Rushing, Tommy Douglas, Lionel Hampton, and Jay McShann. Moving from Wichita to St. Louis to attend college, Koester began his career as a record trader in his dormitory room. Joining a local jazz club gave Koester his first taste of live jazz, seeing Clark Terry ", "score": "1.5278091" }, { "id": "30768654", "title": "Bob Kauffman", "text": " Robert Alan Kauffman was born July 13, 1946 in Brooklyn, N.Y., to LeRoy and Anne Kauffman. He played at Scarsdale High School in Scarsdale, New York. The Kauffman family was in the saddle and bridle business. Kauffman’s Boots and Saddles was their business on East 24th Street in Manhattan.", "score": "1.5273123" }, { "id": "2498614", "title": "Bob Crampsey", "text": " Crampsey was born in Glasgow. A graduate of the University of Glasgow and former head teacher of St. Ambrose High School in Coatbridge, Crampsey was 1965's \"Brain of Britain\". He followed this up eight years later by reaching the semi-finals of Mastermind, choosing the American Civil War as his specialist subject. He served in the Royal Air Force from 1952 to 1955.", "score": "1.5269762" }, { "id": "9030345", "title": "Bob Schloredt", "text": " Schloredt was born in Deadwood, South Dakota in 1939 and attended Gresham High School in suburban Portland. He was blinded in his left eye from a fireworks injury suffered at the age of five.", "score": "1.5206828" }, { "id": "27736969", "title": "Bob Hagedorn", "text": " Born in Elizabeth City, North Carolina to a military family, Hagedorn family settled in Aurora, Colorado in 1965 and he attended local schools, graduating from Aurora Central High School in 1970. He earned a bachelor's degree in journalism from the University of Colorado Boulder in 1974 and a master's degree in urban affairs from the University of Colorado Denver in 1979.", "score": "1.5094396" }, { "id": "4038840", "title": "Bob Elkins", "text": " Bob Elkins (born 1932) is an American character actor who has appeared in movies, plays and television productions. He is sometimes credited as Robert Elkins. Bob Elkins was born in 1932 in Mount Hope, West Virginia, the son of a struggling coal miner. At age four, he moved with his father, mother and two sisters to Muncie, Indiana, where his father took a job at a lawnmower company. At about that time, the elder Elkins inexplicably became withdrawn and stopped talking to his son. Bob Elkins now believes that the lack of communication with his father influenced his acting abilities, although he would ", "score": "1.509068" }, { "id": "32465741", "title": "Bob Gannon", "text": " Gannon was born in Mequon, Wisconsin on January 6, 1959. He graduated from the West Bend High School in West Bend, Wisconsin and attended various colleges and vocational schools.", "score": "1.5082463" }, { "id": "14433163", "title": "Howard Cruse", "text": " Cruse was born on May 2, 1944 in Birmingham, Alabama and raised in nearby Springville, the son of a preacher and a homemaker. His earliest published cartoons were in The Baptist Student when he was in high school. His work later appeared in Fooey and Sick. He attended high school at Indian Springs School in (what is now) Indian Springs, Alabama, and college at Birmingham-Southern College, where he studied drama. Cruse worked for about a decade in television. In 1977, Cruse moved to New York City, where he met Eddie Sedarbaum, his life partner, in April 1979. They married after moving to North Adams, Massachusetts.", "score": "1.4978876" }, { "id": "32830451", "title": "Bob Arno", "text": " Bob Arno (born 1940 ) is a Swedish-American entertainer, known primarily as a comedy pickpocket, and more recently criminologist specializing in global street crime. He grew up in Stockholm, Sweden, and became a US citizen in 1992.", "score": "1.493825" } ]
In what city was Greg Windsperger born?
[ "Minneapolis", "Minneapolis, Minnesota", "Minneapolis, MN", "the 612" ]
place of birth
Greg Windsperger
903,653
96
[ { "id": "27918908", "title": "Greg Windsperger", "text": " Greg Windsperger (born December 30, 1951 in Minneapolis) is an American former ski jumper who competed in the 1976 Winter Olympics.", "score": "1.7937772" }, { "id": "9904348", "title": "Greg Cartwright", "text": " Born in 1972, Cartwright was raised in Frayser, Memphis – a neighborhood located on the north side of Memphis. His last two years of high school were spent in the suburbs after his family relocated outside of the city. His father was a factory worker, employed by the Firestone tire company in Memphis. With his parent's busy work schedule, Cartwright spent his summer vacations and weekends at his grandmother's Memphis home. This is where he was first introduced to musical instruments. At six years old, Cartwright already owned a portable record player, and was introduced to rock and roll music by ", "score": "1.576541" }, { "id": "3137124", "title": "Dave Gregson", "text": " Dave Gregson was born in Harrogate in 1973 and was brought up in Wetherby in West Yorkshire. He attended Crossley Street Primary School from 1978 to 1985 and then Wetherby High School from 1985 to 1992. He attended Askham Bryan College from 1992 to 1995 where he acquired a Higher National Diploma in Amenity Horticulture. He worked in nursery stock production and landscaping before a change of career path in 1996 when he started working for the Harrogate based charity, Yorkshire Association for Disabled People (now known as Disability Action Yorkshire). He was promoted to Supervisor and during this period qualified with an NVQ Level 4 Certificate in Management in Health and Social Care with Leeds Beckett University. Gregson secured a job with United Response in July 2011 as a Support Worker, assisting adults with disabilities in supported living and residential services. Since his dismissal from United Response in December 2018, Gregson has been a full-time carer for his parents and a campaigner and advocate for disability rights in the UK.", "score": "1.5629388" }, { "id": "9350109", "title": "Jermaine Windster", "text": " Windster was born in Rotterdam in the Netherlands. He also organizes youth football clinics on Bonaire.", "score": "1.5241134" }, { "id": "13844809", "title": "Greg Rucka", "text": " Greg Rucka was born in San Francisco and raised on the Monterey Peninsula of California, in an area known to the locals as \"Steinbeck Country\". Rucka is Jewish. He first discovered comics at the Nob Hill Market in Salinas, California, where at age five, he first saw digest-sized black and white reprints of Stan Lee and Jack Kirby's work on The Incredible Hulk, which he convinced his mother to buy. He began writing at a young age, and at age 10, he won a county-wide short story contest. He graduated from Vassar College with an BA in English. He then enrolled in the University of Southern California's Master of Professional Writing program, graduating with a Master of Fine Arts. He names Douglas Adams as his biggest influence. Before becoming a professional fiction writer he worked in a number of other occupations, including house painting, restaurant work, emergency medical technician, security guard, technical writer, and fight choreographer.", "score": "1.5229118" }, { "id": null, "title": "Greg Windsperger", "text": "Greg Windsperger\n\nGreg Windsperger (born December 30, 1951 in Minneapolis) is an American former ski jumper who competed in the 1976 Winter Olympics.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Olympic ski jumpers for the United States", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:American ski jumping biography stubs", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:American male ski jumpers", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Ski jumpers at the 1976 Winter Olympics", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "10136264", "title": "Greg Olear", "text": " Born in Madison, New Jersey, Olear attended Georgetown University. He is half Italian, his grandmother having emigrated from a town located on the side of a volcano near Naples in Campania, southern Italy.", "score": "1.5220339" }, { "id": "29986699", "title": "Greg Drasler", "text": " Drasler was born in Waukegan, Illinois in 1952. He was influenced in the 1960s by seeing James Rosenquist's room-spanning F-111, as well as the work of H. C. Westermann and Chicago Imagists such as Jim Nutt and Roger Brown, and studied art at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. In 1978, a fire destroyed all of his possessions and artwork in diverse media, except for two paintings; afterwards, he committed to painting as his medium. After earning a BFA (1980), he enrolled in the school's Year in Japan Program, which heightened an interest in the relationship between place and identity and encouraged his future use of vernacular imagery. in 1983 after completing his MFA, Drasler moved to New York City and began exhibiting professionally. In his first decade there, he appeared in two shows curated by Marcia Tucker at the New Museum (the ", "score": "1.5137074" }, { "id": "32638650", "title": "Greg Renker", "text": " Greg Renker was born in Phoenix, Arizona, in 1957. He had eight siblings. Renker's family moved every year due to his father's work managing a chain of country clubs and hotels. Desert Magazine described his lifestyle growing up as humble, but posh. The family was not wealthy, but due to his father's work, they spent a lot of time in high-end resorts socializing with \"the rich and famous.\" Renker became interested in self-help books at age 16, after his father lost his job. In his teenage years, Renker had subscriptions to six newspapers and read 200-300 magazines per month. He felt that learning how to sell may help him avoid the financial stress his family experienced. Renker attended the San Diego State University with a major in comparative literature. While attending college, Renker worked several sales jobs, including one as a real estate agent.", "score": "1.5074229" }, { "id": "11923895", "title": "Greg Grunberg", "text": " Grunberg was born in Los Angeles, California, the son of Sandy (née Klein) and Gerry Grunberg and had a Jewish upbringing. He attended University High School in West Los Angeles, class of 1984.", "score": "1.5035799" }, { "id": "32258499", "title": "Greg Hands", "text": " Hands was born in New York City, and completed his secondary education at Dr Challoner's Grammar School, Amersham in 1984. During his gap year he worked in a swimming pool in Berlin, and became interested in the Eastern Bloc, visiting Prague and other Eastern European cities on future holidays. He went on to attend Robinson College, Cambridge, where he graduated with a First class degree in Modern History in 1989. He joined the Conservative Party as a student, served as the Chairman of the Cambridge University Conservative Association (CUCA) and was on the Executive Committee of the Cambridge University Students' Union. He worked on trading floors in derivatives at the City of London and New York City until 1997.", "score": "1.5007434" }, { "id": "27258363", "title": "Greg Forristall", "text": " Forristall was born in Council Bluffs, Iowa and was raised and lived near Macedonia. After graduation from Carson-Macedonia High School in 1968, he went on to complete coursework in computer science and international marketing at Iowa Western Community College and earned bachelor's and master's degrees in music at the University of Iowa in 1972 and 1973 respectively.", "score": "1.4908916" }, { "id": "9901757", "title": "Greg Louganis", "text": " nursing homes and the local naval base. As a child, he was diagnosed with asthma and allergies, so to help with the conditions, he was encouraged to continue the dance and gymnastics classes. He also took up trampolining, and at the age of nine began diving lessons after the family got a swimming pool. He attended Santa Ana High School in Santa Ana, California; Valhalla High School in El Cajon, California; as well as Mission Viejo High School, in Mission Viejo, California. In 1978, he subsequently attended the University of Miami, where he majored in drama and continued diving. In 1981, he transferred to the University of California, Irvine, where in 1983, he graduated with a major in theatre and a minor in dance.", "score": "1.4899241" }, { "id": "14051389", "title": "Greg Noll", "text": " Noll was born Greg Lawhead in San Diego, California, on February 11, 1937. He subsequently adopted the surname of his stepfather, Ash. At the age of three, Noll moved with his family to Manhattan Beach, California. He began surfing at the age of 11 in the South Bay. He was a member of Manhattan Beach Surf Club where he learned board shaping from Dale Velzy. Noll was a member of the Los Angeles County Lifeguards and competed in paddleboarding. Noll developed his big wave surfing off Palos Verdes at breaks such as Lunada Bay. He moved to Hawaii in 1954, where he finished high school, and lived and surfed at Makaha.", "score": "1.4842877" }, { "id": "14526926", "title": "Greg Landau", "text": " Landau's parents are poet Nina Serrano and filmmaker Saul Landau. He was born in Madison, Wisconsin and grew up in San Francisco's Mission District. He co-founded Round Whirled Records with Camilo Landau and Round World Media along with his sister Valerie Landau. He worked with his father and Haskell Wexler on many documentary films in Latin America and the Caribbean.", "score": "1.4764471" }, { "id": "9291112", "title": "Greg Phillinganes", "text": " Gregory Arthur Phillinganes was born on May 12, 1956, in Detroit, Michigan. He began playing a neighbor's piano by ear at the age of two, beginning lessons a few years later after his mother purchased a piano for him. He took lessons from two different instructors before his mother brought him to Misha Kotler, a Detroit Symphony Orchestra pianist who introduced the discipline and technique Phillinganes required to excel. Phillinganes credits Kotler with showing him proper hand posture and for influencing him to play with \"a sense of dexterity and definition\". Phillinganes was discovered by Stevie Wonder after drummer Ricky Lawson gave ", "score": "1.4751213" }, { "id": "3366431", "title": "Greg Barrett", "text": " He was born Gregory Lane Barrett in Bristol, Tennessee, on November 23, 1961. He grew up in Bristol, Virginia, and graduated from Bristol's Virginia High School in 1980. He is a 1986 graduate of Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Virginia. Prior to college, he was a factory worker at Burlington Industries in Bristol, TN. For more than twenty years in print journalism he worked as a local, national and foreign correspondent for, among others, The Augusta Chronicle (Georgia), The Charlotte Observer (North Carolina), The Honolulu Advertiser, the Gannett Company's GNS/USA Today bureau in Washington, D.C., and for The Baltimore Sun.", "score": "1.472759" }, { "id": "16244777", "title": "Gregers Brinch", "text": " Gregers Brinch was born in Esbjerg, Denmark. He was drawn to become a composer upon watching the film Amadeus by Miloš Forman and Peter Shaffer in 1984, at the age of 20. After an initial period of aided self-study in England with the singer and composer Cecil Cope, he studied piano with Louis Demetrius Alvanis in London before moving to Hamburg, Germany to study composition with Elmar Lampson and piano with Alan Newcome and later Ulrike Bauer. Brinch’s use of a number of styles with an authentic quality stems from his wide musical background. He feels equally at home with the blues, as with the music of Beethoven or Gregorian Chants. His consistent use and exploration of ", "score": "1.4720398" }, { "id": "9522350", "title": "Lothar Windsperger", "text": " began his training as a primary school teacher in Rosenheim, where he had moved with his mother in 1898, at a Präparandenanstalt. In 1900 he finally changed to the University of Music and Performing Arts Munich. There he was taught composition and harmony by Josef Rheinberger and Rudolf Louis, among others, and piano by August Schmid-Lindner. Later he continued his studies with Hugo Riemann in Leipzig and work weeks with Hermann Abendroth at the Rheinische Musikschule in Cologne. In February 1905 Windsperger appeared in Munich with an orchestral concert in which he performed his one-hour, one-movement \"Sinfonie der Sehnsucht\". According to the judgement of H. Teibler in the ", "score": "1.4715208" }, { "id": "5077952", "title": "Greg Humphreys", "text": " Greg was born and raised in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. His mother was an art teacher and his attorney father was a folk musician, spurring Greg's own artistic creativity from a very early age. In high school, Greg and his classmate, Chris Goode, formed a band called \"Trash\" that eventually evolved into Dillon Fence.", "score": "1.469698" }, { "id": "7016584", "title": "Greg Fitzsimmons", "text": " Fitzsimmons was born in New York City, New York, to New York City radio personality Bob Fitzsimmons, and Patricia (née McCarthy) Fitzsimmons. He grew up in Tarrytown, New York. He began his stand-up comedy career while attending Boston University, from which he received an undergraduate degree. Fitzsimmons has since appeared on such programs as The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Late Show with David Letterman, Late Night with Conan O'Brien, Chelsea Lately, The Howard Stern Show and his one-hour Comedy Central special \"Life on Stage\". In 2001 he won \"The Jury Award for Best Comedian\" at The HBO US Comedy Arts Festival in Aspen, Colorado.", "score": "1.4692533" } ]
In what city was Matt Moralee born?
[ "Newcastle upon Tyne", "Newcastle", "Newcastle-on-Tyne", "Newcastle upon Tyne (parish)", "Newcastle-upon-Tyne" ]
place of birth
Matt Moralee
5,117,704
55
[ { "id": "29565896", "title": "Matt Moralee (footballer, born 1912)", "text": " Matthew Moralee (21 February 1912−1991) was an English footballer who played as an inside forward in the Football League between the wars. Born in Barnburgh, near Doncaster, he played for Ormsby United before going to Denaby United, Gainsborough Trinity and Grimsby Town. Moralee arrived at Division 1 side Aston Villa in October 1936 where he played in 12 games scoring one goal. In November 1937, he moved to Leicester City who had just been promoted to Division 1. Scoring 6 goals, he played in 43 league and cup matches for them before the outbreak of the war. He was the son of The Wednesday and Doncaster Rovers player, also called Matt Moralee.", "score": "1.9512074" }, { "id": "29431180", "title": "Matt Moralee", "text": " Matthew Whitfield Moralee (1878−1962) was an English footballer who played as a half back for The Wednesday, Doncaster Rovers and Mexborough Town from 1902. Born in Newcastle upon Tyne, by 1901 he was living in Sheffield where he played for Division 1 side The Wednesday, who would later change their name to Sheffield Wednesday. Moralee was seen as being part of the \"rare talent\" of the reserve team though in a team that were Division 1 Champions in 1902−03 and 1903−04, he went on to only make a handful of first team appearances. For the 1904−05 season, he moved to play for Doncaster Rovers who had just been voted into Division 2 and who ", "score": "1.8819668" }, { "id": "5818140", "title": "Mati Moralejo", "text": " Matthew John Moralejo is an actor and was a recurring personality on the Nick GAS television network. He is regularly seen in 60 second featurettes highlighting lesser known sports from around the world called Global GAS. Moralejo was also the host of a short-lived revival of Nickelodeon's Wild and Crazy Kids in 2002. As an actor, he has had guest roles in Dawson's Creek, From the Earth to the Moon and The Mystery Files of Shelby Woo. Moralejo grew up in the Town and Country area of Tampa, Florida, and graduated A.P. Leto High School in 1993. He teaches international sports such as shovel racing, hydrospeeding, zorbing, pato, Kendo, reindeer racing, Futvolei, ice mountain climbing, dog sled racing, snow biking, outrigger canoeing, and sand tobogganing. Alongside Max Rubin, Moralejo co-hosted two seasons of the Ultimate Blackjack Tour on CBS, a blackjack tournament that used the Elimination Blackjack derivative created by poker player and World Series of Poker bracelet winner Russ Hamilton and featured a number of famous poker players and professional gamblers amongst it participants. Anthony Curtis, owner of the Las Vegas Advisor analysed all televised play and wrote the commentary delivered by Moralejo and Rubin.", "score": "1.7035421" }, { "id": "7432054", "title": "Kenneth Moraleda", "text": " Kenneth Moraleda (born 17 April 1973) is an actor. Of Filipino descent, Moraleda was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and has lived in Seattle, the Philippines, Los Angeles and is now based in Sydney, Australia. Moraleda trained at Australian Theatre for Young People (ATYP) before being accepted into the prestigious National Institute of Dramatic Art (NIDA) graduating with a Bachelor of Acting in 1995. Moraleda's first lead in a feature film is the role of Arun in Lucky Miles directed by Michael James Rowland. Other film roles include Monsod in Miramax's The Great Raid directed by John Dahl and Tony in the short film Sweet and ", "score": "1.6140736" }, { "id": "29431181", "title": "Matt Moralee", "text": " on to have the joint worst season in English Football League history, ending up bottom with just 8 points from 34 games and failing to be re-elected. Moralee scored in 1 of his 32 League games for Doncaster in that season, and once in 2 FA Cup games. The following season he scored 3 times, all from the penalty spot. In 1906 he moved to play for Mexborough who were also in the Midland League. He and his wife Isabella had seven children, one of whom was also called Matt Moralee who played for Gainsborough Trinity, Grimsby Town, Aston Villa and Leicester City between the wars. Matt Moralee (senior) died in Doncaster in 1962.", "score": "1.5819179" }, { "id": null, "title": "Matt Moralee (footballer, born 1912)", "text": "Matt Moralee (footballer, born 1912)\n\nMatthew Moralee (21 February 1912−1991) was an English footballer who played as an inside forward in the Football League between the wars.<ref name=villa/>\n\nBorn in Barnburgh, near Doncaster,<ref name=family/> he played for Ormsby United before going to Denaby United, Gainsborough Trinity and Grimsby Town.<ref name=villa/>\n\nMoralee arrived at Division 1 side Aston Villa in October 1936 where he played in 12 games scoring one goal.<ref name=villa/>\n\nIn November 1937, he moved to Leicester City who had just been promoted to Division 1. Scoring 6 goals, he played in 43 league and cup matches for them before the outbreak of the war.<ref name=fox/>\n\nHe was the son of The Wednesday and Doncaster Rovers player, also called Matt Moralee.<ref name=tree/>\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Matt Moralee", "text": "Matt Moralee\n\nMatthew Whitfield Moralee (1878−1962)<ref name=tree/> was an English footballer who played as a half back for The Wednesday, Doncaster Rovers and Mexborough Town from 1902.<ref name=swfc/><ref name=lfc/><ref name=bluff/>\n\nBorn in Newcastle upon Tyne, by 1901 he was living in Sheffield<ref name=tree/> where he played for Division 1 side The Wednesday, who would later change their name to Sheffield Wednesday. Moralee was seen as being part of the \"rare talent\" of the reserve team<ref name=romance/> though in a team that were Division 1 Champions in 1902−03 and 1903−04, he went on to only make a handful of first team appearances.<ref name=bullock/>\n\nFor the 1904−05 season, he moved to play for Doncaster Rovers who had just been voted into Division 2 and who went on to have the joint worst season in English Football League history, ending up bottom with just 8 points from 34 games and failing to be re-elected.<ref name=lfc/> Moralee scored in 1 of his 32 League games for Doncaster in that season, and once in 2 FA Cup games. The following season he scored 3 times, all from the penalty spot. In 1906 he moved to play for Mexborough who were also in the Midland League.<ref name=bluff/>\n\nHe and his wife Isabella had seven children, one of whom was also called Matt Moralee<ref name=tree/> who played for Gainsborough Trinity, Grimsby Town, Aston Villa and Leicester City between the wars. Matt Moralee (senior) died in Doncaster in 1962.<ref name=tree/>\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Mexborough Athletic F.C. players", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Denaby United F.C. players", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Footballers from Doncaster", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "944770", "title": "Jamie Moralee", "text": " title in 2001. As a consequence, Moralee also played in Champions League qualifiers. He left the club in 2003 when they suffered financial breakdown and a player exodus. Moralee had an unhappy 2003–04 season with Conference side Forest Green Rovers, scoring twice in 12 appearances, before rejoining Nicholas at Newport County in 2004, initially on loan. He had a difficult relationship with the fans of the club, but did score the winning goal in a 2–1 victory against Maidenhead that was vital to the club's Conference South survival After leaving the Welsh club to live closer to his London home, he played the 2005–06 season for Chelmsford City. He also represented a Watford side in Sky's Masters Football. '''", "score": "1.5769638" }, { "id": "31853549", "title": "Matt Chessé", "text": " Chessé was born and raised in the San Francisco Bay area, and received a bachelor's degree in English literature from San Francisco State University. He attended Ygnacio Valley High School in the SF/EastBay city of Concord graduating with the Class of 1984.", "score": "1.5643322" }, { "id": "5028122", "title": "Matt Paweski", "text": " Paweski was born in Detroit, US, in 1980. He completed his BFA at Arizona State University in Tempe, US in 2005 before earning his MFA in Fine Art from the Art Center College of Design, Pasadena, US, graduating in 2009.", "score": "1.5217068" }, { "id": "15247572", "title": "Matt Rinard", "text": " Matt Rinard is an American born artist living in New Orleans, Louisiana. Born in Meridian, Mississippi on October 24, 1964 he is the son of an Admiral in the United States Navy. By the time he was 16 he had moved to six different states. He attended N.O.C.C.A. New Orleans Center for Creative Arts in 1980 and abandoned the school in 1981 to attend Holy Cross High School in the Lower Ninth Ward. He received a bachelor's degree from Florida State University in Graphic Design in 1987 and continued his artistic endeavors at the New Orleans Academy of Fine Arts from 1990 to 2003 ", "score": "1.5145906" }, { "id": "10811550", "title": "Matt Hunter (singer)", "text": " Hunter was born in New York City, and raised in Paramus, New Jersey. His mother is Colombian, and his father is Italian.", "score": "1.5056543" }, { "id": "11474057", "title": "Matt McCarthy (comedian)", "text": " Matthew McCarthy, the youngest of three, was born in Providence, Rhode Island at the old Women & Infants Hospital on Maude Street. He grew up in an Irish-Catholic home in Rumford, Rhode Island and attended St. Margaret's School and La Salle Academy.", "score": "1.4964399" }, { "id": "206019", "title": "Matt O'Connor (activist)", "text": " He was born in Manchester in February 1967, and grew up in Kent. His father was a headmaster of a Catholic school from Kerry, Ireland; his mother was an English teacher.", "score": "1.4917269" }, { "id": "944767", "title": "Jamie Moralee", "text": " Jamie Moralee (born 2 December 1971) is an English former footballer who played as a midfielder or forward.", "score": "1.4889288" }, { "id": "14314256", "title": "Manuel Moralez", "text": " Moralez was born on 8 February 1898 in the village of Mesillas 22 kilometers south from Sombrerete, Zacatecas, Mexico. Shortly after his birth, the Moralez family relocated to Chalchihuites. He entered the seminary of the Archdiocese of Durango in Durango City, but dropped out to support his poor family.", "score": "1.4887273" }, { "id": "5983548", "title": "Matt Saincome", "text": " Matt Saincome was born in Danville, California in 1991. Following high school he graduated from San Francisco State University with a degree in journalism.", "score": "1.4882165" }, { "id": "16420217", "title": "Matt Gallant", "text": " Born on June 25, 1964 in Syracuse, New York, and raised in Westport, Connecticut. Gallant studied communications and theatre at the University of Rhode Island where, in his senior year, Gallant worked in the sports information department and broadcast university basketball and football games. He held an internship covering sports news at Channel 6 in Providence, Rhode Island. After graduating, Gallant moved to New York where he became a page at NBC and filled audiences for shows such as Late Night with David Letterman. He then hired an agent who managed to find him minor roles in television adverts and soaps. He then moved on to Los Angeles where he auditioned for some small roles. Eventually, Gallant hosted shows including X-Treme Energy, The Planet's Funniest Animals, and American Inventor. In 2004 Gallant gave the Commencement speech at the University of Rhode Island, and received an Honorary Doctorate of Arts for his career achievements and fundraising & volunteer work with the Make a Wish Foundation that helps children with life-threatening illnesses.", "score": "1.4879994" }, { "id": "2500163", "title": "Matt Kindt", "text": " Kindt was born in 1973 in Cheektowaga, New York and currently resides in Webster Groves, Missouri. He worked in the local mini-comics scene from a young age, self-publishing his own copyshop zines since 1990. In 1995 he obtained a degree in art from Webster University in St. Louis.", "score": "1.4849383" }, { "id": "3093506", "title": "Collabro", "text": " Matthew \"Matt\" Pagan (born 25 July 1993) was raised in Carlisle, Cumbria. At the time of Collabro's BGT audition, he was working as a kitchen salesman.", "score": "1.4825647" }, { "id": "13538289", "title": "Matt Skinner", "text": " Skinner was born in Melbourne, Australia. After many years abroad, he returned to Melbourne in 2008 where he now lives with his wife Carly and their two children.", "score": "1.475189" }, { "id": "29325250", "title": "Matt the Electrician", "text": " Matt Sever was born in San Francisco, California, and spent his formative years in northern California and southern Oregon. Sever began playing coffee houses when he was 15 years old and broke into the Austin, Texas music scene in 1996 when he began hosting an open mic night at the now defunct Flipnotics Coffeespace. When Sever would arrive at gigs still sweaty from a long days work in Austin's summer heat, he would often explain, \"Hi, my name is Matt, and I'm an electrician.\" Regulars to his shows began referring to him as \"The Electrician,\" and the moniker stuck. Early press referred to Sever being \"a regular blue-collar type of guy.\" Indeed, his third album, Made for Working, displayed his work boots on the cover and Sever frequently played up his day job early in his career.", "score": "1.4741746" } ]
In what city was Lloyd Ultan born?
[ "New York City", "NYC", "New York", "the five boroughs", "Big Apple", "City of New York", "NY City", "New York, New York", "New York City, New York", "New York, NY", "New York City (NYC)" ]
place of birth
Lloyd Ultan (composer)
5,006,548
47
[ { "id": "7474174", "title": "Lloyd Ultan (historian)", "text": " Lloyd Ultan (born 1938) is a historian and author. A native of The Bronx in New York City, he has been the borough's historian since 1996. He is a professor of history at Fairleigh Dickinson University's Petrocelli College of Continuing Studies and a member of the adjunct faculty at Lehman College. Ultan received a B.A. in history from Hunter College in 1959 and an M.A. in history from Columbia University in 1960. He has written several books, including The Beautiful Bronx (1920-1950), The Bronx in the Innocent Years: 1890-1925, and Bronx Accent. Ultan is renowned for his walking tours. His predecessor as the official Bronx Borough Historian was Dr. William A. Tieck, who served from 1980 to 1996.", "score": "1.8928063" }, { "id": "7859446", "title": "Ultan", "text": "Lloyd Ultan (composer) ; Lloyd Ultan (historian) ", "score": "1.8787768" }, { "id": "7856195", "title": "Kevin Lloyd (footballer, born 1958)", "text": " Lloyd was born in 1958 in Wolverhampton. After playing football for Worcester City's youth and reserve teams, he moved into Sunday league football in Wolverhampton, from where he joined West Midlands (Regional) League club Darlaston in September 1978. He had no contract with Darlaston, preferring a non-contractual arrangement that let him continue playing Sunday football. He was out for a time through injury, before starting to attract attention early the following year. In March, Worcester City tried to re-sign him but he turned them down. Lloyd was then offered a trial with Football League club Cardiff City. Injury, for which he received daily treatment at nearby Walsall F.C., prevented ", "score": "1.669087" }, { "id": "16564669", "title": "Harold Lloyd", "text": " Lloyd was born on April 20, 1893, in Burchard, Nebraska, the son of James Darsie Lloyd and Sarah Elisabeth Fraser. His paternal great-grandparents were Welsh. In 1910, after his father had several business venture failures, Lloyd's parents divorced and his father moved with his son to San Diego, California. Lloyd had acted in theater since a child, but in California he began acting in one-reel film comedies around 1912.", "score": "1.6314058" }, { "id": "3314426", "title": "Geoff Lloyd", "text": " Lloyd was born in Withington, Manchester, England, and raised in Macclesfield, Cheshire, England. As a teen, he worked as a paperboy, a suit salesman, and in 1989 he began working at a local print works after school, earning £1 an hour.", "score": "1.598012" }, { "id": null, "title": "Lloyd Ultan (historian)", "text": "Lloyd Ultan (historian)\n\nLloyd Ultan (born 1938) is a historian and author. A native of The Bronx in New York City, he has been the borough's historian since 1996. He is a professor of history at Fairleigh Dickinson University's Petrocelli College of Continuing Studies and a member of the adjunct faculty at Lehman College. Ultan received a B.A. in history from Hunter College in 1959 and an M.A. in history from Columbia University in 1960.\n\nHe has written several books, including \"The Beautiful Bronx (1920-1950)\", \"The Bronx in the Innocent Years: 1890-1925\", and \"Bronx Accent\". Ultan is renowned for his walking tours. His predecessor as the official Bronx Borough Historian was Dr. William A. Tieck, who served from 1980 to 1996.\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Lloyd Ultan", "text": "Lloyd Ultan\n\nLloyd Ultan may refer to:\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Gary Hermalyn", "text": "Gary Hermalyn\n\nGary \"Doc\" Hermalyn is an American historian and author, based in New York City. He is an Edgar Allan Poe scholar, and an authority on the history of The Bronx. Hermalyn is editor/author of 172 books on urban history, geography, education, natural history and exploration. He is CEO of The Bronx County Historical Society and a fellow of The Explorers Club.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "The Bronx", "text": "The Bronx\n\nThe Bronx () is a borough of New York City, coextensive with Bronx County, in the state of New York. It is south of Westchester County; north and east of the New York City borough of Manhattan, across the Harlem River; and north of the New York City borough of Queens, across the East River. The Bronx has a land area of and a population of 1,472,654 in the 2020 census. It is the only borough of New York City not primarily on an island. With a population that is 54.8% Hispanic as of 2020, it is the only majority-Hispanic county in the Northeastern United States and the fourth-most-populous nationwide.\n\nThe Bronx is divided by the Bronx River into a hillier section in the west, and a flatter eastern section. East and west street names are divided by Jerome Avenue. The West Bronx was annexed to New York City in 1874, and the areas east of the Bronx River in 1895.<ref name=\"ultan\" /> Bronx County was separated from New York County in 1914.<ref name=\"courtstart\">On the start of business for Bronx County: Bronx County In Motion. New Officials All Find Work to Do on Their First Day. \"The New York Times\", January 3, 1914 (PDF retrieved on June 26, 2008):\n\nThe word \"Bronx\" originated with Faroese-born (or Swedish-born) Jonas Bronck, who established the first settlement in the area as part of the New Netherland colony in 1639.<ref>* \n\nThe Bronx contains the poorest congressional district in the United States, the 15th. There are, however, some upper-income, as well as middle-income neighborhoods such as Riverdale, Fieldston, Spuyten Duyvil, Schuylerville, Pelham Bay, Pelham Gardens, Morris Park, and Country Club. Parts of the Bronx saw a steep decline in population, livable housing, and quality of life in the late 1960s, throughout the 1970s and 1980s, and into the early 1990s, culminating in a wave of arson in the late 1970s. The South Bronx, in particular, experienced severe urban decay. The borough began experiencing new population growth starting in the late 1990s and continuing to the present day.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "The Bronx County Historical Society", "text": "The Bronx County Historical Society\n\nThe Bronx County Historical Society is a private non-profit organization that collects and disseminates historical material and information about the New York City borough of the Bronx, as well as southern Westchester County, New York.\n\nThe Society collects items such as books, reports, photographs, objects, and other artifacts about the Bronx as well as archival records documenting groups and individuals in the borough. It provides information to thousands of people each year through its Research Library and The Bronx County Archives, by mail, over the phone, and via digital communication. The Society also works with the New York Public Library's Bronx Library Center and its branch libraries in sharing these resources. The Bronx County Historical Society is digitizing select portions of its collections.\n\nThe Society honors Bronx High School valedictorians with an annual awards ceremony held at the Museum of Bronx History. The Society is also the largest publisher of books and articles about the Bronx and produces the oldest continuously published historical periodical in the New York metropolitan area, \"The Bronx County Historical Society Journal\" (see Publications).", "score": null }, { "id": "2283737", "title": "The Bronx", "text": " Bronx, 1609–1900 (2000), popular ; Ultan, Lloyd. The Bronx in the innocent years, 1890–1925 (1985), popular ; Ultan, Lloyd. The Bronx: It Was Only Yesterday, \"The Bronx: It Was Only Yesterday 1935–1965 (1992), heavily illustrated popular history Ultan, Lloyd. The Bronx in the frontier era: from the beginning to 1696 (1994) ; Ultan, Lloyd. The Beautiful Bronx (1920–1950) (1979), heavily illustrated ; Ultan, Lloyd. The Birth of the Bronx, 1609–1900 (2000), popular ; Ultan, Lloyd. The Bronx in the innocent years, 1890–1925 (1985), popular ; Ultan, Lloyd. The Bronx: It Was Only Yesterday, \"The Bronx: It Was Only Yesterday 1935–1965 (1992), heavily illustrated popular history ", "score": "1.5500925" }, { "id": "6364194", "title": "Lloyd John Ogilvie", "text": " Lloyd John Oglivie, was born in Kenosha, Wisconsin on September 2, 1930. Educated in the public schools of Kenosha, he graduated from Lake Forest College (B.A.) and Garrett Theological Seminary (Th.M.). He conducted postgraduate studies at the New College of the University of Edinburgh in Scotland.", "score": "1.548676" }, { "id": "1757622", "title": "Ricardo P. Lloyd", "text": " Ricardo P Lloyd was born on 20 November 1993 in Ipswich, England. His grandparents were part of the Windrush generation, migrating from Jamaica to England. Lloyd moved to London with his mum when he was very young. He grew up in the London Borough of Brent attending Kensal Rise Primary School now known as Ark Franklin Primary Academy. In his teenage years, he went to the secondary school Capital City Academy, Lloyd performed in the school productions of Bugsy Malone and West Side Story. He then went down a bad path, hanging around with the wrong crowds trying to fit in, which led him to ", "score": "1.5452076" }, { "id": "7856196", "title": "Kevin Lloyd (footballer, born 1958)", "text": " taking up the offer immediately, but it remained open, and he signed for Cardiff in May 1979. Because Darlaston had no contract with Lloyd, they were not entitled to a transfer fee. He was selected as the substitute for the visit to Notts County on the opening day of the 1979–80 Second Division season, and came on in place of Ray Bishop during a 4–1 defeat. The Sports Argus newspaper reported that \"even the Darlaston officials [were] surprised by the speed of Lloyd's promotion.\" That proved to be his only appearance for Cardiff's first team. He moved to Gillingham in July 1980, where he was top scorer for the ", "score": "1.5417082" }, { "id": "31089313", "title": "George Lloyd (actor)", "text": " George Lloyd (November 5, 1892 &ndash; August 15, 1967) was an American vaudevillian and character actor. Born in Edinburg, Illinois, Lloyd appeared in over 270 films between 1932 and 1956.", "score": "1.5403876" }, { "id": "11392433", "title": "Lloyd Waner", "text": " Waner was born on March 16, 1906 in Harrah, Oklahoma, and grew up on a farm with his older brother, Paul. The two worked from dawn to dusk every day, and baseball was their only form of entertainment. Influenced by their father, who was a minor league player in Oklahoma City, Paul and Lloyd's love and natural talent for the game developed over the years. The Waners learned to hit against corncobs and cut down saplings in the woods to use as bats. Lloyd graduated from McLoud High School and attended three semesters at East Central State University in Ada, Oklahoma before going into professional baseball. Waner started his professional baseball career in 1925 with the San Francisco Seals of the Pacific Coast League, but he hit poorly. He was offered a tryout for the Pirates at the urging of his brother, who had been discovered in Ada by Pirates scout Joe Devine. In 1926, he batted .345 in the Class B South Atlantic League. He also won the league's most valuable player award.", "score": "1.5254376" }, { "id": "12121889", "title": "Russell G. Lloyd Sr.", "text": " Russell G. Lloyd Sr. (March 29, 1932 – March 21, 1980) served as the Republican mayor of Evansville, Indiana from 1972 to 1980 and was an alternate delegate from Indiana to the 1972 Republican National Convention. He was the only Republican to be twice elected mayor of Evansville until the 2015 re-election of Lloyd Winnecke. In 1961 Lloyd was appointed attorney for the Legal Aid Society of Vanderburgh County. Evansville citizen Julia Van Orden had a history as a \"constant complainer\" according to city police and had claimed harassment from officials inspecting her home. On March 18, 1980, Van Orden had thrown a brick at ", "score": "1.5222706" }, { "id": "8849111", "title": "G. Lloyd Preacher", "text": " Preacher was born on May 11, 1882 in Fairfax, South Carolina. He graduated from Clemson Agricultural College of South Carolina (now known as Clemson University) in 1904 and found work as a draftsman, a profession he would hold until 1909. In 1911, Preacher won a design competition and soon after began a successful architecture career in Augusta, Georgia. Throughout his career, Preacher designed 417 structures in seven states, including 45 schools in Atlanta.", "score": "1.5219395" }, { "id": "9087079", "title": "Lloyd Herbert Shinners", "text": " Shinners was born in Bluesky, Alberta on September 22, 1918. His family moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin when he was 5, and he went on to graduate valedictorian from Lincoln High School. He continued his education at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where he eventually earned his Ph.D. under Norman Carter Fassett in 1943. He briefly worked for the town of Milwaukee, before moving to Dallas, Texas in 1945.", "score": "1.5214714" }, { "id": "25865988", "title": "William Alvin Lloyd", "text": " Born the son of a tailor in Kentucky on July 4, 1822, William A. Lloyd's family came to Louisville in 1830 where Lloyd came of age, and was apprenticed to his father until the age of twenty-one. Finally opening his own tailoring business, Lloyd married and fathered two children but abruptly left his home and family in 1846 to follow a traveling minstrel troupe, eventually assuming the duties of manager, marketer and prominent impresario. Between bouts of failure, poverty, blackmailing, swindling and serial bigamy, as he traveled throughout the Northeast and Midwest with his troupe, Lloyd was often on the run from the police, leading new minstrel bands and publishing a steamboat and railroad guide, an anti-abolitionist, southern right mouthpiece that excoriated Abraham Lincoln and his administration. When the Civil War began and his latest minstrel band folded because of his hard-handed management and his failure to pay his performers, along with his pro-Confederate stance, he decided he must go south.", "score": "1.5191933" }, { "id": "8849110", "title": "G. Lloyd Preacher", "text": " Geoffrey Lloyd Preacher (May 11, 1882 – June 17, 1972) was an American architect. Based in Atlanta, Preacher and his firm specialized mostly in commercial offices, hotels, and apartment buildings in the Southeastern United States.", "score": "1.5154765" }, { "id": "13176441", "title": "Lloyd Nosler", "text": " Lloyd was born in Riverton, Oregon, to Charles Nosler and Ida Belle Wright. He left school at the age of 14, and worked for a time as a paperboy for The Spokesman Review. He later took on a job as an office boy at Universal Studios after his family relocated to Los Angeles. In 1918, he was given a promotion to the photography department, where he cut his teeth editing Kaiser, Beast of Berlin. The next year, after editing Cassiday of the Air Lanes, he became specifically renowned for cutting action films after catching the eye of Tom Mix. Work on films like Ben Hur followed at MGM; the studio kept him under contract for seven years. In 1937, he went back to school, compelled by a desire to change careers and pursue screenwriting. During World War II, however, he used his editing skills to cut more than 200 service films while serving as a briefing officer in the U.S. Air Force.", "score": "1.5115623" }, { "id": "30983815", "title": "Errol Lloyd", "text": " Born in Lucea, Jamaica, Errol Lloyd was schooled at Munro College in Saint Elizabeth Parish, where he excelled at sports and was an outstanding footballer (described in his schooldays in the early 1960s as being like \"a Rolls Royce in a used car lot\"). He travelled to Britain in 1963, aged 20, to study at the Council of Legal Education with the intention of becoming a lawyer, but that ambition was superseded by his interest in art (he did not complete his legal studies until 1974), although he undertook no formal training in that field. He has said: \"I was self-taught ", "score": "1.5074692" }, { "id": "15589054", "title": "Lloyd A. Free", "text": " Lloyd A. Free (29 September 1908 — 11 November 1996) was a pollster who worked with Hadley Cantril and the Institute for International Social Research (IISR). Lloyd was born in San Jose, California, son of Arthur M. Free, a six-term Congressman. He was a campaign manager for his father, and studied at Princeton University, graduating as valedictorian of the Class of 1930. He went to George Washington University to study law, then transferred to Stanford University where in 1934 he obtained the Bachelor of Law. Most of Free’s career looked beyond his native land: In 1931 he taught political science at Yenching University. Then he served as commentator in the London, England radio studios of BBC ", "score": "1.5058041" }, { "id": "8055723", "title": "Lloyd Wasserbach", "text": " Wasserbach was born Lloyd George Wasserbach on January 30, 1921 in Baileys Harbor, Wisconsin. He died on February 1, 1949 in a hotel fire in Ripon, Wisconsin.", "score": "1.5031469" } ]
In what city was Ivan Khomukha born?
[ "Ipatovo" ]
place of birth
Ivan Khomukha
967,077
79
[ { "id": "29202122", "title": "Ivan Quashigah", "text": " Ivan was born in Keta in the south-western part of Ghana on December 28, 1966. He studied film directing and scriptwriting at the National Film and Television Institute (NAFTI) in Ghana. He also has an Executive master's degree in Governance and Leadership from the GIMPA Graduate School in Ghana.", "score": "1.6794082" }, { "id": "25365374", "title": "Ivan Lyudnikov", "text": " Ivan Lyudnikov was born on 8 October 1902, in Krivaya Kosa in the Don Host Oblast. In 1913, he began working alongside his father at Mine No. 2 in the Shcheglovskogo Coal Mine. He became a coal sorter, then a drainage pump worker in 1914. He became an apprentice turner at the mine workshop in 1915, and in 1916 became a turner.", "score": "1.584939" }, { "id": "13467274", "title": "Ivan Hladush", "text": " Hladush was born on 24 July 1929 in village of Mishuryn Rih, Verkhnodniprovsk Raion, Dnipropetrovsk Okruha (today in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast). In 1951 he graduated the Dnipropetrovsk Autotransportation Technicum.", "score": "1.5676595" }, { "id": "30996547", "title": "Ivan Bekh", "text": " Ivan Bekh (born October 9, 1940) is a professor who currently holds the position of Director of the Institute for Educational Problems. He was born in Vilchya, a village in the Polissya district of the Kiev Oblast province, and he is a respected member of the science and technology fields in Ukraine. Bekh is also a doctor of psychology (Doktor nauk) and an active member of the National Academy of Pedagogical Sciences of Ukraine.", "score": "1.5499696" }, { "id": "13867215", "title": "Ivan Kakovitch", "text": " school, with his two brothers, Thoma and Shurik. In 1956, at the age of 23, Ivan traveled to France and studied classical literature. A few years later, he moved to Strasburg, to further his education in the classics. In 1959, at the age of 26, Ivan moved to Washington, D.C., and obtained work at the Berlitz School of Languages. He taught Russian, French, and Persian. He also worked at the Voice of America simultaneously, interpreting and translating in Russian, French, and Persian. Ivan was also unique within the Assyrian community for his atheist belief system. As he expressed in his famous novel, Mount Semele, Ivan could never conceive the ", "score": "1.5356171" }, { "id": null, "title": "Ivan Khomukha", "text": "Ivan Khomukha\n\nIvan Viktorovich Khomukha (; born 14 July 1994) is a Russian football player who plays for FC Kuban Krasnodar.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:FC KAMAZ Naberezhnye Chelny players", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:FC Kuban Krasnodar (2018) players", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:FC Yenisey Krasnoyarsk players", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:FC Rotor Volgograd players", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "4029779", "title": "Ivan Kozhedub", "text": " Kozhedub was born on 8 June 1920 to a Ukrainian family in the village of Obrazhievka, in Chernigov province, located within what is now the Shostkinsky district of Ukraine. After graduating from his seventh grade of school in his hometown in 1934 he went on to complete two more years of school in Shostka. There he initially worked as a librarian until completing his ninth grade of school in 1936, and from that year to 1940 he attended the Shostka Chemical Technology College. In addition to his studies, he attended training at the local aeroclub, which he graduated from in 1939. He subsequently joined the Red ", "score": "1.5334605" }, { "id": "28603893", "title": "Ivan Kuchuhura-Kucherenko", "text": " Ivan Kucherenko (or as he later became known, Kuchuhura-Kucherenko) was born on July 7, 1878 in the village of Murafa of Bohodukhiv uyezd in the Kharkov Governorate of the Russian Empire. At the age of 3, he became fully blind in his left eye and had some damage in his right eye. At the age of 8, he lost his father and became an orphan. The young Kucherenko had exceptional musical talent which directed him to the lifestyle of a kobzar. He was apprenticed to the kobzar Pavlo Hashchenko and began to perform as a kobzar at the turn of the 20th century.", "score": "1.5290215" }, { "id": "651046", "title": "Ivan Shabanov", "text": " Ivan Shabanov was born in Nizhnyaya Baygora on 18 October 1939. He is Russian by nationality. His mother died when he was two years old, while his father, Mikhail, worked in Ukraine.", "score": "1.5268627" }, { "id": "27768349", "title": "Ivan Moshchuk", "text": " Ivan Nikolaevich Moshchuk was born in Moscow, U.S.S.R., on 5 December 1990. He moved to Metro Detroit at age four with his family after his father accepted an invitation to work at Wayne State University. Soon after, he began taking private lessons with Margarita Molchadskaya, former pedagogue of the central specialized school for gifted children at the Saint Petersburg State Conservatory, named after Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. While still a student at Grosse Pointe South High School, Moshchuk became the first Michigan resident to receive the Gilmore Young Artist Award. He went on to earn a diploma from the Peabody Institute of Johns Hopkins University, where he studied piano performance with Leon Fleisher. Following his studies at the Peabody Institute, Moshchuk relocated to Paris, France, where he became a resident of the Cité internationale des arts.", "score": "1.5231923" }, { "id": "10758889", "title": "Ivan Kulyk", "text": " Kulik was born in the city of Shpola, in the Kiev Governorate of the Russian Empire (now in Cherkasy Oblast, Ukraine) into the family of a Jewish teacher. He finished fourth-grade college in Uman where he moved with his parents. There his first poem was published in the Uman newspaper Provincial voice (\"Провинциальный голос\"), in Russian. In 1911 he enrolled into the Odessa Art academy. In 1914, together with his parents, he emigrated to the United States. There he worked in the factories and mines in Pennsylvania. He began publishing his poems in the local Russian newspaper New world (\"Новый мир\"). In 1914 he became a member of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP). In spring 1917 Kulik travelled through the Russian Far East and Siberia, returning to Kiev where ", "score": "1.5200244" }, { "id": "11008346", "title": "Ivan Moshlyak", "text": " Moshlyak was born on 15 October 1907 in the village of Rodino in Tomsk Governorate, into a peasant family. His father was a veteran of the Russo-Japanese War and moved to Siberia from Ukraine, like most of the villagers. During his childhood, Moshlyak knew the Ukrainian language better than Russian. He graduated from a rural seven-year school in his native village. Engaged in labor since childhood, he joined the Komsomol in 1929.", "score": "1.5166993" }, { "id": "9327835", "title": "Ivan Born", "text": " Born was born on 20 September 1778 in Wesenberg. He was educated from 1794 in the gymnasium of the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences. After leaving school he worked as a proofreader in a printing company and as a private tutor. In 1801, Born formed, with Nikolai Grech and Vasili Popugaev, a literary society which 1803 was officially recognized and chartered as the Free Society of Lovers of Literature, Science, and the Arts. The Society produced various literary works, including the two-part anthology Scroll of the Muses and the St. Petersburg Gazette. Born took a very active part in these endeavors, contributing articles and poems. In 1803 Born became an instructor, then a senior instructor of the Russian language, at the Petrischule, a prestigious German-language secondary school in St. Petersburg. From 1803 to 1805 ", "score": "1.5161095" }, { "id": "13867214", "title": "Ivan Kakovitch", "text": " Ivan Kakovitch (December 9, 1933 in Kiev, USSR – December 22, 2006 in Paris, France) was an Assyrian author, journalist, professor, and a nationalist leader. He wrote the Assyrian manifesto and the novel Mount Semele. An ethnic Assyrian, Ivan's family fled the Assyrian homeland in Iraq, during the Simele massacre of August 1933. The massacre would be a topic that Ivan would be obsessed with all his life. In 1938, at the age of 5, Ivan’s family moved to Kazakhstan, where he began primary school. In 1944, the family moved again, but this time back to an Assyrian community in Tehran, Iran. In Iran, he attended San Louis French ", "score": "1.5156983" }, { "id": "24952972", "title": "Ivan Mosjoukine", "text": " Ivan Mozzhukhin was born in Kondol, in the Saratov Governorate of the Russian Empire (present-day Penza Oblast in Russia), the youngest of four brothers. His mother Rachel Ivanovna Mozzhukhina (née Lastochkina) was the daughter of a Russian Orthodox priest, while his father Ilya Ivanovich Mozzhukhin came from peasants and served as an estate manager for the noble Obolensky family. He inherited this position from his own father — a serf whose children were granted freedom as a gratitude for his service. While all three elder brothers finished seminary, Ivan was sent to the Penza gymnasium for boys and later studied law at ", "score": "1.5151519" }, { "id": "27727445", "title": "Ivan Koshkosh", "text": " Born in Mariupol, Koshkosh is a product of the local Azovstal Mariupol youth sportive school system. He made his debut for FC Mariupol in the Ukrainian Premier League as a start squad player in the losing home match against FC Shakhtar Donetsk on 10 April 2021.", "score": "1.5109158" }, { "id": "6451533", "title": "Ivan Kliun", "text": " His father was a carpenter. In 1881, seeking to improve their economic condition, the family moved to Kyiv. In 1890, they moved again, to Russian Poland. He received his initial artistic education at the Society for the Encouragement of the Fine Arts (Warsaw) in Warsaw, in the 1890s, while working as an accountant. In 1898, he relocated to Moscow, where he frequented the studios of Fyodor Rerberg and Ilya Mashkov. His most important contact, however, came in 1907 when he met Kazimir Malevich and was introduced to the Russian Avant-Garde. This influenced him profoundly, although he joined the Moscow Salon when it was created in 1910 and remained a member until 1916. He originally worked in the Symboloist style but, in 1913, due to the influence of Malevich, ", "score": "1.5070813" }, { "id": "10788626", "title": "Ivan Slezyuk", "text": " Born on 14 January 1896 in the village of Zhyvachiv, Austrian-Hungarian Empire (now in Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast, Ukraine). After graduating from the seminary in 1923, he was ordained a priest on 1923 by Bishop Hryhoriy Khomyshyn. In April 1945 Khomyshyn consecrated him to the Episcopate as his coadjutor with the right of succession as a precaution in case Khomyshyn should be arrested. However, shortly thereafter on 2 June 1945, Slezyuk was arrested and deported for ten years to the labour camps in Vorkuta. In 1950 he was transferred to the labour camps in Mordovia. After his release on 15 November 1954, he returned to Stanislaviv. In 1962, he was arrested for the second time and imprisoned for five years in a camp of strict regimen. After his release on 30 November 1968, he had to often go to the KGB for regular \"talks.\" The last visit was two weeks before his death. He died on 2 December 1973 in Ivano-Frankivsk.", "score": "1.4999536" }, { "id": "15743771", "title": "Ivan Svitlichny", "text": " Ivan Svitlichny was born on 20 September 1929 in Polovykino, Luhansk Oblast to a family of farmers. In 1952 he graduated from the philological faculty at Kharkov University. In 1954 he gained his PhD at Shevchenko Institute of Literature in Kyiv. From 1954 to 1965 he worked as an editor at the literary magazine Dnepr. Svitlichny became close to Vasyl Symonenko and helped circulate his poems in samizdat (typescript literature) and magnitizdat (unofficial audio tape recordings). Svitlichny's poetry in turn was translated into Russian by dissident Yuli Daniel. In the early 1960s, Svitlichny was one of the founders of the Club of Creative Youth in Kyiv. The club of ", "score": "1.496086" }, { "id": "5921810", "title": "Ivan Khandoshkin", "text": " Ivan Khandoshkin was born into a Cossack family near Myrhorod. He was related to the family of Hetman Danylo Apostol. Ivan's father Ostap was trained as a tailor, but eventually became a professional French horn and percussion player in the court orchestra of Tsar Peter III. Ivan studied under Tito Porta with other Italian influences being Domenico dall’Oglio and Pietro Peri. He was a musician at the Russian court, of which he later became kapellmeister, from 1765 and he taught violin at the Yekaterinoslav Musical Academy, founded by Potemkin in 1785. After Potemkin's death Khandoshkin was forced to resign by Giuseppe Sarti who was considered his rival, and returned to St. Petersburg in 1789.", "score": "1.4850696" }, { "id": "27781581", "title": "Ivan Vasilenko", "text": " Ivan Dmitrievich Vasilenko was born January 20, 1895 in the village of Makiivka, in Don Host Oblast (in present-day Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine) in a clerk’s family. Seven years later, his family moved to the city of Taganrog proper. In 1912 Ivan Vasilenko graduated from the 4-year college and became teacher at a village school. He entered the Belgorod pedagogical institute, but was soon dismissed for organization of a Marxist group, because of that the further route for Vasilenko to teaching was closed and he worked as an accountant in the Taganrog Land bank. After October Revolution, he managed trade department, later the department of public education, and gave lessons. During World War II, he contributed to Soviet military newspapers.", "score": "1.4806442" } ]
In what city was Bob Warlick born?
[ "Hickory", "Hickory, North Carolina" ]
place of birth
Bob Warlick
2,748,982
80
[ { "id": "28396692", "title": "Bob Warlick", "text": " Robert Lee Warlick (March 20, 1941 – September 6, 2005) was an American professional basketball player. Warlick was born in Hickory, North Carolina, and attended Ridgeview High School. The 6'5\" guard/forward played at Pueblo Junior College in Colorado, then transferred to Pepperdine University in 1961. At Pepperdine, he helped the school reach the NCAA Tournament after a season in which he averaged 16.4 points and 9.6 rebounds. Warlick then played professionally in the NBA and ABA as a member of the Detroit Pistons, San Francisco Warriors, Milwaukee Bucks, Phoenix Suns, and Los Angeles Stars. He averaged 7.9 points per game in his professional career, which was cut short by a knee injury. Warlick later worked for Purex Industries, then established the Youth Sports Foundation in Long Beach, California. He died of a heart attack in 2005. Warlick's brother, Ernie Warlick, played football for the Buffalo Bills.", "score": "1.9458458" }, { "id": "4586080", "title": "Bob Kulick", "text": " Michael Bolton (1983) ", "score": "1.7313061" }, { "id": "1855346", "title": "Warlick", "text": "Bob Warlick (1941–2005), American basketball player ; David Warlick (born 1952), American educator, author, programmer and public speaker ; Ernie Warlick (1932–2012), American football player ; Hermene Warlick Eichhorn (1906–2001), American musician and composer ; Holly Warlick (born 1958), American women's basketball coach and former player ; James B. Warlick Jr. (born 1956), American diplomat ; Mary Burce Warlick (born 1957), American diplomat ; Tom Warlick (1888–1939), American football player and coach ; Wilson Warlick (1892–1978), American judge Warlick is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.7139099" }, { "id": "4586066", "title": "Bob Kulick", "text": " Robert Joel Kulick (January 16, 1950 – May 28, 2020) was a Grammy award winning American guitarist and record producer, who worked with numerous acts such as Kiss, W.A.S.P., Alice Cooper, Lou Reed, Meat Loaf and Michael Bolton. He was born in Brooklyn, New York, and was the older brother of former Kiss lead guitarist Bruce Kulick.", "score": "1.6708043" }, { "id": "7875223", "title": "Bruce Kulick", "text": " Kulick was born in Brooklyn, New York City and lived in Queens for a time, graduating from Newtown High School. He is Jewish and also went to Hebrew school. Kulick's brother, session guitarist/producer Bob Kulick, was influential in his music career. Bob's performance credits include W.A.S.P., Meat Loaf's touring band, and Kiss.", "score": "1.6492991" }, { "id": null, "title": "Bob Warlick", "text": "Bob Warlick\n\nRobert Lee Warlick (March 20, 1941 – September 6, 2005) was an American professional basketball player.\n\nWarlick was born in Hickory, North Carolina, and attended Ridgeview High School. The 6'5\" guard/forward played at Pueblo Junior College in Colorado, then transferred to Pepperdine University in 1961. At Pepperdine, he helped the school reach the NCAA Tournament after a season in which he averaged 16.4 points and 9.6 rebounds. Warlick then played professionally in the NBA and ABA as a member of the Detroit Pistons, San Francisco Warriors, Milwaukee Bucks, Phoenix Suns, and Los Angeles Stars. He averaged 7.9 points per game in his professional career, which was cut short by a knee injury.<ref name=sg/>\n\nWarlick later worked for Purex Industries, then established the Youth Sports Foundation in Long Beach, California. He died of a heart attack in 2005.<ref name=sg/>\n\nWarlick's brother, Ernie Warlick, played football for the Buffalo Bills.<ref name=sg/>\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Warlick", "text": "Warlick\n\nWarlick is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Holly Warlick", "text": "Holly Warlick\n\nFrances Hollingsworth \"Holly\" Warlick (born June 11, 1958) and held the position until the end of the 2018–19 season. Warlick was inducted into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2001.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:CSU Pueblo ThunderWolves men's basketball players ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Whitey and Hogan", "text": "Whitey and Hogan\n\nWhitey and Hogan (Roy \"Whitey\" Grant born April 7, 1916 in Shelby, North Carolina - died September 17, 2010 in Charlotte, North Carolina and Arval Hogan born July 24, 1911 in Robbinsville, North Carolina - died September 12, 2003 in Charlotte) were an American country music duo active for sixty-six years.", "score": null }, { "id": "4586084", "title": "Bob Kulick", "text": " Afterlife (1993) ", "score": "1.6226852" }, { "id": "32684127", "title": "Bob Koester", "text": " Koester was born in Wichita, Kansas, on October 30, 1932. He began collecting and trading classic 78 rpm records when he was in high school. He studied business and cinematography at Saint Louis University starting in 1951.", "score": "1.6005225" }, { "id": "4586076", "title": "Bob Kulick", "text": "Coney Island Baby (1975) ", "score": "1.5894077" }, { "id": "4586085", "title": "Bob Kulick", "text": " Murderer's Row (1996) ", "score": "1.5832453" }, { "id": "5281026", "title": "Holly Warlick", "text": " Born Frances Hollingsworth Warlick in Knoxville, Tennessee, Warlick played for Tennessee under Pat Summitt where she was a three-time All-American point guard and set several school records. She was also the first player in Tennessee sports history to have her jersey retired at the end of her playing career and was named to the 1980 US Olympic Basketball Team. Warlick played in the Women's Professional Basketball League for the Nebraska Wranglers. She was named a WPBL All-Star in 1981 when the Wranglers captured a championship, and she was inducted into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2001.", "score": "1.5621549" }, { "id": "26613945", "title": "Jacob E. Glick", "text": " He was born on 12 February 1920, in Burlington, Iowa.", "score": "1.5582666" }, { "id": "4586073", "title": "Bob Kulick", "text": "Winchester Cathedral (1966) ", "score": "1.5525962" }, { "id": "1270498", "title": "Wilson Warlick", "text": " Born in Newton, North Carolina, Warlick received a Bachelor of Science degree from Catawba College in 1911 and a Bachelor of Laws from the University of North Carolina School of Law in 1913. He was in private practice of law in Newton from 1913 to 1930. He was a Judge of the Superior Court for the 16th Judicial District of North Carolina from 1931 to 1949.", "score": "1.5512578" }, { "id": "4586086", "title": "Bob Kulick", "text": "Calling the Wild (2000) ", "score": "1.5455116" }, { "id": "29054198", "title": "Gene B. Glick", "text": " Eugene Biccard Glick was born in Indianapolis on August 29, 1921, the eldest son of Reuben and Faye Biccard Glick. The family was Jewish of German ancestry. His younger brother, Arthur, died of spinal meningitis in 1937. Gene attended Shortridge High School at the same time as author Kurt Vonnegut. While attending Indiana University in Bloomington, he operated a charter bus service for students. After graduating from Indiana University in December 1942 with a bachelor's degree in business, Glick enlisted in the United States Army. Glick served as an infantry combat instructor until June 1944, when he was deployed to Italy. He soon requested a transfer to ", "score": "1.5430651" }, { "id": "8097256", "title": "Al Barlick", "text": " Barlick was born in Springfield, Illinois. His father, an Austrian immigrant, worked for 50 years at a Peabody coal mine. Barlick dropped out of high school after two years to support his family. He joined the Civilian Conservation Corps, and spent six months in Washington and six months in Wisconsin. When Barlick's brother died, he returned to the coal mine to assist his father. Barlick said that he did not play much baseball as a youngster, but that he often watched the game. During a coal mine strike, a 19-year-old Barlick was offered $1 ($0) to umpire his first game. He played outfield in semipro baseball, but he was described as \"mediocre.\" In August 1936, the Class-D Northeast Arkansas League was in need of a replacement umpire, and hired Barlick for the last 4 weeks of the season. In 1937, Barlick was hired by the Class-B Piedmont League, moved to the Eastern League in 1939, and was promoted to the International League later that season.", "score": "1.5410292" }, { "id": "4648683", "title": "Gene Havlick", "text": " Eugene Charles Havlicek was born in Enid, Oklahoma to Frank Havlicek and Agnes Petricka, of Czech descent. His parents married in Heidelberg, Minnesota. Frank was a cabinet-maker, and later, an undertaker. By 1900, the family went by \"Havlick\".", "score": "1.5388505" }, { "id": "7494315", "title": "Bob DiLuca", "text": " DiLuca was born in Italy and was raised in Belgium and Canada.", "score": "1.5378073" }, { "id": "9030345", "title": "Bob Schloredt", "text": " Schloredt was born in Deadwood, South Dakota in 1939 and attended Gresham High School in suburban Portland. He was blinded in his left eye from a fireworks injury suffered at the age of five.", "score": "1.5373387" }, { "id": "26740444", "title": "John Glick", "text": " John Glick was born on 1 July 1938 in Detroit, Michigan. The child of two parents with an affinity for art, Glick began his life surrounded by creativity. His father, a grocery store manager, had an interest in gardening and painting; his mother, a homemaker, enjoyed cooking, sewing, and crafts. From a young age, Glick was included in his parents' projects, and he began formally studying art himself in high school. As a student at Wayne State University, Glick studied geology for one semester, but quickly decided to major in both ceramics and metalwork instead. He earned his BFA degree in 1960. ", "score": "1.5344551" } ]
In what city was Clarence Beck born?
[ "Harrisburg", "Capital of Pennsylvania", "Harrisburg, Pennsylvania" ]
place of birth
Clarence Beck
3,746,560
65
[ { "id": "25806561", "title": "Fred Beck", "text": " Born and raised in Havana, Illinois, Beck got his start in organized baseball with semi-pro teams in Havana. He began his professional career with Bloomington of the Illinois–Indiana–Iowa League in 1905. The team planned to use Beck as a pitcher, but he had problems throwing strikes, so he was placed in the outfield. He played with Bloomington until mid-1908, when he was sold to the San Francisco Seals of the Pacific Coast League for $750. Beck made his major-league debut with the Boston Doves in 1909. In, he tied for the major league lead in home runs with 10. He split 1911 between the Cincinnati ", "score": "1.5717524" }, { "id": "32270077", "title": "Clarence Major", "text": " Clarence Major was born on December 31, 1936, in Atlanta, Georgia, and grew up in Chicago, Illinois. As a teenager he started drawing and painting, writing poetry and fiction. In his early twenties he started publishing his own literary magazine, Coercion Review, which featured poets and writers such as Henry Miller, Kenneth Patchen and Lawrence Ferlinghetti. As a teenager Major was influenced by the monumental Van Gogh Exhibition of Paintings and Drawings at the Art Institute of Chicago, February 1 – April 16, 1950. After a stint in the Air Force he left the Midwest and moved to New York ", "score": "1.5712612" }, { "id": "6459298", "title": "Jackson Beck", "text": " Beck was born on July 23, 1912, in New York City. Beck's father, Max Beck, was a silent film actor.", "score": "1.5711892" }, { "id": "14484435", "title": "C. C. Beck", "text": " Charles Clarence Beck (June 8, 1910 – November 22, 1989) was an American cartoonist and comic book artist, best known for his work on Captain Marvel (today known as Shazam!) at Fawcett Comics and DC Comics. He was inducted into the comic book industry's Will Eisner Comic Book Hall of Fame in 1993 and the Jack Kirby Hall of Fame in 1997.", "score": "1.5689671" }, { "id": "14917465", "title": "Bruce Beck", "text": " Beck grew up in Livingston, New Jersey, where his mother Doris Beck twice served as mayor. She was the first female mayor of any Essex County municipality. He was a student athlete at Livingston High School. He graduated from high school in 1974 and was inducted into the school's hall of fame in 1993. A graduate of Ithaca College in Ithaca, New York, Beck received a Bachelor of Science degree in 1978. Bruce and his wife, Janet, currently reside in Westchester County, New York. The Becks have two sons, Jonathan and Michael, and two daughters-in-law, Jordana and Calie. Each Thanksgiving, Beck and his family serve those in need at the St. John's Bread and Life Program, the largest soup kitchen in Brooklyn. In 2015, the Becks received the Johnny's Angel Award for ", "score": "1.561166" }, { "id": null, "title": "C. C. Beck", "text": "C. C. Beck\n\nCharles Clarence Beck (June 8, 1910 – November 22, 1989) was an American cartoonist and comic book artist, best known for his work on Captain Marvel (today known as Shazam!) at Fawcett Comics and DC Comics.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Clarence Beck", "text": "Clarence Beck\n\nClarence Robert Beck (March 13, 1896 – August 20, 1962) was a professional football player from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Beck attended high school at Harrisburg Tech where he scored a 105-yard touchdown for Tech against their rival Steelton. After high school, Beck attended Pennsylvania State University where he became a star offensive tackle. Beck made his professional debut in the National Football League in 1925 with the Pottsville Maroons. He played in the NFL for one season. Prior to that, he played for the independent Union Quakers of Philadelphia in 1921.\n\nIn 1924 Beck helped the Maroons win the 1924 Anthracite League championship. This move placed Clarence with his brother, Carl, on the Maroons team. In 1925 the Maroons entered the NFL. That year Clarence played on the Maroons team that won the 1925 NFL Championship, before it was stripped from the team due to a disputed rules violation.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ohio Players", "text": "Ohio Players\n\nOhio Players is an American funk band, most popular in the 1970s. They are best known for their songs \"Fire\" and \"Love Rollercoaster\", and for their erotic album covers that featured nude or nearly nude women. Many of the women were models featured in \"Playboy\".\n\nThe singles \"Funky Worm\", \"Skin Tight\", \"Fire\", and \"Love Rollercoaster\", and their albums \"Skin Tight\", \"Fire\", and \"Honey\", were awarded Gold certification.\n\nOn August 17, 2013, Ohio Players were inducted into the inaugural class of the Rhythm and Blues Music Hall of Fame that took place at Cleveland State University in Cleveland, Ohio.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Sally Rand", "text": "Sally Rand\n\nSally Rand (born Helen Gould Beck; April 3, 1904 – August 31, 1979) was an American burlesque dancer, vedette, and actress, famous for her ostrich feather fan dance and balloon bubble dance. She also performed under the name Billie Beck.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Bill Parker (comics)", "text": "Bill Parker (comics)\n\nWilliam Lee Parker (September 11, 1911 – January 31, 1963) was an American comic book writer and editor. He is best known for creating the Fawcett Comics character, Captain Marvel, in 1939, along with artist C. C. Beck.", "score": null }, { "id": "32935002", "title": "Clarence Stein", "text": " Clarence Samuel Stein (June 19, 1882 – February 7, 1975) was an American urban planner, architect, and writer, a major proponent of the garden city movement in the United States.", "score": "1.5606526" }, { "id": "11166369", "title": "Julian Beck", "text": " Beck was born on May 31, 1925 in the Washington Heights section of Manhattan in New York City, the son of Mabel Lucille (née Blum), a teacher, and Irving Beck, a businessman. He briefly attended Yale University, but dropped out to pursue writing and art. He was an abstract expressionist painter in the 1940s, but his career turned upon meeting his future wife. In 1943, he met Judith Malina (born 1926) and quickly came to share her passion for theatre; they founded The Living Theatre in 1947.", "score": "1.5541134" }, { "id": "29989489", "title": "John J. Beck", "text": " Beck was born in Ford City, Pennsylvania on January 8, 1900. Beck attended the University of Pittsburgh.", "score": "1.5515232" }, { "id": "14484436", "title": "C. C. Beck", "text": " C. C. Beck was born on June 8, 1910, in Zumbrota, Minnesota. Beck's father was a Lutheran minister. Beck's mother was a schoolteacher. He studied at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts and the University of Minnesota, and also took an art correspondence course.", "score": "1.5495414" }, { "id": "12510732", "title": "Dave Beck", "text": " David Daniel Beck was born in Stockton, California, to Lemuel and Mary (Tierney) Beck. His father was a carpet cleaner. The Becks moved to Seattle, Washington when Dave was 4 years old. He had one sibling, a younger sister named Reba, and his family was poor. He attended Broadway High School but was forced to quit at the age of 16 in order to go to work. In 1910, Beck took a job as a laundry worker and joined his first labor union, the Laundry Workers International Union, despite being just 16 years of age, securing a more lucrative position driving a laundry truck shortly thereafter. Following a short-lived strike in 1917, Beck helped to organize and establish Local 566 of the Teamsters Union. He was drafted in World War I and served as a machinist’s mate and gunner in England with the United States Navy.", "score": "1.5474386" }, { "id": "10601760", "title": "Martin Beck (vaudeville)", "text": " Martin Beck was born to a Jewish family on July 31, 1868, in Liptószentmiklós, Kingdom of Hungary (now Liptovský Mikuláš, Slovakia). He went with a group of actors on the SS Elbe from Bremen, Germany, to the United States in May 1884, where he worked as a waiter in a beer garden in Chicago, Illinois. He went to San Francisco with the Schiller Vaudeville Company, then gained citizenship in the United States in October 1889. When the Orpheum Theatre in San Francisco was bought by Morris Meyerfeld Jr. in 1899, he worked with Morris to acquire more theaters. By 1905, Beck was running the organization. In 1910 he formed the United Booking Offices with Alfred Butt.", "score": "1.5469651" }, { "id": "4513152", "title": "Billy Beck", "text": " Billy Beck (born Frank Billerbeck; May 26, 1920 &ndash; June 29, 2011) was an American clown and character actor.", "score": "1.545155" }, { "id": "13188470", "title": "Stanley D. Beck", "text": " Beck was born in Portland, Oregon but grew up in small towns in Washington state. He became interested in insects at a young age and joined Washington State University after earning money by working in a lumber mill for a year with some seasons spent on an experimental apple orchard. He graduated in 1942 and joined the US Navy in 1942 working aboard a mine-sweeper. After the war, he joined the University of Wisconsin, Madison as a research assistant followed by work as an instructor of entomology. He suffered from polio in 1952 and his limbs were largely paralyzed and was restricted to a wheelchair. He learned to strike typewriter keyboards with a pencil held in his ", "score": "1.5427853" }, { "id": "9004480", "title": "Samuel J. Beck", "text": " Beck was born in Alsace-Lorraine on April 22, 1835, to John Baptist Beck Sr, and Marguerithe Beck, and about 1838 the family emigrated to the United States. In 1849 the young Beck \"fought his way into Montana,\" to an area that is now the city of Bozeman. As a wounded veteran of \"Many conflicts with the Sioux Indians\" in Oregon and Montana, he drew a survivor's pension for fourteen years. He was graduated from F.T. Kefnper's Collegiate School in Booneville, Missouri, in 1853 and then studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he earned a degree as a metallurgist in 1870. He also became a lawyer that year. He visited Los Angeles in 1869 at the behest of the W.H. Workman family and bought a vineyard on San Pedro Street, then moved to the city in 1876. He and Workman had been classmates in Booneville.", "score": "1.5409545" }, { "id": "32360993", "title": "Lewis White Beck", "text": " Born in Griffin, Georgia, Beck received his bachelor's degree from Emory University in 1934, his master's degree from Duke University in 1935, and his doctoral degree from Duke University in 1937. Before moving to Rochester, he was an international student at the University of Berlin (1937–38; an interview about his experiences there appeared in The Atlanta Constitution, Sept. 18, 1938), an instructor at Emory University (1938–41), assistant professor at the University of Delaware (1941–46), and associate professor at Lehigh University (1946–48), eventually becoming professor (1948–49). He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1963. He retired in 1979 and died at age 83 in Rochester, New York.", "score": "1.534294" }, { "id": "7825527", "title": "Arthello Beck", "text": " Arthello Beck Jr. (July 17, 1941 – November 5, 2004) was an American artist. He often painted scenes of places he had visited, using a variety of mediums, including oils, watercolors, and charcoal. Beck was born in Dallas, Texas, and attended Lincoln High School, where he received his only formal art training. Afterwards, he worked for the United States Postal Service, as well as various other jobs before becoming a professional artist. He is possibly known best for his works from the 1960s dealing with the Civil Rights Movement, although Beck commonly featured other subjects, including children, religion, and human interaction, particularly in the African-American community in the southern regions of the United States. A longtime resident of Oak Cliff, Beck was a firm believer in grassroots movements, and established the Arthello Beck Gallery, which became a centerpiece of the Dallas area art scene in the 1970s and 80s, and was instrumental to the careers of many black artists. Beck was a member of the National Conference of Artists and the Southwest Alliance of African American Artists, and was one of the founders of the Southwest Black Artists Guild.", "score": "1.5267763" }, { "id": "15734435", "title": "Joel Beck", "text": " Born in Ross, California, Beck grew up in El Sobrante, California, as an ill and bedridden child, who battled a combination of tuberculosis and spinal meningitis. In Richmond, California, while attending De Anza High School, he began a lifelong friendship with the cartoonist Roger Brand. Visiting UC Berkeley, he started submitting cartoons to the campus humor magazine, The Pelican, slipping them under the door to editors who believed he was a college student. Soon he dropped out of high school and never graduated. In the early 1960s, he drew studio cards for Box Cards. He lived for several months in Manhattan in 1962 before returning to the West Coast.", "score": "1.5249321" }, { "id": "2869685", "title": "Raphael Beck (artist)", "text": " Abram Raphael Beck (November 16, 1858 – May 29, 1947) was an American artist born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. He is best known for his work related to the Pan-American Exposition.", "score": "1.5226195" }, { "id": "30549012", "title": "Clarence Lightner", "text": " Clarence Everett Lightner was born on August 15, 1921 in Raleigh, North Carolina, to Mammie Blackmon and Calvin E. Lightner. He was the youngest of four children. Calvin Lightner founded the Lightner Funeral Home in 1911 and made an unsuccessful bid for a seat on the Raleigh City Council in 1919. Though the city was racially segregated at the time, Clarence—who was black—was raised at the edge of a white neighborhood and frequently played sports with white children in his youth. He attended public schools in Raleigh, and spent much of his free time in high school assisting his father in the funeral ", "score": "1.5215893" }, { "id": "9323338", "title": "William Thomas Beck", "text": " Born in Castlemaine, Australia on 7 May 1865, Beck was the son of Sarah Beck ( Taylor) and her husband Richard Beck. Beck and his family settled in Dunedin, New Zealand shortly after his birth. Beck married Edith Chick on 8 June 1896, in Port Chalmers, New Zealand. They had three children during their marriage.", "score": "1.5203876" } ]
In what city was Aloïs Boudry born?
[ "Ypres", "leper" ]
place of birth
Aloïs Boudry
2,312,795
86
[ { "id": "26691958", "title": "Aloïs Boudry", "text": " Aloïs Boudry (12 August 1851, Ypres – 27 November 1938, Antwerp) was a Belgian painter known for his portraits, still lifes and interiors.", "score": "1.7389262" }, { "id": "14899604", "title": "Alphonse Boudard", "text": " Boudard was born in Paris, an illegitimate child. He was brought up first by an adoptive family in the Loiret region of the center of France, then by his grand mother in the south of Paris. Boudard had a late career. As a teenager he was living in a country occupied by the German Army. He was wounded fighting for the French and he was awarded a military medal. His early adult life was spent in casual work, periods in jail and in a sanatorium recovering from tuberculosis. He experimented with writing, but it was not until he was 33 that he decided to be a full-time writer. He credits the writer Albert Paraz ", "score": "1.6260707" }, { "id": "26691959", "title": "Aloïs Boudry", "text": " He studied at the art schools in Ypres and Roeselare and finished at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts (Antwerp), where his teachers were Nicaise De Keyser and Jozef Van Lerius. In 1885, he joined \"Als ik Kan\" (If I Can), an association of visual artists devoted to preserving traditional methods. He participated in the exposition \"Brussels International 1910\", where he won a silver medal. When the seaside resort of Knokke-Heist began a promotional campaign in 1913, he designed the posters, which became well-known. At the outbreak of World War I, he fled to England and established himself as a portraitist. In 1917, he moved to Italy to await the end of the war, then returned to Belgium. Wherever he was, he sought out humble people as the subjects for his paintings. His depictions of the fisherman of Nieuwpoort are especially popular. Many of them can be seen at the National Fishery Museum in Oostduinkerke. His son, Robert (1872-1961), was also a painter, as was his grandson Paul Boudry (1913-1976). His great-granddaughter, Nele, is currently a painter in Ghent.", "score": "1.5938933" }, { "id": "6364781", "title": "Alphonse Poaty-Souchlaty", "text": " Poaty-Souchlaty was born in Kouilou Department in 1941, to Alphonse Souchlaty-Poaty the Elder (died March 24, 1946), ivoirier and traveler, and Alphonsine Ndoko Ntondo.", "score": "1.5465842" }, { "id": "32056735", "title": "René Olry", "text": " Olry was born on 28 June 1880 in Lille in the Nord-Pas-de-Calais region of France. The son of Albert Olry, himself a polytechnicien, Olry was admitted to the École Polytechnique in 1900. Upon graduating, he joined the 21st Artillery Regiment and was appointed the rank of lieutenant on 10 October 1904.", "score": "1.5150785" }, { "id": null, "title": "Aloïs Boudry", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jozef Van Lerius", "text": "Jozef Van Lerius\n\nJoseph Henri François Van Lerius (23 December 1823, Antwerp – 29 February 1876, Mechelen) was a Belgian painter in the Romantic-Historical style.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Nicaise de Keyser", "text": "Nicaise de Keyser\n\nNicaise de Keyser (alternative first names: Nicaas, Nikaas of Nicasius; 26 August 1813, Zandvliet – 17 July 1887, Antwerp) was a Belgian painter of mainly history paintings and portraits who was one of the key figures in the Belgian Romantic-historical school of painting.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "1851 in Belgium", "text": "1851 in Belgium\n\nEvents in the year 1851 in Belgium.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "3665730", "title": "Jean Albert Gaudry", "text": "organised beings have little by little been transformed, we shall regard them as plastic substances which an artist has been pleased to knead during the immense course of ages, lengthening here, broadening or diminishing there, as the sculptor, with a piece of clay, produces a thousand forms, following the impulse of his genius. But we shall not doubt that the artist was the Creator himself, for each transformation has borne a reflection of his infinite beauty. Jean Albert Gaudry Jean Albert Gaudry (September 16, 1827 – November 27, 1908), French geologist and palaeontologist, was born at St Germain-en-Laye, and was", "score": "1.449127" }, { "id": "13184046", "title": "Charles-Valentin Alkan", "text": " Alkan was born Charles-Valentin Morhange on 30 November 1813 at 1, Rue de Braque in Paris to Alkan Morhange (1780–1855) and Julie Morhange, née Abraham. Alkan Morhange was descended from a long-established Jewish Ashkenazic community in the region of Metz; the village of Morhange is located about 30 mi from the city of Metz. Charles-Valentin was the second of six children – one elder sister and four younger brothers; his birth certificate indicates that he was named after a neighbour who witnessed the birth. Alkan Morhange supported the family as a musician and later as the proprietor of a private music school in le Marais, in the Jewish quarter of Paris. At an early age, Charles-Valentin and his siblings adopted their father's first name as their last (and were known by this during their studies at the Conservatoire de Paris and subsequent careers). His brother Napoléon (1826–1906) became professor of solfège at the Conservatoire, his brother Maxim (1818–1897) had a career writing light music for Parisian theatres, and his sister, Céleste (1812–1897), was a singer. His brother Ernest (1816–1876) was a professional flautist, while the youngest brother Gustave (1827–1882) was to publish various dances for the piano.", "score": "1.4948065" }, { "id": "13676955", "title": "Alex Bodry", "text": " Born 3 October 1958 in Dudelange, Bodry lived there since childhood. Coming from a family of socialist tradition (his grandfather Jean Fohrmann, was Member of Parliament and Mayor, union activist, member of the High authority of the ESCS and resistant fighter and his aunt Marthe Bigelbach-Fohrmann, was a socialist Member of Parliament from 1974 to 1979), he entered the Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party at the age of 15. After his secondary education at the Lycée des Garçons in Esch-sur-Alzette, he studied law at the Sorbonne University (Paris I) where he passed his master's degree and became lawyer in Luxembourg. Neither his university studies, nor his professional ", "score": "1.4937842" }, { "id": "27580260", "title": "Alois Moyo", "text": " He was born on 28 October 1966 in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. He currently lives in Germany.", "score": "1.4825764" }, { "id": "2335595", "title": "Georges Journois", "text": " Journois was born on 13 November 1896 to Pierre Hyppolite Journois (4 March 1858 – 7 January 1935) and Henriette Grillière (7 February 1858 – 27 June 1906). Journois had a sister Georgette and a brother Roger, fraternal twins born on 21 April 1903. Roger died in infancy in December 1904. Journois lived in the commune of Bosc-Bordel in the Normandy region of France, and went to elementary school there until he and his family moved to the commune of Buchy in northern France in 1906. On 27 June of that year, Journois's mother died; his father remarried on 6 October 1908 to Anne Marie Grebeauval. Following the move, Journois went to elementary school in Buchy. Later, he was sent to boarding school at Armentières in northern France. He was an excellent student and was accepted at the School of Arts and Crafts in Armentières where he hoped to become an engineer.", "score": "1.4824207" }, { "id": "12916676", "title": "Albert Bitran", "text": " Albert Bitran was born in 1931, in a Jewish Sephardic family, in Istanbul, Turkey. After his studies at the French Collège Saint Michel, having both diplomas in French and Turkish, he is admitted in the Ecole Spéciale d’Architecture, in Paris. In 1948, at seventeen, he arrives in Montparnasse, knowing already that he wants to become a painter, not an architect. Leaving the school after 8 months, he moves into a studio at the American pavillon of the Cité Universitaire, where he joins the circle of expatriated artists who had come to Paris for inspiration: Ellsworth Kelly and Jack Youngerman from the U.S, many South Americans, Ricardo Porro ", "score": "1.4771922" }, { "id": "13075124", "title": "Caudry", "text": "André Piettre (1906-1994) - French economist, born in Caudry. ; Lucien Janssoone (1898-1944) - French Resistant, director of the ‘Complementary Classes For Boys’ in Caudry from October 1933, shot in 1944. ; Charles Lemaire (born 1985) – French actor from Caudry. ; Arthur Ramette (born in Caudry, Nord, on 12 October 1897 - 15 December 1988) was a French mechanic, communist and politician. He was a leading representative of the French Communist Party in the National Assembly both before and after World War II (1939–45). ; Gaston Pigot (1885 - 1969) - French boxer, born in Caudry. ; Lucienne Bogaert (1892-1983) - ", "score": "1.4765749" }, { "id": "25003884", "title": "Jean Haudry", "text": " Jean Haudry was born on 28 May 1934 in Le Perreux-sur-Marne, in the eastern suburbs of Paris. He became agrégé in grammar studies at the École Normale Supérieure in 1959, and earned a PhD in linguistics in 1975 after a thesis on Vedic Sanskrit grammatical cases. From 1974–1975, he has been a member of the patronage committee of Nouvelle École, a review published by GRECE, an ethno-nationalist think tank led by Alain de Benoist. Haudry acted as the chairman of GRECE at its 13th symposium in 1978. Haudry was a member of the Institute of Formation of the Front National (FN) of Jean-Marie Le Pen. He also served in the \"Scientific Council\" of the FN until the late 1990s, when he decided to follow Bruno Mégret and his splinter party Mouvement National Républicain. In 1980, he co-founded with GRECE members Jean-Paul ", "score": "1.4752543" }, { "id": "32015290", "title": "Alois Carigiet", "text": " Alois Carigiet was the seventh of eleven children born to Alois Carigiet and Barbara Maria Carigiet, née Lombriser; the actor and comedian Zarli Carigiet was one younger brother. It was a farm family in Trun in the canton of Graubünden, where he grew up and spent his first school years. At home, the family spoke Sursilvan, the local Romansh dialect of the anterior Rhine valley. In 1911, economic hardship forced them to move to the canton's German-speaking capital Chur where his father found employment. This relocation into a more urban environment had a strong impact on the nine-year-old. In retrospect, Carigiet described the move as an \"emigration to the low-lands\", from a \"mountain boy's paradise\" to a \"gloomy apartment on the ground floor in a narrow town alley\". Carigiet visited primary and secondary schools in Chur, as well ", "score": "1.4710045" }, { "id": "3864993", "title": "Ian Boucard", "text": " Ian Boucard was born on 5 May 1988 in Belfort, Territoire de Belfort, to a 19-year-old mother who temporarily suspended her studies in order to raise him. Initially raised in the Résidences district in his first few years, he grew up in the Dardel district, and was educated in public schools in Belfort, at the École élémentaire publique Les Barrès, Collège Léonard de Vinci, and Lycée Condorcet, taking preparatory classes for business school at the Lycée Courbet. He started coaching youth teams at ASM Belfort at the age of 15, and has continued to supervise teams across all youth age groups since then, including during his studies and professional career, which allowed him to secure an internship at L'Oréal. He studied at the ESC Dijon Bourgogne for two years, and subsequently entered the supermarket sector, employed by Unilever and Super U. He was the official announcer for ASM Belfort at its home stadium Stade Roger-Serzian during Championnat National 2 matches from 2012 to 2017.", "score": "1.4652591" }, { "id": "11689813", "title": "John Aloisi", "text": " Born in Adelaide, South Australia, Aloisi arrived in Europe aged 16, signing with Standard Liège from Adelaide City. He did not appear in any official games for the club, and also played sparingly for his next team, fellow top division outfit Royal Antwerp FC. In November 1995, Aloisi signed for Italian side US Cremonese. On the 25th, after only two minutes on the pitch, he scored in a 2–1 home win against Calcio Padova, becoming the youngest foreign player ever to score in a Serie A match. Ultimately, the Lombardy team suffered two consecutive relegations, and he left the club. Aloisi arrived in English football early in the 1997–98 season, signing for Portsmouth in ", "score": "1.4639251" }, { "id": "8093261", "title": "Elmyr de Hory", "text": " De Hory claimed that he was born into an aristocratic family, that his father was an Austro-Hungarian ambassador and that his mother came from a family of bankers. However, subsequent investigation has suggested that de Hory's childhood was, more likely, of a middle-class variety; he was born Elemér Albert Hoffmann on April 14, 1906. (An acquaintance, Fernand Legros, said that de Hory was born in Budapest (Hungary) 14 April 1905, but that de Hory would change the date to 1914 to appear younger. ) Both his parents were Jewish. His father's occupation was listed as \"wholesaler of handcrafted goods.\" His parents did not divorce when he was sixteen, as he had ", "score": "1.4596887" }, { "id": "10521467", "title": "Paul Éluard", "text": " Paul Eluard was born in Saint-Denis, Seine-Saint-Denis, France, the son of Eugène Clément Grindel and wife Jeanne-Marie née Cousin. His father was an accountant when Paul was born but soon opened a real estate agency. His mother was a seamstress. Around 1908, the family moved to Paris, rue Louis Blanc. Éluard attended the local school in Aulnay-sous-Bois before obtaining a scholarship to attend the École Supérieure de Colbert. At the age of 16, he contracted tuberculosis, interrupted his studies, and remained hospitalized until April 1914 in the Clavadel sanatorium near Davos. There he met a young Russian girl of his age, Helena Diakonova, ", "score": "1.4574758" }, { "id": "11012213", "title": "Wissam Boustany", "text": " Boustany was born in Beirut, Lebanon, the son of a pipeline engineer, Fayez Boustany. His mother, Nadia Saba, is of Palestinian descent. Raised in Lebanon, Wissam studied flute with Dr Hussam Yacoub (Iraqi flute player) and his step-father Emile Nouné (Lebanese violinist). In 1977, at the age of 17, Boustany left Lebanon and the civil war behind to study with Trevor Wye at Chetham's School of Music and the Royal Northern College of Music (RNCM) in Manchester, England, graduating from the RNCM in 1982.", "score": "1.455744" }, { "id": "10080584", "title": "Paul Léautaud", "text": " He was born in Paris. Abandoned by his mother, an opera singer, soon after birth, his father Firmin, brought him up. The two lived in no 13 and later no 21 of Rue des Martyrs, in Courbevoie. “''At that time, my father used to go down to the cafe every morning, before lunch. He had thirteen dogs. He was walking down the rue des Martyrs with his dogs and holding a whip in his hand which he did not use for dogs.''\" Léautaud became interested in the Comédie-Française and wondered around the corridors and backstage of the theater. His father remarried and had another son, Maurice. Léautaud studied at the Courbevoie municipal school where he met Adolphe van Bever. In 1887, at the age of 15, he moved to Paris to work doing small jobs. \"For eight years I ate lunch and dinner on a ", "score": "1.4539181" }, { "id": "5950125", "title": "Franck Bohbot", "text": " Bohbot was born in a suburb of Paris in 1980 and moved to New York City in 2013.", "score": "1.4535844" } ]
In what city was Tony Shields born?
[ "Strabane", "Straban", "An Srath Bán", "An Srath Ban" ]
place of birth
Tony Shields
6,020,401
73
[ { "id": "2378566", "title": "Tony Shields", "text": " Anthony Shields (born 4 June 1980) in Strabane, Northern Ireland is an Irish professional footballer who played as a midfielder for Finn Harps. He played for Peterborough United in the Football League.", "score": "1.8840146" }, { "id": "6183734", "title": "Kevin Shields", "text": " Kevin Patrick Shields was born on 21 May 1963 in Jamaica Hospital in Queens, New York City, United States. He is the eldest of five siblings born to Irish parents; his mother was a nurse and his father was an executive in the food industry. Shields' parents had emigrated from Ireland to the United States in the 1950s, when the couple were teenagers. Shields attended Christ the King, a Roman Catholic primary school which he described as \"a really horrible school run by psychopathic nuns\". They lived in Flushing, a neighbourhood in north-central Queens, relocating to Commack, Long Island, when Shields was four, where he lived until the age of ten. In 1973, Shields returned to Dublin, Ireland, with his ", "score": "1.660146" }, { "id": "16208786", "title": "Albert F. Shields", "text": " Albert Shields was born in Cleveland, Ohio. He was the son of an unprosperous family. He studied at the Stevens Institute of Technology, where he received his master’s degree in 1933. He then received a scholarship from the Deutschen Akademischen Austauschdienst and studied in Germany at the Preussische Versuchsanstalt für Wasserbau und Schiffbau (Prussian Research Institute for Water and Shipbuilding); PVWS). His intention was to get his PhD there on a subject in shipbuilding (the TH Berlin was at that time leading in this area). However, the grant was very limited and only covered the cost of living in Germany and not the travel costs. Shields paid for his crossing by working on a freighter to Germany.", "score": "1.6232944" }, { "id": "13700961", "title": "Will Shields", "text": " Shields was born in Fort Riley, Kansas. He graduated from Lawton High School in Lawton, Oklahoma, where he played for the Lawton Wolverines high school football team.", "score": "1.6221642" }, { "id": "25897130", "title": "Mark Shields", "text": " Shields was born and raised in Weymouth, Massachusetts, in an Irish Catholic family. He graduated from the University of Notre Dame in 1959.", "score": "1.6201339" }, { "id": null, "title": "Tony Shields", "text": "Tony Shields\n\nAnthony Shields (born 4 June 1980) in Strabane, Northern Ireland is an Irish professional footballer who played as a midfielder for Finn Harps. He played for Peterborough United in the Football League.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "André De Shields", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Tony \"Doc\" Shiels", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ridley Scott", "text": "Ridley Scott\n\nSir Ridley Scott (born 30 November 1937) is a British film director and producer. Directing, among others, science fiction films, his work is known for its atmospheric and highly concentrated visual style. Scott has received many accolades throughout his career, including the BAFTA Fellowship for lifetime achievement from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts in 2018. In 2003, he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II for services to the British film industry. He was inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame in 2007, and received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2011.\n\nAn alumnus of the Royal College of Art in London, Scott began his career in television as a designer and director before moving into advertising, where he honed his filmmaking skills by making mini-films for television commercials. He made his debut as a film director with \"The Duellists\" (1977) and gained wider recognition with his next film, \"Alien\" (1979). Three years later he would direct \"Blade Runner\", which Scott calls his \"most complete and personal film\". Though his films range widely in setting and period, they frequently showcase memorable imagery of urban environments, spanning 2nd-century Rome in \"Gladiator\" (2000), 12th-century Jerusalem in \"Kingdom of Heaven\" (2005), Medieval England in \"Robin Hood\" (2010), contemporary Mogadishu in \"Black Hawk Down\" (2001), or the futuristic cityscapes of \"Blade Runner\" and different planets in \"Alien\", \"Prometheus\" (2012), \"The Martian\" (2015) and \"\" (2017). Several of his films are also known for their strong female characters, such as \"Thelma & Louise\" (1991).\n\nScott has been nominated for three Academy Awards for Directing, which he received for \"Thelma & Louise\", \"Gladiator\" and \"Black Hawk Down\". In a 2004 BBC poll, Scott was ranked 10 on the list of most influential people in British culture.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Tony Anthony", "text": "Tony Anthony\n\nDarrell W. Anthony (born April 12, 1960) is a retired American professional wrestler, also known by his ring name Dirty White Boy. He wrestled primarily for independent promotions in the Southeastern United States. He was most active throughout the 1980s and 1990s in the Tennessee-based United States Wrestling Association (USWA) and Smoky Mountain Wrestling (SMW), and had two short stints with the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) under the ring names of T.L. Hopper and Uncle Cletus.", "score": null }, { "id": "13738956", "title": "David Shields", "text": " Shields was born in Los Angeles in 1956 to a lower-middle-class Jewish family. He has an older sister, a half-brother, and a half-sister. Both of Shields’s parents were journalists. His mother, the West Coast correspondent for the Nation for many years, was a political activist; his father worked as a speechwriter for progressive politicians. In 1962, the family moved to San Francisco, where Shields’s parents were deeply involved in the local anti-war and civil rights community, frequently opening up their home to those in need of short- or long-term shelter. In 1978, Shields graduated, Phi Beta Kappa, magna cum laude, from Brown University, with a Bachelor of Arts, with Honors, in British and American Literature. In 1980, he received a Master of Fine Arts, with Honors in Fiction, from the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop.", "score": "1.6188893" }, { "id": "31942744", "title": "André De Shields", "text": " André Robin De Shields was born on January 12, 1946 in Dundalk, Maryland, to Mary Gunther and John De Shields. He was raised in Baltimore, Maryland, the ninth of eleven children. De Shields obtained his high school diploma at Baltimore City College in 1964, then attended Wilmington College, where he starred in a production of Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin in the Sun. He then transferred colleges and earned his B.A. in English literature from the University of Wisconsin, Madison in 1970. In 1991, De Shields received his M.A. in African American studies from the Gallatin School of Individualized Study of New York University. He currently serves as an adjunct professor at the Gallatin School of Individualized Study of New York University.", "score": "1.614891" }, { "id": "8526783", "title": "Joe Shield", "text": " Shield was born Joseph Michael Shield on June 26, 1962 in Brattleboro, Vermont.", "score": "1.607557" }, { "id": "12609471", "title": "Tom Shields", "text": " Shields was born in Panama City, Florida, as his father was stationed at Tyndall Air Force Base. When Shields was two years old, his parents moved him and his older sister, Lindy Shields, to their hometown, Huntington Beach, California. It was there in Orange County that Shields began swimming competitively when he was eight years old. He attended Edison High School where he swam on the Varsity Swim Team all four years, receiving multiple awards, breaking the National High School Record in the 200 Yard Freestyle (1:33.83), and ending his high school career with an induction into the Edison High School Hall of Fame in 2009. Shields attended the University of California, Berkeley from 2010 to 2013, graduating with an undergraduate degree in religious studies in 2013.", "score": "1.589612" }, { "id": "25628036", "title": "Tony Booth (artist)", "text": " Born in 1933, Booth grew up in Moreton and was a wartime schoolboy. In 1948, at the age of 15, he won a scholarship in commercial art and design at the Wallasey School of Art and Crafts in Wallasey, Merseyside. After only 18 months at art school, he was offered his first position in a local commercial art studio which was also a printing, sign-writing and poster-writing company.", "score": "1.5827544" }, { "id": "3769348", "title": "George Franck", "text": " After the war, he continued to play with the Giants from 1945 to 1947. He eventually became a high school teacher and coach in Oklahoma City and then Rock Island High School in Illinois. He was a member of Broadway Presbyterian Church and enjoyed bowling. He was survived by Helen, his wife of 57 years. He bought and lived in the Shields House in Highland Park Historic District in Rock Island, IL. , which is now owned by Filipino-American author, Jason Tanamor.", "score": "1.5790594" }, { "id": "10762593", "title": "Dave Shields", "text": " David Shields (born April 24, 1967) is a Canadian retired ice hockey center who was an All-American for Denver.", "score": "1.5755548" }, { "id": "11256114", "title": "Shields and Yarnell", "text": " Shields was born in Los Angeles and graduated from Grant High School. At the age of 18, while working as a street mime and performing at the Hollywood Wax Museum, Shields was discovered by Marcel Marceau, who offered Shields a full scholarship to his school of mime in Paris. His apprenticeship was short-lived as he felt the need to develop his own style and pry mime loose from its artsy pedestal. Shields soon returned to California, working in Union Square, San Francisco. Shields is credited with being the originator of \"The Robot\" moves early in his career. In 1974, Shields appeared in Francis Ford Coppola's film The Conversation. In 1998, Shields was recruited by the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus to serve as their Director of Clowning. Lorene Yarnell and Robert Shields met when they worked on Fol-de-Rol, a 1972 Sid and Marty Krofft TV special that was Shields' first TV appearance.", "score": "1.5704651" }, { "id": "4051065", "title": "Rob Shields", "text": " Robert MacArthur Shields (born 9 June 1961 in Toronto, Ontario) is a Canadian sociologist and cultural theorist. He is Professor and Henry Marshall Tory Endowed Research Chair at University of Alberta. Shields directs the City Region Studies Centre in the Faculty of Extension. From 1991 to 2004 he rose to Professor of Sociology and Directed the Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies at Carleton University, Ottawa Canada, with an interlude in 1995-97 as a lecturer in Culture and Communications at Lancaster University, Lancaster UK. Education: Architecture (B.A. Directed Interdisciplinary Studies, Carleton University, Ottawa Canada), Sociology (M.A. Carleton University) and Urban and Regional Studies (D.Phil., University of Sussex).", "score": "1.5616957" }, { "id": "25807929", "title": "Lonnie Shields", "text": " Lonnie Thomas Shields Jr. was born in West Helena, Arkansas, United States, with his local church being a focus for family life. Due to its similar musical heritage, West Helena is often considered an extension of the Mississippi Delta. He started his music career by playing funk and soul as a teenager in a local group called the Checkmates. This was before his friend and mentor, Sam Carr, based in Lula, Mississippi, showed Shields the rudiments of Delta blues. The twosome played together in the Unforgettable Blues Band, and took guidance from Frank Frost and Big Jack Johnson. Shields later ", "score": "1.5506048" }, { "id": "15926367", "title": "Kenny Shields", "text": " Shields moved to Saskatoon to attend the University of Saskatchewan and joined the local band Witness Incorporated. The band started touring the country, opening for Roy Orbison and Cream. His career was sidetracked in 1970 when he was critically injured in a car accident. Shields returned to music in 1975 and moved to Regina, Saskatchewan following the dissolution of Witness Incorporated. He began performing with local musicians and soon formed the band that would become Streetheart. The band became a success in Canada, frequently playing cities across the country and recording six studio albums and one double-disc live album. Their more popular tour mates would include AC/DC, Styx and Max Webster.", "score": "1.5494925" }, { "id": "3211653", "title": "Mark Shields (police officer)", "text": " Shields was born in London, the son of a nurse and a civil servant in the Ministry of Defence. Shields married his first wife in 1987, and had two children with her. He attended the University of Essex on a police scholarship, where he studied government and politics. In Jamaica, outside of his work hours he enjoyed a bon vivant lifestyle, and was described as \"one of Jamaica's 30 most eligible men\" by the Jamaica Gleaner. In 2007, he was reported to have been in a serious relationship for two years with a 24-year-old local fashion designer, but they separated soon after. He lives in the upscale Norbrook neighbourhood of the Kingston Metropolitan Area. On one occasion police showed up with a warrant to search his house, but it turned out they were actually looking for the house of his neighbour Vybz Kartel; Shields' boss Lewin later apologised to him over the incident. Shields married Emily Crooks an attorney at law and broadcast journalist. They have a daughter, Zuri born in 2009.", "score": "1.5452057" }, { "id": "15926366", "title": "Kenny Shields", "text": " Shields was born and spent his youth in Nokomis, Saskatchewan, a small farming community. He developed an interest in music early in his life, enrolling in an amateur talent show at six years old.", "score": "1.5434629" }, { "id": "6607901", "title": "Ricky Shields", "text": " Richard Essington Shields (born July 27, 1982) is an American former professional basketball player. Standing at 6'4\" (1.93 m) he played the shooting guard position.", "score": "1.5430945" }, { "id": "25975408", "title": "James Shields (baseball)", "text": " Shields grew up in the Newhall neighborhood of Santa Clarita, California. He has two older brothers. While attending William S. Hart High School, he was named the Los Angeles Times Valley Player of the Year in 1999, his junior season after leading Hart to the Division II championship. He had an 11–0 win–loss record with a 2.35 earned run average (ERA) with 123 strikeouts in 71 1⁄3 innings pitched. He also batted .478 with a then-school record 11 home runs and 45 runs batted in, being named the Southern Section's Division II Player of the Year. He declined a full scholarship to play baseball at Louisiana State University in favor of signing with the Tampa Bay Devil Rays. Baseball America ranked him the 16th best high school prospect in 2000.", "score": "1.5400786" } ]
In what city was Amoene van Haersolte born?
[ "Utrecht", "Utreg", "Utrecht (city)" ]
place of birth
Amoene van Haersolte
1,632,004
55
[ { "id": "29687333", "title": "Amoene van Haersolte", "text": " Jonkvrouw Amoëne van Haersolte (born Ernestine Amoene Sophia van Holthe tot Echten; 23 February 1890 &ndash; 11 August 1952) was a Dutch author of prose writing. Van Haersolte was born in Utrecht. She won the first P. C. Hooft Award in 1947. She died, aged 62, in Dalfsen.", "score": "1.938472" }, { "id": "29687335", "title": "Amoene van Haersolte", "text": "1927 - De laatsten ; 1946 - Sophia in de Koestraat ; 1953 - De roerkop ", "score": "1.7829623" }, { "id": "7721297", "title": "Kees van Kooten", "text": " Cornelis Reinier van Kooten was born on 10 August 1941 in The Hague, Netherlands. He is the oldest child of Cornelis Reinier van Kooten en Anna Geertruida Snaauw. He has one sister, Anke, who is a year younger. He met his wife Barbara Kits in 1959 and married her on 18 October 1968. After their marriage they moved from The Hague to the polder village of Zuidoostbeemster, where their two children were born, Kasper in 1971 and Kim in 1974. Both children are well-known performers in the Netherlands. In 1978 the family moved to Hilversum and in 1996 to Amsterdam. Van Kooten is ", "score": "1.6228845" }, { "id": "10014924", "title": "Manon van Raay", "text": " Van Raay was born in Woerden.", "score": "1.6151953" }, { "id": "9609180", "title": "Maasgouw", "text": "Henk van Hoof (born 1947) a retired Dutch politician, lives in Ohé en Laak ; Jan Cober (born 1951 in Thorn) a Dutch conductor and clarinet player ; Guido Geelen (born 1961 in Thorn) a Dutch sculptor, furniture designer and ceramist ; Margo Reuten (born ca.1966 in Maasbracht) a Dutch head chef, holds two Michelin stars ; Lies Visschedijk (born 1974 in Heel) a Dutch actress ", "score": "1.5877478" }, { "id": null, "title": "Amoene van Haersolte", "text": "Amoene van Haersolte\n\nJkvr. Amoëne van Haersolte (born Ernestine Amoene Sophia van Holthe tot Echten; 23 February 1890 – 11 August 1952) was a Dutch writer of prose.\n\nVan Haersolte was born in Utrecht. She won the first P. C. Hooft Award in 1947. She died, aged 62, in Dalfsen.\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Holte (surname)", "text": "Holte (surname)\n\nHolte or Holthe is the surname of:\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "9003111", "title": "Arie Smit", "text": "his niece, Luciënne Smit (1953, Koog aan de Zaan), it was published in both Dutch and English. Arie Smit Adrianus Wilhelmus \"Arie\" Smit (15 April 1916 – 23 March 2016) was a Dutch-born Indonesian painter who lived on Bali. Smit was the third of eight children of a trader in cheese and confectionery in Zaandam. His family moved in 1924 to Rotterdam, where Smit eventually studied graphic design at the Academy of Arts. In his youth he was most inspired by the work of three artists named Paul (Signac, Gauguin and Cézanne). In 1938 he joined the Royal Netherlands East", "score": "1.5480957" }, { "id": "9702728", "title": "Isidore van Kinsbergen", "text": "1873. Isidore van Kinsbergen was born in Bruges in 1821 (at that time, Bruges was part of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands). Having studied painting and singing in Paris, he joined a French opera group that travelled to Batavia (the present day Jakarta) in 1851. After several performances the group left the Dutch East Indies, but Van Kinsbergen decided to stay there. He became interested in the new medium of photography, particularly in using the albumen print technique. He opened the first albumen print processing shop in Batavia. In 1862, the General Secretary of East Indies Alexis Loudon invited", "score": "1.547245" }, { "id": "17296636", "title": "Koen Vanmechelen", "text": "a Venezia at the biennial of Venice was in 2013 named Trigonostomum Vanmecheleni in honour of the artist. Koen Vanmechelen, who lives in the Belgian town of Meeuwen-Gruitrode, is professionally based in Hasselt. He is a self-taught artist who studied hotel management in Antwerp and worked several years as a cook and pastry chef in Belgian top restaurants. His father is an artist, his mother a fashion designer. Vanmechelen’s interest in chickens and birds started at an early age, due to the trips he made with his uncle Louis Gonnissen, a famous Belgian ornithologist and television personality. At the age", "score": "1.5431409" }, { "id": "29687334", "title": "Amoene van Haersolte", "text": "1949 - De komeet en het harlekijntje ; 1951 - Lucile ; 1953 - De roerkop ", "score": "1.5818131" }, { "id": "1323241", "title": "Johannes Bernardus van Loghem", "text": " He was born in Haarlem as the son of a bulb grower and after attending high school at the local HBS, he continued his education at the Polytechnical school there for civic engineering. According to the RKD he studied in Delft during the years 1905–1909 and was influenced by Frank Lloyd Wright and Hendrik Petrus Berlage. After graduation he became an architect in Haarlem where he married the textile artist Berta Neumeier. In 1912 they moved into the house of his own design on the Spaarne river called \"Steenhaag\". He received many commissions for city planning, including the projects based on the garden city movement Rosenhaghe, Betondorp, Ter Cleef, and Tuinwijk ", "score": "1.5735769" }, { "id": "30530374", "title": "Almelo", "text": "Catharina Julia Roeters van Lennep (1813–1883) a Dutch artist ; Bertha Tideman-Wijers (1887-1976) composer ; Izaak Kolthoff (1894–1993) an analytical chemist and chemistry educator ; Judith Ledeboer OBE (1901–1990) architect ; Evert Willem Beth (1908-1964) philosopher and logician ; Gerritdina Benders-Letteboer (1909–1980) an active member of the Dutch Resistance ; Wubbo Ockels (1946-2014) a physicist and astronaut of the European Space Agency ; Herman Finkers (born 1954) comedian, known for his friendly, dry-witted humour ; Tom Egbers (born 1957) a Dutch English journalist, writer and TV presenter ; Liesbeth van Tongeren (born 1958) a Dutch politician, Director of Greenpeace Netherlands 2003–2010, grew up in Almelo ; Hero Brinkman (born 1964) a police officer and former Dutch politician ; Jos de Blok, Dutch Wiki (born 1960) founder and CEO of Buurtzorg ; Michiel Veenstra (born 1976) Radio-dj on KINK ; Ilse de Lange (born 1977) a Dutch country and pop rock singer-songwriter ; Loes Haverkort (born 1981) a Dutch movie, TV and theater actress ; Azra Akın (born 1981) Miss Turkey World 2002 and Miss World 2002 ", "score": "1.5684128" }, { "id": "2319148", "title": "Anton Koolhaas", "text": " Anthonie Koolhaas was born on 16 November 1912 in Utrecht, Netherlands. He was the son of Teunis Koolhaas and Trijntje de Boer, and he had two elder brothers and an elder sister. He grew up in Utrecht, where the Remonstrant family lived. He had little connection with the members of his family and he developed a rich imagination. He wrote his first play at the age of seven. He attended the hogere burgerschool in Utrecht. Between 1931 and 1935 he attended Utrecht University, studying an individual program related to journalism. He wrote the scenario of the Academy Award-nominated films Everyman (1963) and Ape and Super-Ape (1972), both directed by Bert Haanstra. He is the father of architect Rem Koolhaas (1944). He won the Constantijn Huygens Prize for his complete works in 1989 and the P. C. Hooft Award, a literary oeuvre award, in 1992. He died on 16 December 1992, age 80, in Amsterdam, Netherlands.", "score": "1.5678723" }, { "id": "30612980", "title": "Vught", "text": "Erna Spoorenberg (1925 – 2004 in Vught) a Dutch soprano ; Misha Geller (1937 – 2007 in Vught) a Russian viola player and composer ; Joost Prinsen (born 1942 in Vught) a Dutch actor, TV presenter, singer and writer ; Mina Witteman (born 1959 in Vught) a Dutch children's author ; Maarten van der Vleuten (born 1967 in Vught) a Dutch producer, composer and recording artist ; Jan-Hein Arens (born 1974 in Vught) a Dutch painter, sculptor and illustrator ", "score": "1.5668972" }, { "id": "7474394", "title": "Aart Staartjes", "text": " Aart Staartjes was born in Nieuwendam, a neighbourhood of Amsterdam-Noord. He had an older brother, and a younger sister. They lived in a house on the Nieuwendammerdijk. His father, his grandfather, and an uncle of his worked in a carpentry shop located behind the house. Staartjes started his primary education at the age of eight. After that, he went to the mulo in Amsterdam, followed by the Kweekschool, a teachers' college. He dropped out of the Kweekschool in 1958, and went to the theatre school instead. He graduated in 1961.", "score": "1.5605147" }, { "id": "25289337", "title": "Goeree-Overflakkee", "text": "Jan van Os (1744 in Middelharnis – 1808) a Dutch painter ; Laurens J. Bol (1898 in Ooltgensplaat – 1994) an art historian, specialized in Dutch Golden Age painters ; Aart Alblas (1918 in Middelharnis – 1944 in Mauthausen concentration camp) highly decorated Dutch resistance member ; Tomas Ross (born 1944 in Den Bommel) a Dutch writer of historical criminal thrillers ; Elco Brinkman (born 1948 in Dirksland) a retired Dutch politician and businessman. ; Toine van Peperstraten (born 1967 in Achthuizen) a Dutch sports journalist ; Barbara Baarsma (born 1969) a Dutch economist, grew up in Goeree-Overflakkee ; Liesbeth Zegveld (born 1970 in Ridderkerk) a Dutch lawyer, legal expert and professor ", "score": "1.5596781" }, { "id": "8193803", "title": "Dick Ket", "text": " Born in Den Helder, Ket spent his childhood in Hoorn and then Ede before attending the Kunstoefening in Arnhem from 1922 to 1925. Born with a serious heart defect (believed to be tetralogy of Fallot with dextrocardia), he was prevented from traveling by debilitating weakness as well as by phobias, and lived secluded in his parents' house in Bennekom after 1930. Exposed to modern art mainly through reproductions, he concentrated on painting still lifes and self-portraits. His health worsened in his last decade, leading to his early death in Bennekom in 1940.", "score": "1.5594921" }, { "id": "27053579", "title": "Jacob Israël de Haan", "text": " De Haan was born in Smilde, a village in the northern province of Drenthe, and grew up in Zaandam. He was said to be one of eighteen children and received a traditional Jewish education. In 1904, while living in Amsterdam, he wrote the novel Pijpelijntjes (\"Lines from De Pijp\"), which pretends to be a thinly veiled version of his own gay life with Aletrino in Amsterdam's \"Pijp\" working-class district. The homo-eroticism of the book, shocking to readers in the early 20th century, led to his dismissal from his teaching job and social-democratic political circles. Aletrino and Johanna van Maarseveen, de Haan's fiancée, bought almost the entire print run of the book, to keep a lid on the scandal. In 1907 he married van Maarseveen, a non-Jewish doctor; they separated in 1919 but never officially divorced.", "score": "1.5592861" }, { "id": "26147435", "title": "Susan Hendrik van Sitteren", "text": " Van Sitteren was born on 4 November 1904 in the city of Amsterdam, Netherlands. He was named after his aunt, Susan.", "score": "1.5564128" }, { "id": "8522529", "title": "Patrick van Aanholt", "text": " Van Aanholt was born in 's-Hertogenbosch to parents from Curaçao. He is the cousin of fellow Dutch international Leroy Fer.", "score": "1.5536973" }, { "id": "30531474", "title": "Oldebroek", "text": "Rudolph van Pallandt (1868–1913), sport shooter who competed at the 1908 Summer Olympics ; Martin Koopman (born 1956 in Wezep), former football defender and football manager ; Jan Maarten Heideman (born 1973), speed skater ; Lana Wolf (born 1975 in Wezep), pop singer ; Freek Jansen (born 1992), politician ", "score": "1.5535852" }, { "id": "785711", "title": "Kees Verkade", "text": " Kees Verkade was born on 12 October 1941 in Haarlem. He wished to attend the Gerrit Rietveld Academie but was rejected. He took painting lessons with Gerrit van ’t Net from 1958 to 1963, and from Dirk Bus at the Royal Academy of Art, The Hague. He graduated from the Academy in 1963.", "score": "1.55353" }, { "id": "30531498", "title": "Rheden", "text": "Mina Kruseman (1839 in Velp – 1922) a 19th-century Dutch feminist, actress and author ; Louis Couperus (1863 – 1923 in De Steeg) a Dutch novelist and poet ; Baroness Ella van Heemstra (1900 in Velp – 1984) a Dutch-British aristocrat and the mother of Audrey Hepburn ; Simon Carmiggelt (1913–1987) author, who had a home in De Steeg ; Teun Jacob (1927 in Rheden - 2009) a Dutch wall painter and sculptor ; Jan Siebelink (born 1938 in Velp) a Dutch author ; Paula van der Oest (born 1965 in Laag-Soeren) a Dutch film director and screenwriter ; Anouk van Dijk (born 1965 in Velp) a Dutch choreographer, dancer, artistic director and teacher ; Maarten Demmink (born 1967 in Goudriaan), known as Demiak, a Dutch painter, photographer and sculptor ; Jorrit van der Kooi (born 1972 in Rheden) a Dutch film and TV director and presenter ", "score": "1.5521142" }, { "id": "11690849", "title": "Richard Stolte", "text": " Stolte was born in Emmeloord, Netherlands. Before being picked up by the youth academy of SC Heerenveen, Stolte played at Flevo Boys, an amateur club from his home town. In the academy he played as a left winger, both on midfield and in attack. He also received many international call-ups from the various Dutch youth squads. In 2008, he signed a two-year deal at Heerenveen with an option for two more seasons. The plan was to keep Stolte another year in the academy followed by one season in the reserve squad. In the summer of 2009 FC Emmen was interested in loaning him for a season, but first team manager Trond Sollied kept him at the club. With many injuries in the first ", "score": "1.5518199" } ]
In what city was Jim Baker born?
[ "Ilkeston" ]
place of birth
Jim Baker (footballer)
4,246,734
87
[ { "id": "27318337", "title": "Jim Baker (frontiersman)", "text": " Baker was born in 1818 in Belleville, St. Clair County, Illinois, of Scotch-Irish descent. There were contemporary sources, however, that stated how Baker himself was not quite sure of his exact birth date or whether it was the year 1818 or 1819. However, his childhood was documented, with his parents described as poor. Baker was one of many children in the family. From an early age he excelled in fishing, and he also hunted squirrels, muskrats, and other small game using a gun. When he was seventeen, his father sent him to his grandfather at St. Louis for his education, but he was sent home after showing little interest in the instruction. During this journey he met a \"capper\" who told him tales and adventures at the frontier. Baker then went to the office of the American Fur Company and joined his first trapping expedition.", "score": "1.7487688" }, { "id": "30641301", "title": "Rick Baker", "text": " Baker was born in Binghamton, New York, to Doris (née Hamlin), a bank teller, and Ralph B. Baker, a professional artist. Baker and his family moved to Covina, California when he was less than one year old.", "score": "1.7215761" }, { "id": "7925333", "title": "James M. Baker (mayor)", "text": " Baker was born in Fostoria, Ohio, in 1942. After completing high school there, he joined the United States Air Force. He received an honorable discharge in 1966. Following his discharge he joined VISTA, the domestic Peace Corps program.", "score": "1.6864114" }, { "id": "10422833", "title": "BlocBoy JB", "text": " James Baker was born on May 19, 1996, in Memphis, Tennessee. His name comes from his father, who is currently serving a 25-year prison sentence for rape. In 2008, when Baker was 12, his father broke out of prison and traveled to Baker's home to see him for a short period of time. At the age of 14, Baker became affiliated with the Grape Street Watts Crips. Although located in Los Angeles, the gang has an affiliated branch in Memphis called the Peda Roll Mafia. Baker's affiliation is mentioned throughout many of his songs, including \"Rover\". Baker served a month in prison in 2012 for committing a home invasion, and served the rest of his sentence on house arrest. Baker has said the invasion was \"sloppy\", and that they performed the invasion with no masks and a BB gun. Baker began making music when he was fourteen when he moved to Raleigh in North Memphis and met Tay Keith (who later produced \"Look Alive\"), and the two began making music shortly afterwards.", "score": "1.6644936" }, { "id": "10324490", "title": "Dee Bradley Baker", "text": " Baker was born in Bloomington, Indiana, on August 31, 1962, the son of Nancy and Buddy Baker. He grew up in Greeley, Colorado. He started performing at the age of nine and steadily worked in musicals, operas, plays, and stand-up comedy. He was a childhood fan of Star Trek, Star Wars, Planet of the Apes, and the music of Frank Zappa; he also had an interest in insects, arthropods, and dinosaurs. He graduated from University High School in 1981 and received a Boettcher Scholarship. Baker attended Colorado College in Colorado Springs, Colorado, where he studied philosophy, biology, fine arts, and German, the last of which he studied overseas for a year at the University of Göttingen. He was involved in local theater productions and singing groups. After graduating with a BA in philosophy in 1986, he was involved in many community theater projects, including a sketch comedy movie that aired on local public television.", "score": "1.6544445" }, { "id": null, "title": "Jim Bakker", "text": "Jim Bakker\n\nJames Orsen Bakker (; born January 2, 1940) is an American televangelist and convicted fraudster. Between 1974 and 1987, Bakker hosted the television program \"The PTL Club\" and its cable television platform, the PTL Satellite Network, with his then wife, Tammy Faye. He also developed Heritage USA, a now-defunct Christian theme park in Fort Mill, South Carolina.\n\nIn the late 1980s, Bakker resigned from the PTL ministry over a cover-up of hush money to church secretary Jessica Hahn for an alleged rape. Subsequent revelations of accounting fraud brought about felony charges, conviction, imprisonment, and divorce. Bakker later remarried and returned to televangelism, founding Morningside Church in Blue Eye, Missouri, and reestablishing the PTL ministry. He currently hosts \"The Jim Bakker Show\", which focuses on the end times and the Second Coming of Christ while promoting emergency survival products. Bakker has written several books, including \"I Was Wrong\" and \"Time Has Come: How to Prepare Now for Epic Events Ahead\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "James Baker", "text": "James Baker\n\nJames Addison Baker III (born April 28, 1930) is an American attorney, diplomat and statesman. A member of the Republican Party, he served as the 10th White House Chief of Staff and 67th United States Secretary of the Treasury under President Ronald Reagan and the 61st U.S. Secretary of State before returning as the 16th White House Chief of Staff under President George H. W. Bush.\n\nBorn in Houston, Baker attended The Hill School and Princeton University before serving in the United States Marine Corps. After graduating from the University of Texas School of Law, he pursued a legal career. He became a close friend of George H. W. Bush and worked for Bush's unsuccessful 1970 campaign for the United States Senate. After the campaign, he served in various positions for President Richard Nixon. In 1975, he was appointed Under Secretary of Commerce for Gerald Ford. He served until May 1976, ran Ford's 1976 presidential campaign, and unsuccessfully sought election as the Attorney General of Texas.\n\nBaker ran Bush's unsuccessful campaign for the 1980 Republican presidential nomination, but made a favorable impression on the Republican nominee, Ronald Reagan. Reagan appointed Baker as his White House Chief of Staff, and Baker remained in that position until 1985, when he became the Secretary of the Treasury. As Treasury Secretary, he arranged the Plaza Accord and the Baker Plan. He resigned as Treasury Secretary to manage Bush's successful 1988 campaign for president. After the election, Bush appointed Baker to the position of Secretary of State. As Secretary of State, he helped oversee U.S. foreign policy during the end of the Cold War and dissolution of the Soviet Union, as well as during the Gulf War. After the Gulf War, Baker served another stint as White House Chief of Staff from 1992 to 1993.\n\nBaker remained active in business and public affairs after Bush's defeat in the 1992 presidential election. He served as a United Nations envoy to Western Sahara and as a consultant to Enron. During the Florida recount following the 2000 presidential election, he managed George W. Bush's legal team in the state. He served as the co-chairman of the Iraq Study Group, which Congress formed in 2006 to study Iraq and the ongoing Iraq War. He serves on the World Justice Project and the Climate Leadership Council. Baker is the namesake of the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice University.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Tammy Faye Messner", "text": "Tammy Faye Messner\n\nTamara Faye Messner (née LaValley, formerly Bakker ; March 7, 1942 – July 20, 2007) was an American evangelist, singer, author, talk show host, and television personality. She gained notice for her work with \"The PTL Club\", a televangelist program she co-founded with her husband Jim Bakker in 1974. They had hosted their own puppet show series for local programming in the early 1960s; Messner also had a career as a recording artist.<ref name=\":0\" /> In 1978, she and Bakker built Heritage USA, a Christian theme park.<ref name=\":0\" />\n\nMessner garnered significant publicity when Jim Bakker was indicted, convicted, and imprisoned on numerous counts of fraud and conspiracy in 1989, resulting in the dissolution of \"The PTL Club\". She was diagnosed with colon cancer in 1996, from which she suffered intermittently for over a decade before dying of the disease in 2007.<ref name=\":1\" />\n\nDuring her career Messner was noted for her eccentric and glamorous persona, as well as for moral views that diverged from those of many mainstream evangelists, particularly her advocacy for LGBT persons and reaching out to HIV/AIDS patients at the height of the AIDS epidemic. She released three autobiographies during her lifetime, \"I Gotta Be Me\" in 1978, \"Tammy: Telling it My Way\" in 1996 and \"I Will Survive and You Will Too!\" in 2003.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jim Baker (frontiersman)", "text": "Jim Baker (frontiersman)\n\nJim Baker (1818–1898), known as \"Honest Jim Baker\",<ref name=\"Van Pelt\" /> was a frontiersman, trapper, hunter, army scout, interpreter, and rancher. He was first a trapper and hunter. The decline of the fur trade in the early 1840s drove many trappers to quit, but Baker remained in the business until 1855. During that time he was a friend of Jim Bridger, Kit Carson and John C. Frémont. On August 21, 1841, he was among a group of twenty three trappers who were attacked by Arapaho, Cheyenne, and Sioux on what became known as Battle Mountain. After Henry Fraeb was killed, Baker organized the trappers against the Native Americans in a multiple-day fight.\n\nWhile he was a trapper, he developed expertise as a guide, leader, marksman, and interpreter with Native Americans. He operated a ferry and trading post along the Green River. He served the military as a tracker and guide, including during the Mormon Utah War, following the Meeker Massacre, and during the Battle of the Rosebud in present day Big Horn County, Montana.\n\nHe had at least three Native American wives and fourteen children. He homesteaded on what is now Clear Creek near Denver on July 3, 1859. The area became known as Baker's Crossing, and he established several businesses there. He raised cattle, operated a stone coal (anthracite) mine, a toll bridge on the Denver Boulder Wagon Road, and a store operated by two of his wives. In 1873, Baker built a cabin with a guard tower near the Little Snake River in Wyoming, where he raised livestock until his death in 1898. His cabin is currently on display at the Little Snake River Museum in Savery, Wyoming. Baker's grave is marked with a stone at Baker Cemetery near Savery.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jim B. Baker", "text": "Jim B. Baker\n\nJames B. Baker (July 12, 1941 – February 4, 2014), sometimes credited as Jim B. Baker, was an American stage, film and television actor. He was best known for his stage work in regional repertory theatre and for his role as tightwad banker Farley Waters on the short-lived 1980–81 CBS sitcom \"Flo\", a spin-off of \"Alice\".", "score": null }, { "id": "27318340", "title": "Jim Baker (frontiersman)", "text": " In 1847, Baker settled for a short time in the region of Salt Lake City, Utah, where he became a government scout and guide. His fluency in the Shoshone language and use of Arapahoe sign language, as well as his knowledge of the rivers, trails, and mountains, led him to Mexico, where he returned with a regiment of soldiers to Fort Bridger. General Albert S. Johnston, who was in command of the U.S. Army, was sent to install a new governor in Utah, because President James Buchanan believed that the Mormons would forcibly resist the replacement of Brigham Young as Utah Territorial governor during the Mormon War, from 1857 to 1859. ", "score": "1.6442972" }, { "id": "12108141", "title": "Matt Baker (artist)", "text": " Baker was born December 10, 1921, in Forsyth County, North Carolina. At a young age he relocated with his family to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and after graduating high school in 1940, moved to Washington, D.C. Prevented by a heart condition from being drafted into the U.S. military during World War II, he began studying art at Cooper Union, in New York City. He entered comics through the Jerry Iger Studio, one of the 1930s to 1940s \"packagers\" that provided outsourced comics to publishers entering the new medium. Iger recalled that Baker came into his studio with a single sample of a color sketch in his portfolio; he thought the woman was so naturally beautiful that he hired Baker on the spot, as a background artist before he was given his first scripts. Baker's first confirmed ", "score": "1.6438155" }, { "id": "31595410", "title": "Ray Jerome Baker", "text": " Baker was born near Rockford, Illinois in 1880. From 1898 until 1903 he lived in Saint Paul, Minnesota, where he studied at Mechanic Arts High School and took his first photographs before attending the University of Minnesota for one semester. In 1903, he moved to Portland, Oregon and shortly thereafter, in 1904, to Eureka, California. On his arrival in Eureka, his studio was in a tent until moving into a building at 5th and F Streets where he ran a commercial photography studio and became a lifelong friend of the writer Jack London. Baker regularly toured southern Humboldt County on a motorcycle in the early 20th century. He met Edith Frost, a local school teacher, at a Socialist meeting in ", "score": "1.6409422" }, { "id": "15767751", "title": "Jim Baker (footballer)", "text": " James William Baker (15 November 1891 – 13 December 1966) was a professional footballer most notable for being the first captain of Leeds United He was the brother of Alf Baker who played for Arsenal. Another brother Aaron Baker also played football professionally and briefly played for Leeds. Jim was born in Ilkeston and started his career at Hartlepool United, and played at Portsmouth before moving to Huddersfield Town, where he played under future Leeds manager Arthur Fairclough. When Fairclough moved to the newly formed Leeds United F.C. to become its first manager, Jim followed him and was handed the captain's armband to command from the center of defence. Jim played for six seasons at Elland Road being captain for the whole period, and even helped Fairclough guide the team to their first silverware and Second Division championship in 1923–24, being a rock at the heart of the Leeds defence along with Ernie Hart. Jim left Leeds after two seasons of just surviving in the First Division at the end of the 1925–26 season, moving to Nelson. He served on the Board of Directors for Leeds United between 1959 and 1961.", "score": "1.6373584" }, { "id": "12565936", "title": "Jim Baker (bowls)", "text": " Jim Baker is a former Northern Irish international lawn and indoor bowler.", "score": "1.6222925" }, { "id": "1590777", "title": "Jim Irvin", "text": " Born James Lawrence Irvin and raised in west London.", "score": "1.6220624" }, { "id": "12565937", "title": "Jim Baker (bowls)", "text": " Baker was born in Belfast on 18 February 1958. After finishing runner-up in the 1982 World Indoor Bowls Championship he went one better in 1984 clinching the World Indoor title. Baker was part of the Gold Medal-winning triples for the combined Irish team in the 1984 World Outdoor Bowls Championship and Gold Medal-winning fours in the 1988 World Outdoor Bowls Championship. In the 2004 World Championships he won a third gold medal for the combined Irish team, in the fours with Jonathan Ross, Noel Graham and Neil Booth and a silver medal with Noel Graham in the pairs during the 2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship. In addition Baker has won two Commonwealth Games medals. At national level he also won the 1989 Irish National Bowls Championships singles.", "score": "1.6212249" }, { "id": "10411427", "title": "Gilbert Baker (artist)", "text": " Baker was born on June 2, 1951, in Chanute, Kansas. He grew up in Parsons, Kansas, where his grandmother owned a women's clothing store. His father was a judge and his mother was a teacher. Baker served in the United States Army from 1970 to 1972. He was stationed as a medic in San Francisco at the beginning of the gay rights movement, and lived there as an openly gay man. After his honorable discharge from the military, he worked on the first marijuana legalization initiative California Proposition 19 (1972), and was taught to sew by his fellow activist Mary Dunn. He used his skill to create banners for gay-rights and anti-war protest ", "score": "1.62028" }, { "id": "27318334", "title": "Jim Baker (frontiersman)", "text": " Jim Baker (1818–1898) was a frontiersman, trapper, hunter, fur trader, explorer, army scout, interpreter, soldier, territorial militia officer, rancher, mine owner, toll keeper and mountain man. He was a friend of Jim Bridger and Kit Carson and one of General John C. Fremont's favorite scouts. The decline of the fur trade in the early 1840s drove many the trappers to quit, but Baker remained in the business. Little is known of his movements after 1844, but in 1855 he was hired as chief scout for General William S. Harney of Fort Laramie, and was sent with the U.S. Army to pacify the Mormons in Utah. In 1873 Baker built a cabin with a guard tower near the Colorado Placers of the Little Snake River in Wyoming, ", "score": "1.6132131" }, { "id": "27318335", "title": "Jim Baker (frontiersman)", "text": " he raised livestock until his death in 1898. His cabin is currently on display at the Little Snake River Museum in Savery, Wyoming. Baker's grave is marked with a stone at Baker Cemetery near Savery, Carbon County, Wyoming. Baker was married several times, each time to a Native American woman, one of whom (Marina) was a daughter of the Shoshone chief Washakie. His other two wives were Shoshone sisters raised by a French family: Mary (Meteetsee) and Eliza (Yanatse). He had a total of 14 children, but only 6 survived to accompany him to Savery, Wy in 1873. They were: William, Joseph (born to Marina) Mary, Isabelle, Madeline (born to Mary) and Jennie (born to Eliza). All three wives were no longer with him in ", "score": "1.6103022" }, { "id": "30836956", "title": "Bob Baker (actor)", "text": " The son of Guy Weed and Ethel Leland Weed, Baker was born in Forest City, Iowa. He spent part of his childhood and youth in Colorado and Arizona. Unlike most movie cowboys, Baker really worked as a cowboy in his youth, and was a rodeo champion when he was sixteen. He joined the army at the age of 18, where he learned to play the guitar.", "score": "1.6037893" }, { "id": "27622302", "title": "Jane Baker (mayor)", "text": " Baker was born in Ohio. She received her bachelor's degree in nutrition and home economics from Purdue University. She met her future husband, Bill Baker, in 1941 while both were participating in a Purdue University student debate called \"Are Men Good Or Bad?\" Bill, who had attended the debate for a speech class, asked her out on a date the next day. The couple married on the same day that Jane graduated from Purdue in 1946 and had two children. Baker moved with her husband to the San Francisco Bay area due to Bill Baker's governmental job transfer, where he worked as a FBI agent. She worked as the host and television producer of a home cooking show, which was filmed in San Francisco, before relocating to the nearby city of San Mateo. In the late 1950s, Baker and her family lived on Sunset Terrace in the western hills of San Mateo before relocating to the nearby Laurelwood neighborhood. Baker was credited as one of the bakers of cookies sent to a company of the 101st Airborne Division \"Screaming Eagles.\" San Mateo adopted Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 327 Infantry Regiment on March 4, 1968.", "score": "1.6029451" }, { "id": "30836957", "title": "Bob Baker (actor)", "text": " Baker began singing professionally at the age of twenty, for the KTSM radio station in El Paso, Texas. In Chicago he spent several months with WLS. As a professional rodeo roper and rider, he competed in Cheyenne, Wyoming, Pendleton, Oregon, and Salinas, California, among other sites. In 1935 he married Evelyn. They were to have four children.", "score": "1.6017083" }, { "id": "32884201", "title": "Jim Glaser", "text": " James William Glaser (December 16, 1937 – April 6, 2019) was an American country music artist. He was born in Spalding, Nebraska.", "score": "1.6015685" }, { "id": "25929588", "title": "A. J. Baker", "text": " Allan James \"Jim\" Baker (22 July 1922 – 3 March 2017), usually cited as A. J. Baker, was an Australian philosopher who was best known for having systematised the realist philosophy of John Anderson. He studied under Anderson at Sydney University and had taught philosophy in Scotland, New Zealand, the United States and Australia. He was a prominent member of the Sydney Libertarians and the Sydney Push. He instigated, and was a prolific contributor to, several journals, compilations and newsletters that addressed issues, philosophical and otherwise, associated with Sydney Libertarianism. Among these were Libertarian (1957–1960), Broadsheet (1960 - 1979), The Sydney Line: A Selection of Comments and Criticisms (1963), Heraclitus (1980–2006) and The Sydney Realist (2005–). In 1997 he published a monograph, Social Pluralism: A Realistic Analysis, in which he posited his exposition of human social life.", "score": "1.6004792" } ]
In what city was Pete Stewart born?
[ "Statesville", "Statesville, North Carolina" ]
place of birth
Pete Stewart (racing driver)
5,424,513
72
[ { "id": "27774833", "title": "Pete Stewart", "text": "Empty – 2001 ", "score": "1.758979" }, { "id": "10281752", "title": "Gary Stewart (singer)", "text": " Stewart was born in Jenkins, Kentucky, on May 28, 1944, the son of George and Georgia Stewart. He was named after the actor Gary Cooper. In 1959 his father, a coal miner, sustained an injury while working in the mines, and shortly afterwards the family moved to Fort Pierce, a city on Florida's Atlantic coast. Learning guitar and piano, Stewart began touring with local bands and writing songs in his teens. He married Mary Lou Taylor, who was more than three years his senior, at age seventeen and began working days in an airplane factory. He still played in rock and country ", "score": "1.6665344" }, { "id": "69516", "title": "Bobby Stewart", "text": " Stewart was raised in Amsterdam, New York.", "score": "1.6611693" }, { "id": "13935675", "title": "Pete Stewart (racing driver)", "text": " Pete Stewart (born August 12, 1931 in Statesville, North Carolina) is a retired NASCAR Grand National Series driver who participated in 17 racing events from 1953 to 1965.", "score": "1.6521454" }, { "id": "15107326", "title": "Al Stewart", "text": " Born in Scotland, raised in Dorset, and gaining fame in London, Stewart moved to Los Angeles shortly after the release of Year of the Cat.", "score": "1.6258792" }, { "id": null, "title": "Pete Stewart (racer)", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Pete Stewart", "text": "Pete Stewart\n\nPete Stewart is a singer, guitarist, songwriter and producer from Seattle, Washington. He is the lead singer and guitarist of Grammatrain, was the lead singer for The Accident Experiment, and is the former guitarist of Tait.\n\nStewart released solo albums in 1999, 2007 and 2010. He served as producer, songwriter, and guitarist for the debut albums of Tait (the solo project of Michael Tait) and TobyMac, the latter of which sold over 500,000 copies.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Peter Stewart", "text": "Peter Stewart\n\nPeter or Pete Stewart may refer to:\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Peter G. Stewart", "text": "Peter G. Stewart\n\nPeter Grant Stewart (September 6, 1809 – August 27, 1900) was a jeweler and pioneer of the Oregon Country in what later became the U.S. states of Oregon and Washington. A native of New York state, he traveled the Oregon Trail to the Willamette Valley and settled first in Oregon City and later in what became Washington. He was served on the Second Executive Committee of the Provisional Government of Oregon, and his homesite became part of Fort Canby at the mouth of the Columbia River.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Peter A. Stewart", "text": "Peter A. Stewart\n\nPeter Arthur Robert Stewart (1921–1993) was a Canadian physiologist who introduced an alternate approach to understanding acid–base physiology.\n\nHe outlined his model in a paper in 1978, and explained it his 1981 book, \"How to Understand Acid–Base\". The book was unavailable for many years, then made available on-line and finally reprinted in 2009, with additional chapters on current applications in clinical medicine.\n\nThe Stewart approach models the complex chemical equilibrium system known as acid–base balance. Stewart introduced the term \"strong ion difference\" or [SID] to mean the concentration of strongly dissociating cations minus the concentration of strongly dissociating anions. He characterised this, the total weak acid concentration and the partial pressure of CO as independent variables and formulated a quartic equation relating [H] to these three independent variables. The quartic equation was solved numerically by computer and has never been validated by titration or physiological experiments. The model ignores intracellular and extravascular compartments.\n\nThe impact of the Stewart analysis has been slow in coming but there has been a recent resurgence in interest, particularly as this approach provides explanations for several areas which are otherwise difficult to understand (\"e.g.\", dilutional acidosis, acid–base disorders related to changes in plasma albumin concentration).", "score": null }, { "id": "12270678", "title": "Norm Stewart", "text": " Stewart was born in Shelby County, Missouri. He grew up the son of a gas station owner around the small farming community of Shelbyville, and graduated from high school there in 1952. After high school Stewart enrolled at the University of Missouri, becoming a standout in both basketball and baseball for the Tigers. Stewart was a two-time team captain, and all-Big Seven selection in basketball. His 24.1 scoring average per-game in 1956 ranks fourth in school history and earned him a spot on the 1956 Helms Foundation All-American team. It was while at MU he met the love of his life, Virginia (Zimmerley) Stewart. Following graduation from Mizzou, Stewart was drafted by the St. Louis Hawks in the 1956 NBA draft, playing one season at forward. He also signed a contract with Major League Baseball's Baltimore Orioles, pitching in 1957 for the Class C Aberdeen Pheasants, but never played at the big-league level.", "score": "1.6162112" }, { "id": "15847708", "title": "Dennis Cleveland Stewart", "text": " Stewart was born in Los Angeles, California on July 29, 1947.", "score": "1.6033008" }, { "id": "12561022", "title": "Pete Dunne", "text": " Peter Thomas England was born in Birmingham on 9 November 1993.", "score": "1.6028922" }, { "id": "5247226", "title": "Aron Stewart", "text": " Stewart was born in Jersey City, New Jersey. He attended Lincoln High School in his home city between 1965–66 and 1968–69. At 6ft 5in, he played shooting guard and small forward. Stewart's high school had so many talented basketball players that he did not even make the varsity team until his senior season, and even then he only managed to start one game. He mainly focused on baseball, his first passion, and he played outfielder for the school's team.", "score": "1.5949373" }, { "id": "11248003", "title": "David J. Stewart", "text": " Stewart was born in Omaha and attended the University of Omaha. He moved to New York and trained as an actor at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theater and the Actors Studio. During World War II he served as a paratrooper in the 82nd Airborne, receiving a Purple Heart and a Bronze Star.", "score": "1.5949061" }, { "id": "1204406", "title": "Frank Stewart (artist)", "text": " Frank Stewart was born in 1949, in Nashville, Tennessee, and was raised in Memphis and Chicago. At the age of 14, he took his first photograph at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. For most of his career, he has been a documentary photographer. With funding from two National Endowment for the Arts Grants, Stewart traveled the country photographing African American communities. In 1977, he was included as part of the first team of journalists allowed into Communist Cuba. Stewart worked closely with artist Romare Bearden, photographing him at home and at his studio, from 1975 until the artist's death in 1988. Stewart was invited by the Olympic Committee to be the official staff photographer for the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. As part of ", "score": "1.5850811" }, { "id": "28093104", "title": "Robert Stewart (saxophonist)", "text": " Stewart was born in Oakland, California. His mother was from Louisiana, and his biological father, Bob Stewart, was a San Francisco Conservatory trained flutist and trumpeter. Stewart says that his mother began teaching him to read from the Qur'an when he was three years old; the Bible was his next reading task, and he went on to study other major religions. Stewart first played the flute as a hobby; his primary passion was basketball during his grade school years. He stated that he \"played flute in high school because it was easy to hide from my friends who were all into sports\". His high school music teacher encouraged ", "score": "1.5822015" }, { "id": "15107313", "title": "Al Stewart", "text": " Although born in Glasgow, Al Stewart grew up in the town of Wimborne, Dorset, England, after moving from Scotland with his mother, Joan Underwood. His father, Alastair MacKichan Stewart, who served as a flight lieutenant in the Royal Air Force volunteer reserve, died in a plane crash during a 1945 training exercise before Stewart was born. Stewart attended Wycliffe College, Gloucestershire as a boarder. After that, according to the song \"Post World War II Blues\" (from Past, Present and Future): \"I came up to London when I was 19 with a corduroy jacket and a head full of dreams.\" Having bought his fourth guitar from future Police guitarist Andy Summers, Stewart traded in his electric guitar for an acoustic guitar when he was offered a weekly slot at Bunjies Coffee House in London's Soho in 1965. From there, he went on to serve as master of ceremonies at the Les Cousins folk club on Greek Street, where he played alongside Cat Stevens, Bert Jansch, Van Morrison, Roy Harper, Ralph McTell and Paul Simon, with whom he shared a flat in Dellow Street, Stepney, London.", "score": "1.5821166" }, { "id": "8470973", "title": "Michael Stewart (basketball)", "text": " Stewart, son of former Santa Clara standout and European pro Mike Stewart, was born in Cucq, Pas-de-Calais, France and starred at Kennedy High School in Sacramento, California, leading the Cougars to back-to-back city section titles in 1990 and 1991. Stewart earned his nickname \"Yogi\" from his older brother for his childhood love of Yogi Bear cartoons.", "score": "1.5804844" }, { "id": "27196963", "title": "Raymond Lee Stewart", "text": " Stewart was born in Burlington, North Carolina, in 1952, and raised in an abusive environment. According to Stewart's sister, his father frequently physically and sexually abused his nine children and threw Stewart out of the house when he was aged 14, telling him to never come back. Stewart dropped out of high school and drifted through several jobs. He would go on to spend six years in prison for several armed robbery and theft convictions in the 1970s. At some point, Stewart moved to Rockford, Illinois.", "score": "1.5771778" }, { "id": "27774828", "title": "Pete Stewart", "text": " Pete Stewart is a singer, guitarist, songwriter and producer from Seattle, Washington. He is the lead singer and guitarist of Grammatrain, was the lead singer for The Accident Experiment, and is the former guitarist of Tait. Stewart released solo albums in 1999, 2007 and 2010. He served as producer, songwriter, and guitarist for the debut albums of Tait (the solo project of Michael Tait) and TobyMac, the latter of which sold over 500,000 copies.", "score": "1.5770011" }, { "id": "1219310", "title": "Steenz", "text": " Christina \"Steenz\" Stewart is an American cartoonist and editor known for illustrating Archival Quality and currently authoring and illustrating the daily comic strip Heart of the City. She was born September 29, 1990, in Detroit, Michigan, and currently resides in St. Louis, Missouri. Upon taking over Heart of the City from Mark Tatulli in May 2020, she became the second nationally syndicated Black nonbinary cartoonist, preceded in this distinction by Bianca Xunise only a month prior.", "score": "1.5763015" }, { "id": "26480311", "title": "Wynn Stewart", "text": " Wynn Stewart was born in Morrisville, Missouri, United States, in 1934, during the Depression. He spent most of his childhood moving around the country with his sharecropping family. After World War II, Stewart spent a year working at KWTO in Springfield, Missouri. In 1948, he moved to California with his family. Stewart originally wanted to become a professional baseball player, but suffered from a hand disease and was also too short to play professional baseball. In high school, Stewart formed a band that played at clubs around California. He soon met steel guitarist Ralph Mooney, who joined Stewart's band. The group's lineup consisted of guitarist Roy Nichols and bassist Bobby Austin. In 1954, Stewart signed a recording contract with an independent record label called Intro Records. He released two singles on Intro. The first was called \"I've Waited a Lifetime\" ", "score": "1.5761724" }, { "id": "158566", "title": "John Clarence Stewart", "text": " Stewart was born in 1988 in Stone Mountain, Georgia. He initially attended Shiloh High School before transferring to George Walton Academy on a football scholarship for one year. His senior year he transferred back to Shiloh High School after realizing he wasn't talented enough for football. He performed in his school musical Once on This Island. He attended Columbus State University, graduating in 2009 with a BFA in Performance Theater. He then attended Kennesaw State University, graduating in 2012 with a BA in Theater and Performance Studies and Dance. Thereafter he performed educational theatre for Kaiser Permanente in Atlanta. At 24 years old, he moved to New York City and then to Los Angeles to further pursue acting.", "score": "1.5741217" }, { "id": "27774831", "title": "Pete Stewart", "text": "Pete Stewart – 1999 ; I Gave You a Desert – 2007 ; Under North Sky – 2010 ", "score": "1.5732019" } ]
In what city was Piotr Balcerzak born?
[ "Warsaw", "Warszawa", "Varshe", "Warschau", "Varshava", "Varšava", "Varsó", "Varsavia", "Varsovie", "Varsovia", "Varšuva" ]
place of birth
Piotr Balcerzak
5,456,079
39
[ { "id": "10585134", "title": "Piotr Balcerzak", "text": " Piotr Balcerzak (born 25 June 1975 in Warsaw) is a former Polish sprint athlete. He achieved the most success with the Polish 4 x 100 meters relay. He is married to another Polish sprinter, Joanna Niełacna.", "score": "1.8082657" }, { "id": "5256862", "title": "Oswald Balzer", "text": " Oswald Marian Balzer (23 January 1858 in Chodorów – 11 January 1933 in Lwów) was a Polish historian of law and statehood, one of the most renowned Polish historians of his times. In 1887 he became a professor at the University of Lwów. Between 1895 and 1896 he also briefly served as its rector. Since 1891 until his death he was also the director of City Archives in Lwów. His best work is Genealogia Piastów (1895). In 1888 he was offered a seat in the Polish Academy of Skills, as well as several other scientific societies, both in Poland and abroad. In 1901 he founded the Society for the Support of Polish Science in Lwów (Towarzystwo dla Popierania Nauki Polskiej we Lwowie), the first such society in the city, later to be renamed to Lwow Scientific Society (1920). Among the fields of his studies were the history of Polish statehood and Poland's historical law, as well as the early history of Slavic states. He was buried in the Łyczakowski Cemetery.", "score": "1.6368392" }, { "id": "30698485", "title": "Edward Balcerzan", "text": " Edward Balcerzan (born in Vovchansk, Kharkiv Oblast, Ukraine, 13 October 1937) is a Polish literary critic, poet, prose writer, and translator.", "score": "1.6106296" }, { "id": "7584224", "title": "Balcerzak", "text": "John Balcerzak, American police officer ; Patrycja Balcerzak (born 1994), Polish footballer ; Piotr Balcerzak (born 1975), Polish sprinter Balcerzak is a surname of Polish-language origin. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.5893009" }, { "id": "4977139", "title": "Roman Laskowski", "text": " Laskowski was born on February 17, 1936, in Komarno, Ukraine. In 1940, his family was taken to Kazakhstan and went back to Poland in 1946. Roman studied at the high school in Kietrz. He graduated in slavistics from the Jagiellonian University in 1959. He has worked at the University since 1960, and in 1981, he received the title of academic professor. In 2001 he received the title of full professor. From 1973 to 1985 he was a lecturer at the University of Silesia in Katowice. In 1985 he emigrated to Sweden and settled down in Gothenburg. He decided to go back to Poland in 2001. He worked again as a lecturer at the Jagiellonian University (2001–2007) and University of Social Sciences and Humanities (2008–2012). In 1995 he was decorated with Knight's Cross of Polonia Restituta for dissemination of Polish culture in Sweden. He died in 2014 and was buried at the Rakowicki Cemetery.", "score": "1.5663695" }, { "id": null, "title": "Piotr Balcerzak", "text": "Piotr Balcerzak\n\nPiotr Balcerzak (born 25 June 1975 in Warsaw) is a former Polish sprint athlete. He achieved the most success with the Polish 4 x 100 meters relay.\n\nHe is married to another Polish sprinter, Joanna Niełacna.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Balcerzak", "text": "Balcerzak\n\nBalcerzak () is a surname of Polish-language origin. Notable people with the surname include:\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of people named Piotr", "text": "List of people named Piotr\n\nPiotr is a Polish given name that is equivalent to the English name, Peter. In 2009, Piotr was one of the three most popular male names in Poland.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Pete Buttigieg", "text": "Pete Buttigieg\n\nPeter Paul Montgomery Buttigieg ( ; born January 19, 1982) is an American politician and former military officer who is currently serving as United States Secretary of Transportation. A member of the Democratic Party, he was the 32nd mayor of South Bend, Indiana, from 2012 to 2020, which earned him the nickname \"Mayor Pete\".\n\nButtigieg is a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Oxford, attending the latter on a Rhodes Scholarship. From 2009 to 2017, he was an intelligence officer in the United States Navy Reserve, attaining the rank of lieutenant. He was mobilized and deployed to the War in Afghanistan for seven months in 2014. Before being elected as mayor of South Bend in 2011, Buttigieg worked on the political campaigns of Democrats Jill Long Thompson, Joe Donnelly, and John Kerry, and ran unsuccessfully as the Democratic nominee for Indiana state treasurer in 2010. While serving as South Bend's mayor, Buttigieg came out as gay in 2015. He married Chasten Glezman, a schoolteacher and writer, in June 2018. Buttigieg declined to seek a third term as mayor.\n\nButtigieg ran as a candidate for president in the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries, launching his campaign for the 2020 United States presidential election on April 14, 2019. He became one of the first openly gay men to launch a major party presidential campaign. Despite initially low expectations, he gained significant momentum in mid-2019 when he participated in several town hall meetings and television debates. Buttigieg narrowly won the Iowa caucuses and placed a close second in the New Hampshire primary. By winning Iowa, he became the first openly gay candidate to win a presidential primary or caucus. Buttigieg dropped out of the race on March 1, 2020, and endorsed Joe Biden the following day.\n\nPresident-elect Biden named Buttigieg as his nominee for Secretary of Transportation in December 2020. His nomination was confirmed on February 2, 2021, by a vote of 86–13, making him the first openly gay Cabinet secretary in U.S. history. Nominated at age 38, he is also the youngest Cabinet member in the Biden administration and the youngest person ever to serve as Secretary of Transportation.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Polish athletics biography stubs", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "2721478", "title": "Aleksander Balos", "text": " Aleksander Balos was born in 1970 in the city of Gliwice, Poland. His father Jan worked in an industrial factory and his mother Janina was a schoolteacher. Neither was a member of the Communist Party (Polska Zjednoczona Partia Robotnicza or PZPR), and due to Jan’s candid criticisms of government policies during the '80s, his name was placed on a list to be sent to a Soviet labor camp. Following Janina's death in 1982, Aleksander's health declined until he suffered a severe case of rheumatic fever which damaged his heart, rendering him medically housebound at age 14 for a period of six months. Due to his personal challenges ", "score": "1.564844" }, { "id": "30698487", "title": "Edward Balcerzan", "text": "1960 – Morze, pergamin i ty ; 1964 – Podwójne interlinie ; 1969 – Granica na moment. Wiersze, przekłady, pastisze ; 1972 – Późny wiek. Poezje. ", "score": "1.5491165" }, { "id": "8862558", "title": "Mieczysław Balcer", "text": " Mieczysław Balcer (12 June 1906 &ndash; 13 March 1995) was a Polish footballer. He played in ten matches for the Poland national football team from 1924 to 1934, scoring eight goals.", "score": "1.5401083" }, { "id": "12265806", "title": "Tadeusz Łomnicki", "text": " Born on 18 July 1927 in Podhajce near Lwów (modern Lviv, Ukraine), to a family of a post office clerk and a teacher. After graduating from a trade school in Dębica he moved to Kraków, where he started to work as railway worker and study violin play. There he spent World War II and fought against the Germans in the ranks of the Grey Ranks. In 1945 he passed his exams to an actors' school organized by the Stary Teatr (Old Theatre), one of the most prestigious Polish theatres of the epoch. After his stage debut in an episodic role in ", "score": "1.5376139" }, { "id": "28128447", "title": "Janusz Korczak", "text": " Korczak was born in Warsaw in 1878. He was unsure of his birth date, which he attributed to his father's failure to promptly acquire a birth certificate for him. His parents were Józef Goldszmit, a respected lawyer from a family of proponents of the haskalah, and Cecylia née Gębicka, daughter of a prominent Kalisz family. Born to a Jewish family, he was an agnostic in his later life who did not believe in forcing religion on children. His father fell ill around 1890 and was admitted to a mental hospital, where he died six years later on 25 April 1896. Spacious apartments were given up on ", "score": "1.5370266" }, { "id": "25065313", "title": "Mirosław Bałka", "text": " Miroslaw Balka (born 1958) is a contemporary Polish sculptor and video artist. He graduated from the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts in 1985. He currently works in Otwock and Warsaw, Poland. Balka was born in Warsaw. From 1986 to 1989, Balka worked in the group Consciousnes Neue Bieriemiennost. He was the 1991 winner of the Mies van der Rohe Stipendium from the Kunstmuseum Krefeld and he is a member of Akademie der Künste, Berlin. Balka runs the Spatial Activities Studio at the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts. In 2009, Balka installed How It Is, the 10th Unilever Series commission for the Turbine Hall at Tate Modern, London, which opened on 13 October of that year.", "score": "1.526171" }, { "id": "9063453", "title": "List of Polish Jews", "text": "Arthur Balsam, violinist and pedagogue born in Warsaw and trained in Łódź ; Mike Brant, Israeli pop star; mother was Bronia Rosenberg, originally from Łódź in Poland; father was Fishel Brand, from Biłgoraj in Poland ; Grzegorz Fitelberg, composer and conductor; born in Dvinsk, Latvia ; Jerzy Fitelberg, composer; born in Warsaw, Poland; immigrated to the United States ; Szymon Goldberg, conductor and violinist; born in Włocławek, Congress Poland ; Benny Goodman, band leader; parents born in Poland ; George Henschel (1850-1934), musician; immigrated to England ; Mieczysław Horszowski, pianist, born in Lwow ; Jan Kiepura (1902-1966), actor and singer; immigrated to the ", "score": "1.5255988" }, { "id": "600868", "title": "Stefan Jaracz", "text": " Jaracz was born in Stare Żukowice near Tarnów during the Partitions of Poland. He studied law, history of art, and literature at the Jagiellonian University of Kraków, but gave up his studies to join theatre. He moved to Poznań for yet another contract where he was drafted to the Austrian army in 1907. A year later he settled in Łódź where he performed until 1911. He moved to Warsaw in the Russian Partition and worked in Teatr Mały and Teatr Polski (1913). He was sent to Moscow by the Russians (1915). Upon his return to sovereign Poland in 1918 he embarked upon an energetic ", "score": "1.5231166" }, { "id": "16550381", "title": "Piotr Skrzynecki", "text": " Skrzynecki was born 12 September 1930 in Warsaw. He was the son of a Pole Marian Skrzynecki, lieutenant colonel in the Polish Army and a Jewess Magdalena Endelman. His father died during the Soviet invasion of Poland, when he was the commander of the 7-th Lubelski Cavalry Regiment. After World War II his family moved to Łódź. There he attended a theater school associated with the National Film School in Łódź. Next he moved to Kraków where he begun studies in history of art at the Jagiellonian University. There, at the age of 26, in 1956 he organized student club which, in time, became Piwnica pod Baranami, with its first performance in December that year. Until his death, he would be the ", "score": "1.5164864" }, { "id": "27649823", "title": "Katowice", "text": " politician ; Waldemar Świerzy (1931–2013), artist, illustrator and cartoonist ; Wojciech Kilar (1932–2013), classical and film music composer ; Janusz Sidło (1933–1993), javelin thrower ; Henryk Górecki (1933–2010), classical composer ; Josef Kompalla (born 1936), ice hockey player and referee ; Henryk Broder (born 1946), journalist ; Krzysztof Krawczyk (1946–2021), singer, guitarist and composer ; Jerzy Kukuczka (1948–1989), alpine and high altitude climber ; Joanna Kluzik-Rostkowska (born 1963), politician ; Elżbieta Bieńkowska (born 1964), politician ; Alicja Kwade (born 1979), contemporary visual artist ; Jan P. Matuszyński (born 1984), film director ; Grzegorz Kosok (born 1986), volleyball player ; Zuzanna Bijoch (born 1994), fashion model ", "score": "1.5138736" }, { "id": "3824295", "title": "Tadeusz Balcerowski", "text": " Tadeusz Balcerowski (5 January 1933, Pawliczka – 26 October 2020, Radom ) is a Polish politician from the Polish People's Party. He served as member of the Sejm from 2004 to 2005.", "score": "1.5042489" }, { "id": "9815735", "title": "Marian Kociniak", "text": " Born in Warsaw, Kociniak graduated from The Aleksander Zelwerowicz National Academy of Dramatic Art in Warsaw in 1959 from the teachings of Ludwik Sempoliński. From 1959 to his death, almost without interruption, he acted at the Ateneum Theatre. He appeared on televised Theatre, reenacting many novels from the time. He also appeared in Kabaret Starszych Panów. His screen debut came in the 1959 film Mr. Professor. He appeared in over 30 films since then. He also collaborated with radio appearing in the magazine 60 minut na godzinę, where he paired with Andrzej Zaorski on Polskie Radio Program III. The popularity of the actor influenced creations of Franek Dolas in the famous ", "score": "1.5037407" }, { "id": "10299073", "title": "Aleksander Augustynowicz", "text": " Aleksander Augustynowicz was born in Iskrzynia on February 7, to his father Wincenty, a landlord and his mother, Julia from the House of Habecki. He completed his secondary education in Rzeszów, in the following years of 1883 to 1886 he studied at the Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts in Kraków, where he was led by Feliks Szynalewski, Władysław Łuszczkiewicz, and Jan Matejko. To complete his studies he moved to Munich, and participated in artist travels to Italy and Hungary. In 1890, he moved to Lwów (today Lviv in Ukraine; then Poland) where he began his artist career. He spent time in Zakopane between 1914 and 1921, in 1921 he moved to live in Poznań, where he already had a ", "score": "1.5032693" }, { "id": "8330119", "title": "Jakub Różalski", "text": " Różalski was born in Koszalin, Poland, in 1981. He graduated from the Wyższa Szkoła Sztuki Stosowanej in Poznań. He resides in Kraków.", "score": "1.5008923" }, { "id": "13595979", "title": "Patrycja Balcerzak", "text": " Patrycja Balcerzak (born 1 January 1994) is a Polish football midfielder, currently playing for SC Sand and the Polish national team.", "score": "1.497083" } ]
In what city was Mariano Chao born?
[ "San Fernando", "San Fernando, Buenos Aires" ]
place of birth
Mariano Chao
940,200
56
[ { "id": "25528026", "title": "Mariano Chao", "text": " Mariano Rodolfo Chao (born February 7, 1972) is a field hockey goalkeeper from Argentina, who competed at the 2000 Summer Olympics. He was born in San Fernando, Buenos Aires. He is also known as Tomas Chao´s uncle, a very important influencer.", "score": "1.7335262" }, { "id": "29555352", "title": "Jason Chao", "text": " Jason Chao Teng Hei (born December 12, 1986) was born in Macau. Chao is a social activist and LGBT rights campaigner. He was President of the New Macau Association and Director of the satirical newspaper Macau Concealer, one of the few online pro-democracy media in the city. He co-founded activist organisation Macau Conscience and the Rainbow of Macau.", "score": "1.6212478" }, { "id": "31916417", "title": "Midi Z", "text": " Chao was born in Lashio, Shan State, Myanmar. Both his parents are of Chinese descent, and his ancestral home is Nanjing. The son of a cook and a doctor, Chao was the youngest of five children and grew up poor. He won a scholarship and moved to Taiwan when he was 16, where he went to high school. Chao received his bachelor's degree and master's degree in design at National Taiwan University of Science and Technology. In 2011, he renounced his Burmese citizenship, and became a naturalised citizen of Taiwan. He was named Outstanding Taiwanese Filmmaker of the Year at the 53rd Golden Horse Awards in 2016.", "score": "1.6079645" }, { "id": "8721548", "title": "Ramón Chao", "text": " Ramón Luís Chao Rego (21 July 1935 – 20 May 2018) was a Spanish journalist and writer. He won the Premio de Virtuosismo for Piano in 1955. The same year he moved to Paris, France to study music with Nadia Boulanger and Lazare Lévy. In 1960 he began his collaboration with the RTF's Iberian languages Service. He was head of this service ten years later. At the same time he was collaborating with the Spanish weekly Triunfo, the monthly Le Monde Diplomatique, and the daily newspapers Le Monde and La Voz de Galicia. Ramón Chao was named chevalier de Ordre des Arts et des ", "score": "1.5954764" }, { "id": "3712859", "title": "Mariano Martínez (actor)", "text": " Mariano Gastón Martínez was born on December 5, 1978 in La Boca, Argentina. After the separation of his parents, Mariano Martínez moved to Avellaneda, Buenos Aires with his mother and his five brothers.", "score": "1.584461" }, { "id": null, "title": "Mariano Chao", "text": "Mariano Chao\n\nMariano Rodolfo Chao (born February 7, 1972) is a field hockey goalkeeper from Argentina, who competed at the 2000 Summer Olympics. He was born in San Fernando, Buenos Aires. He is also known as Tomas Chao´s uncle, a very important influencer.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Mariano", "text": "John Mariano\n\nJohn Mariano (born August 5, 1960) is an American actor who has worked in film, television, animation and nightclubs. He is known for playing tough guys with a comic edge. His ability of physical comedy has been compared to Jerry Lewis and Buster Keaton. Keaton's wife Eleanor was quoted as saying; \"He reminded me so much of Buster, it gave me chills\". He got his start in films playing a prissy bank teller in \"Tough Guys\" with Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas. Working steadily in both film and television, he's best remembered on television for playing Johnny the waiter in \"Caroline in the City\" with Lea Thompson. A gifted improviser, sketch player and voice-over artist, his impression of Robert De Niro in a sketch entitled \"De Niro Sings the Supremes\" at The Groundlings, led to him playing a pigeon named Bobby in the cartoon series \"Animaniacs\", who is based on a character played by De Niro in \"Goodfellas\".\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Chao (surname)", "text": "Chao (surname)\n\nChao is a surname in various cultures. It is the Pinyin spelling of two Chinese surnames ( and ), the Wade–Giles spelling of two others ( or the much rarer , both spelled in Pinyin as Zhào), and a regional or other spelling of two additional Chinese surnames ( Cáo and Zhōu). It is also a Galician and Portuguese surname.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Medalists at the 2007 Pan American Games", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Pan American Games medalists in field hockey", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "29781874", "title": "Mariano Raffo", "text": " Mariano Raffo was born in Buenos Aires on August 24, 1973. He lived their formative years in Quilmes, where he studied and worked. He taught Video Classes at the Municipal School of Fine Arts in Quilmes, as it relates to other artists of his generation, as Marcelo Vecelich, Juan Manuel Cellini, with whom he wrote the screenplay for a movie ever made, \"El Retorno2\" and Carlos Spagarino, Cucamonga fri Cultura member in the city of La Plata, with whom the documentary Carrojero were made. He also meet Agustín Ronconi, Arbolito's leader.", "score": "1.580503" }, { "id": "3546355", "title": "Stephen Chao", "text": " Stephen Chao was born to a Chinese American family, and raised in Ann Arbor, Michigan, moving to New Hampshire when he was eight years old. His maternal grandfather was a prominent official in pre-revolutionary China, once serving as the nation's economic minister to the United States. Chao is the nephew of Zao Wou Ki, a well-known Chinese impressionist painter. Chao attended Fay School and later, the Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire. He attended Harvard University where he majored in classical studies in 1977. He later went on to earn an MBA from Harvard Business School in 1981.", "score": "1.5785447" }, { "id": "5642652", "title": "Mariano Ching", "text": " Mariano Ching is a Chinese–Filipino artist, painter, illustrator, and photographer. His works have been exhibited in Philippines, France, Singapore, Malaysia and United States.", "score": "1.5595644" }, { "id": "26748917", "title": "Luis Mariano", "text": " Luis Mariano was born in Irun, Spain on 13 August 1914, the son of a garagiste and taxi-driver and showed interest in singing as a child. His family moved to France at the start of the Spanish Civil War and settled in Bordeaux where he studied at the Conservatoire, and also sang in cabarets. Jeanne Lagiscarde, who was in charge of the classical department of a record store in Bordeaux, took Mariano under her wing, and gave up her job to nurture his talent in Paris. To earn a living, he sang in stage shows and appeared in films, starting with 'L'escalier sans fin' in 1943. That year he auditioned for the role of Ernesto in Don Pasquale, and sang in the opera at the Palais de Chaillot and later ", "score": "1.5574735" }, { "id": "31262568", "title": "Mariano Grueiro", "text": " Mariano Grueiro (born 1975) is a Galego (Galician language) cultural activist, writer, photographer, filmmaker, artist. He was born in 1975 in Narón, Galicia/Galiza, Spain, and grew up in the naval dockyard town of Ferrol in the 1980s, during a period of major crisis in the Galician shipbuilding industry. As a photographer his main areas of work are landscapes and documentary. His earliest photographic work was \"People in Compostela\", a photographic essay about the Galician capital Santiago de Compostela (1996–1999). This was followed by a series on the Galician coast (1999) and subsequently on the December 2002 political demonstrations in Santiago de Caompostela. His SO2 project linked the Berlin Alexanderplatz communications tower ", "score": "1.557242" }, { "id": "286839", "title": "Mariano Bombarda", "text": " Bombarda was born in Cádiz, Spain, to an Italian father and Argentinian mother. Due to the profession of his father, who was a naval engineer, his family moved a lot and in addition to Spain he has also lived in Italy, Argentina and Venezuela.", "score": "1.5528983" }, { "id": "28885824", "title": "Chao Pengfei", "text": " Chao Pengfei was born in Dalian in China.", "score": "1.5445422" }, { "id": "15468354", "title": "Manu Chao", "text": " Chao's mother, Felisa Ortega, is from Bilbao, Basque Country, and his father, writer and journalist Ramón Chao, is from Vilalba, Galicia. They emigrated to Paris to avoid Francisco Franco's dictatorship—Manu's grandfather had been sentenced to death. Shortly after Manu's birth, the Chao family moved to the outskirts of Paris, and Manu spent most of his childhood in Boulogne-Billancourt and Sèvres. As he grew up he was surrounded by many artists and intellectuals, most of whom were acquaintances of his father. Chao cites much of his childhood experience as inspiration for some songs. As a child, he was a big fan of Cuban singer-pianist Bola de Nieve.", "score": "1.5439553" }, { "id": "13541392", "title": "James Y. Chao", "text": " James Yuan Chao was born on September 14, 1947 and grew up in Taiwan. His father was born in China and moved to Taiwan with his family in 1946. In the mid-1980s, Chao's family moved from Taiwan to the U.S.", "score": "1.5436096" }, { "id": "29064282", "title": "Raymond Mariano", "text": " Born in 1950, Raymond Mariano is the oldest of nine children, the son of an immigrant mother and a disabled veteran father. Mariano grew up in one of the state's largest public housing projects, Great Brook Valley. Mariano graduated with a BA from Worcester State College and holds an MPA from Clark University (1982). Ray has taught graduate and undergraduate courses at several New England colleges and universities. His teaching includes both government and management courses.", "score": "1.5433934" }, { "id": "2113157", "title": "Romulo Yanes", "text": " Yanes was born in Fomento, Cuba, on February 17, 1959. His father, Abraham, worked as an auto mechanic; his mother, Caridad (Nieblas), was employed as a seamstress. He and family left Cuba via Freedom Flights when he was eight years old; they ultimately relocated to Weehawken, New Jersey. His interest in photography was piqued when he took a course on it in high school. He studied at the School of Visual Arts in New York City during the early 1980s. After graduating, he worked as the manager of a photo studio.", "score": "1.539328" }, { "id": "2731166", "title": "Mariano Bellver", "text": " When he was twelve years old, his family moved to Seville, where he studied merchant professor and insurance actuary, and lived all his life. It was until his death that he was the owner of the San Juan Bosco school in Seville, located on the well-known Venice Street, where he has walked daily for more than 50 years, without missing a “class” for a single day. Everyone who met Don Mariano knew that in addition to being a classy millionaire, he was a humble man who never left his two well-known passions, teaching and art. All kinds of students have passed through his school, some of them outstanding in the world of ", "score": "1.5370784" }, { "id": "13788815", "title": "Pablo Antonio", "text": " Antonio was born in Binondo, Manila in 1901. He was orphaned by the age of 12, and had to work in the daytime in order to finish his high school education and work at night. He studied architecture at the Mapua Institute of Technology but dropped out of school. Ramon Arevalo, the engineer in charge of the Legislative Building project, funded Antonio's education at the University of London. He completed a five-year architecture course in three years, graduating in 1927.", "score": "1.5316551" }, { "id": "1888682", "title": "Chan Chao", "text": " Chao was born in Burma (now Myanmar) in 1966. He and his family left Burma for the United States in 1978. Chao studied under John Gossage at the University of Maryland, College Park. When he turned 30, Chao decided to visit Burma for the first time since his family left but was denied a visa. Instead, he travelled to Thailand and crossed the border illegally into Burma, where he photographed a Burmese rebel camp. These images comprise his books Burma: Something Went Wrong and Letter from PLF. He also has a book of female nudes entitled Echo. His Burma portraits were included in the 2002 Whitney Biennial. Chao was one of 113 artists selected for the show. One of the ", "score": "1.5290277" }, { "id": "6492795", "title": "James S. C. Chao", "text": " Chao was born on December 29, 1927 in a small, rural farming village called Malu in Jiading County (now Jiading District) outside Shanghai, Republic of China. His parents were Yi-Ren Chao, an elementary school principal, and Yu-Chin Hsu Chao. They were farmers who \"emphasized the value of education\". Chao attended schools near Shanghai, including Shanghai Jiao Tong University (formerly National Chiao Tung University) and Wusong Merchant Marine College, where he majored in navigation. He finished his coursework in 1949 and went to sea as a cadet on a merchant vessel. At the climax of the Chinese Civil War, Chao's ship went to Taiwan, where it remained.", "score": "1.5216761" } ]
In what city was John Edgerton born?
[ "Johnston County", "Johnston County, North Carolina" ]
place of birth
John Edgerton
1,427,860
78
[ { "id": "565789", "title": "John Edgerton", "text": " Edgerton was born on October 2, 1879 in Johnston County, North Carolina to Gabriel Griffin Edgerton and his wife Harriet Copeland but moved to Lebanon, Tennessee, to join his older brother, Howard K. Edgerton, a physician, in 1896. He attended Cumberland University for prep school and his first year of college. After receiving the Wilson County Cartmell scholarship, he went to Vanderbilt University, earning an A.B. in 1902 and an M.A in 1903.", "score": "1.7839582" }, { "id": "11885375", "title": "Alfred Peck Edgerton", "text": " Edgerton was born in Plattsburgh, New York, on January 11, 1813. He graduated from Plattsburgh Academy and worked briefly for a newspaper. He moved to New York City to work in advertising and other business pursuits. Within a few years, in 1837, Edgerton moved to Hicksville, Ohio, an area of development. He became manager of the American Land Company, engaging in surveying and selling land for settlement and development in northern Ohio. He was the founder of Edgerton, Ohio.", "score": "1.7362318" }, { "id": "10792959", "title": "Doc Edgerton", "text": " Edgerton was born in Fremont, Nebraska, on April 6, 1903, the son of Mary Nettie Coe and Frank Eugene Edgerton, a descendant of Samuel Edgerton, the son of Richard Edgerton, one of the founders of Norwich, Connecticut and Alice Ripley, a great-granddaughter of Governor William Bradford (1590–1657) of the Plymouth Colony and a passenger on the Mayflower. His father was a lawyer, journalist, author and orator and served as the assistant attorney general of Nebraska from 1911 to 1915. Edgerton grew up in Aurora, Nebraska. He also spent some of his childhood years in Washington, D.C., and Lincoln, Nebraska.", "score": "1.71194" }, { "id": "3745715", "title": "Nash Edgerton", "text": " Edgerton was born in Blacktown, New South Wales and grew up in Dural (both suburbs of Sydney). He is the son of Marianne Margarethe (von Dort), a homemaker, and Michael Edgerton, a solicitor/property developer. His younger brother is actor Joel Edgerton. His mother is a Dutch immigrant who was born in The Hague.", "score": "1.7068486" }, { "id": "12072534", "title": "Benjamin Hyde Edgerton", "text": " Edgerton was born in Saybrook, Connecticut on August 17, 1811. Edgerton studied to be a surveyor in Buffalo, New York.", "score": "1.6991577" }, { "id": null, "title": "Joel Edgerton", "text": "Joel Edgerton\n\nJoel Edgerton (born 23 June 1974) is an Australian actor and filmmaker. He is best known for his appearance in the \"Star Wars\" films \"Attack of the Clones\" (2002) and \"Revenge of the Sith\" (2005) as a young Owen Lars, a role he reprised in the Disney+ series \"Obi-Wan Kenobi\" (2022). Edgerton also appeared in \"King Arthur\" (2004) as Gawain, \"Warrior\" (2011), \"Zero Dark Thirty\" (2012), \"The Great Gatsby\" (2013), \"Black Mass\" (2015), \"Loving\" (2016), \"Bright\" (2017), \"Red Sparrow\" (2018), \"The King\" (2019), and the limited series \"The Underground Railroad\" (2021).\n\nIn Australia, Edgerton portrayed Will McGill in the drama series \"The Secret Life of Us\" (2001–02), for which he won the AACTA Award for Best Lead Actor in a Television Drama. He has appeared in several Australian films, such as \"The Square\" (2008), \"Animal Kingdom\" (2010), for which he won the AACTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, \"Wish You Were Here\" (2012), and \"Felony\" (2013).\n\nIn 2015, Edgerton received a nomination for the Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directing – First-Time Feature Film for \"The Gift\", a psychological horror-thriller film he wrote, directed, co-produced, and in which he co-starred. Edgerton garnered further critical acclaim for his performance as Richard Loving in the 2016 historical drama \"Loving\", for which he received a nomination for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor. In 2018, he wrote, directed, and starred in the drama \"Boy Erased\", about gay conversion therapy. The following year's \"The King\", which he co-wrote and starred in, was released on Netflix.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Egerton (journalist)", "text": "John Egerton (journalist)\n\nJohn Egerton (June 14, 1935 — November 21, 2013) was an American journalist and author known for his writing on the Civil Rights Movement, Southern food, history of the South, and Southern culture.<ref name=passing/>\n\nEgerton wrote or edited approximately twenty non-fiction books and one \"contemporary fable\". He also contributed chapters to numerous other volumes and wrote scores of articles in newspapers and magazines. Egerton was a participant and writer for many projects and conferences dealing with education, desegregation, civil rights, and the American South; particularly its food. Among his best-known books are \"The Americanization of Dixie\", \"Generations: An American Family\", \"Southern Food: At Home, on the Road, in History\", and \"Speak Now Against the Day: The Generation before the Civil Rights Movement in the South\".\n\nEgerton's \"Speak Now Against the Day: The Generation Before the Civil Rights Movement in the South\" won the Robert F. Kennedy Book Award. He also wrote \"Southern Food: At Home, On the Road, In History\" and coedited \"Nashville: An American Self-Portrait\", a look at his adopted city to in the 1960s. In June 2013, five months before his own death, Egerton spoke at the memorial service for preacher and civil rights activist Will D. Campbell.<ref name=passing/>", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Edgerton", "text": "John Edgerton\n\nJohn Emmett Edgerton (October 2, 1879 – August 4, 1938) was an industrialist who gained prominence as the president of the National Association of Manufacturers from 1921 to 1931. Edgerton was also an All-Southern college football fullback for the Vanderbilt Commodores of Vanderbilt University.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Taron Egerton", "text": "Taron Egerton\n\nTaron Egerton ( ; born 10 November 1989) is a Welsh actor. He is the recipient of a Golden Globe Award, and has received nominations for a Grammy Award and two British Academy Film Awards.\n\nBorn in Birkenhead, England, Egerton began acting at age 15 and graduated from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in 2012. He gained recognition for his starring role as spy recruit Gary \"Eggsy\" Unwin in the action comedy film \"\" (2014) and its sequel \"\" (2017). He has also starred in several biographical films, portraying military officer Edward Brittain in the drama \"Testament of Youth\" (2014), the titular ski-jumper in the sports film \"Eddie the Eagle\" (2016), and singer Elton John in the musical \"Rocketman\" (2019), the lattermost of which earned him the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. In 2022, Egerton starred in the miniseries \"Black Bird\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Egerton, 3rd Earl of Bridgewater", "text": "John Egerton, 3rd Earl of Bridgewater\n\nJohn Egerton, 3rd Earl of Bridgewater KB PC (9 November 1646 – 19 March 1701) was a British nobleman from the Egerton family.\n\nHe was the eldest son of John Egerton, 2nd Earl of Bridgewater and his wife Elizabeth Cavendish. His maternal grandparents were William Cavendish, 1st Duke of Newcastle and his first wife Elizabeth Basset.\n\nOn 17 November 1664, he married Lady Elizabeth Cranfield, daughter of James Cranfield, 2nd Earl of Middlesex. She gave birth to a son, but died in childbirth. He married his second wife on 2 April 1673, Lady Jane Paulet, eldest daughter of Charles Paulet, 1st Duke of Bolton.\n\nEgerton served as a Member of Parliament for Buckinghamshire as a Whig for Buckinghamshire from 1685 to 1686. He also served as Lord Lieutenant of Buckinghamshire following his father's death in 1686 but was dismissed after his first period in office by King James II for refusing to produce a list of Roman Catholics to serve as officers of the militia. He was later reinstated to the position when William III came to the throne and James II was forced into exile.\n\nHe served as First Lord of Trade in the Convention Parliament, 1690–1691. He was promoted to the cabinet as First Lord of the Admiralty by the Whigs in 1699. He served in this position until March 1700/1.\n\nHe was chosen as a Speaker for the House of Lords in 1697 and then again for 1701.", "score": null }, { "id": "14600700", "title": "Joel Edgerton", "text": " Edgerton was born in Blacktown, New South Wales, Australia the son of Michael, a solicitor and property developer, and Marianne Margarethe (van Dort) Edgerton. His mother is a Dutch immigrant, who was born in The Hague. He graduated from The Hills Grammar School in 1991. He attended the Nepean Drama School at the University of Western Sydney, before moving on to various stage productions, including at Sydney Theatre Company.", "score": "1.6857979" }, { "id": "13290391", "title": "Sidney Edgerton", "text": " Edgerton was born in Cazenovia, New York, on August 17, 1818. His parents were Amos and Zerviah (Graham) Edgerton, both of Connecticut. Zerviah was a cousin of millionaire philanthropist Anson Greene Phelps. As a child, Edgerton was so sickly and frail that burial clothes were prepared for him. Whereas the young Edgerton avoided death, the same could not be said for his father, a teacher by trade who had been blind for years. Amos Edgerton died when Sidney was still an infant. Left with six children to raise, Zerviah Edgerton struggled to maintain her family. By age eight, young Sidney was out of the home and working himself through school. He eventually attended the Genesee Wesleyan Seminary in Lima, New York, where his cousin taught, and where he would later become an instructor as well.", "score": "1.6716912" }, { "id": "32025836", "title": "H. K. Edgerton", "text": " Harold Kenneth Edgerton was born in North Carolina on February 18, 1948. His father Roger Roland Edgerton (1917-1994) was a minister.", "score": "1.6667378" }, { "id": "15410601", "title": "Elisha W. Edgerton", "text": " Edgerton was born in South Coventry, Connecticut.", "score": "1.6586902" }, { "id": "26590023", "title": "Bill Edgerton", "text": " William Albert Edgerton (born August 16, 1941) is an American former Major League Baseball left-handed pitcher. He pitched for the Kansas City Athletics (1966–1967) and Seattle Pilots (1969). Edgerton was born in South Bend, Indiana. He is 6ft 2in and weighs 185 lb.During a 3-year baseball career, Edgerton compiled 1 win, 11 strikeouts, and a 4.79 earned run average. Following his majors career, Edgerton pitched in the Orioles and Dodgers Minor league systems.", "score": "1.6474092" }, { "id": "565788", "title": "John Edgerton", "text": " John Emmett Edgerton (October 2, 1879 &ndash; August 4, 1938) was an industrialist who gained prominence as the president of the National Association of Manufacturers from 1921 to 1931. Edgerton was also an All-Southern college football fullback for the Vanderbilt Commodores of Vanderbilt University.", "score": "1.641698" }, { "id": "32025835", "title": "H. K. Edgerton", "text": " H. K. Edgerton (born February 18, 1948) is an African-American activist for Southern heritage and an African-American member of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. He is often given a prominent place at rallies for the Confederate flag. A former president of the Asheville, North Carolina, chapter of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People), he is on the board of the Southern Legal Resource Center.", "score": "1.6106439" }, { "id": "565793", "title": "John Edgerton", "text": " One of the highest honors that a student could achieve was the \"Bachelor of Ugliness,\" a title given to the male undergraduate student believed to be most representative of ideal young manhood and the class's most popular member, devised by Professor William H. Dodd in 1885. In the spring semester of 1902, that honor was given to football star John Edgerton. Edgerton was considered such a celebrity that advertisers in the Hustler used his name to sell their products. One such ad read: \"John E. Edgerton will be glad to see his friends at Varley, Bauman & Bowers: One Price Clothiers, Hatters, Furnishers and Merchant Tailors.\" One account reads: \"John Edgerton, whose last year was 1903, was in speed and size the type of man which made the Yale teams of the early nineties so powerful. After leaving college he became one of the head masters at the Columbia Military Academy at Columbia, and is now manager and part owner of a woolen mill at Lebanon, Tenn.\"", "score": "1.6055174" }, { "id": "30815354", "title": "Edward H. Edgerton", "text": " Edward Henry Edgerton was born in Warren, Vermont on August 31, 1863. He graduated from Barre Academy in 1885 and settled in Rochester, where he became the Treasurer of the White River Lumber Company and was involved in several other business ventures. Edgerton later studied law and established a practice in Rochester. A Republican, Edgerton served in several local offices, including selectman and town clerk. Edgerton served in the Vermont House of Representatives from 1907 to 1911, and in the Vermont Senate from 1911 to 1913. In 1912 he was elected Windsor County Assistant Judge, and he served from 1913 to 1921. In 1924 Edgerton was again elected to the Vermont Senate. He served one term, 1925 to 1927, and was the Senate's President Pro Tempore. Edgerton was an unsuccessful candidate for lieutenant governor in 1926, losing to Hollister Jackson, who went on to win the general election. In 1928 Edgerton was again elected to the Vermont House of Representatives. He served one term, 1929 to 1931 and was chairman of the Ways & Means Committee. Edward H. Edgerton died in Rochester on July 7, 1934. He was buried at Woodlawn Cemetery in Rochester.", "score": "1.601131" }, { "id": "13290392", "title": "Sidney Edgerton", "text": " In 1844, he moved to Ohio and began working in the law office of Rufus P. Spalding. Edgerton also taught in an academy in Tallmadge, Ohio, the same year. He studied law and graduated from the Cincinnati Law School in 1845. The next year Edgerton was admitted to the bar and began the practice of law in Akron, Ohio. During this time, Edgerton declared himself an Agnostic. He married Mary Wright (1827–1885) of Tallmadge on May 18, 1848, but Mary almost ended the relationship, because of Edgerton's religious views.", "score": "1.5963132" }, { "id": "4951418", "title": "Clyde Edgerton", "text": " Edgerton was born in Durham, North Carolina and grew up in the small town of Bethesda, North Carolina. He was the only child of Truma and Ernest Edgerton, who came from families of cotton and tobacco farmers, respectively. In 1962 Edgerton enrolled at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, eventually majoring in English. During this time he was a student in the Air Force ROTC program where he learned to fly a small plane. After graduating in 1966, he entered the Air Force and served five years as a fighter pilot in the United States, Korea, Japan, and Thailand. After his time in service, Edgerton got his Master's degree in English and began a job as an English teacher at his old high school. Soon after, he also earned a doctorate. He decided to become a writer in ", "score": "1.5934463" }, { "id": "8215036", "title": "Edgerton W. Day", "text": " Day was born in Inverary, Ontario to Dr. Louis E. and Harriet Ansley Day, of Scottish descent. His father, Louis owned a hotel in Inverary. He completed his education in Inverary, and got his first job as a stage driver on the run between Inverary and Kingston. Day then worked for the Massey-Harris company, starting as an office worker, eventually becoming chief clerk, before resigning after 11 years with the company. Day then took a job as the general manager of the Globe Loan company in Toronto. After \"always longing to go to the west\", Day came to the area that would ", "score": "1.5679512" }, { "id": "29544472", "title": "Edgerton, Kansas", "text": "John Henry Balch (1896-1980), U.S. Naval Reserve Commander, Medal of Honor recipient Notable individuals who were born in and/or have lived in Edgerton include:", "score": "1.5631275" }, { "id": "32594139", "title": "John Edgerley", "text": " John Edgerley was born about 1814, probably in Upper Arley, then Staffordshire England and worked as a gardener at Arley Hall. He migrated to New Zealand in 1834 on the sailing ship Emma Eugenia ex the Downs, arrived en route at Sydney 10 May 1835 and reached the Hokianga 30 July. He spent the years to 1841 at Horeke in the Hokianga as gardener/botanist for Lieutenant Thomas McDonnell, who had been appointed an additional British Resident in New Zealand - they had travelled out together. He brought plants with him from England and when Edward Wakefield visited Horeke in 1839 he found a flourishing garden. There are records in England of John ", "score": "1.560843" }, { "id": "13290389", "title": "Sidney Edgerton", "text": " Sidney Edgerton (August 17, 1818 – July 19, 1900) was an American politician, lawyer, judge and teacher from Ohio. He served during the American Civil War, as a Squirrel Hunter. During this time, Edgerton served as a U.S. Congressman. In 1863, Abraham Lincoln appointed him the first Chief justice of the Idaho Territorial Court. Edgerton lobbied for the creation of separate territories, out of the Idaho Territory, and in 1864, Abraham Lincoln appointed Edgerton as the first Territorial Governor of Montana. During his term as Territorial Governor, he was an alleged member of the infamous Montana Vigilantes, and was reputedly among its ", "score": "1.5556762" } ]
In what city was Jim born?
[ "Arizona Territory" ]
place of birth
Jim (Medal of Honor recipient)
4,674,280
97
[ { "id": "6988610", "title": "Jim Bessman", "text": " Bessman was born July 19, 1952, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He grew up in Madison and began writing freelance for Variety while in Wisconsin.", "score": "1.6895552" }, { "id": "2382690", "title": "James Barrier", "text": " James \"Buffalo Jim\" Barrier (March 22, 1953 – April 6, 2008), born in Cleveland, Ohio, was a local wrestling promoter in Las Vegas. His legal struggle with business owner and landlord Frederick \"Rick\" Rizzolo, who owned land occupied by Barrier's auto repair business, was covered by the media during the early 2000s.", "score": "1.6723723" }, { "id": "1590777", "title": "Jim Irvin", "text": " Born James Lawrence Irvin and raised in west London.", "score": "1.6709397" }, { "id": "6025898", "title": "Jim Ignatowski", "text": " Ignatowski was born James Caldwell. He claimed to have been born in Spokane, Washington, although his often-unreliable memory makes this information quite open to question. However, he was definitely raised in Boston, Massachusetts as one of three children in a very well-to-do family. Jim's mother died when he was quite young, leaving Jim's father (later played by Victor Buono) to raise the family. (Jim states while applying for his taxi driver's license that his father's name was Ignatowski—another example of his faulty memory.) Being busy with his thriving urology practices, Dr. Caldwell left much of this task to various family servants. The father's absence seemed to affect all the Caldwell children in some way: Jim was an ", "score": "1.6704631" }, { "id": "32170326", "title": "Jim Plunkett", "text": " had been born; Jim was born in 1947, after the family had moved to Santa Clara. They later moved to San Jose where William ran a newsstand, and where they were able to find low-cost housing. The family lived in relative poverty, and received state financial aid. Jim and his sisters learned to work hard and do things for themselves as they grew up. They also helped Carmen with cooking and other household chores. When Jim was growing up, the family's financial situation was a big problem for him. He did not like the area he lived in, often did not have money for dates, and avoided bringing friends to his house. He worked from an early age, cleaning up at a gas ", "score": "1.6585219" }, { "id": null, "title": "Jim Gaffigan", "text": "Jim Gaffigan\n\nJames Christopher Gaffigan (born July 7, 1966) is an American stand-up comedian, actor, writer, and producer. His material often addresses fatherhood, laziness, food, religion, and general observations. He is regarded as a \"clean\" comic, using little profanity in his routines. He has released several successful comedy specials, including \"\", \"Obsessed\", \"Cinco\", and \"Quality Time\", all of which have received Grammy nominations.\n\nGaffigan's memoir \"Dad Is Fat\" (2013) and his most recent book \"Food: A Love Story\" (2014) were both published by Crown Publishers. He co-created and starred in the TV Land series \"The Jim Gaffigan Show\", based on his life. He collaborates extensively with his wife, actress Jeannie Gaffigan, with whom he has five children. They are Catholic, a topic that frequently comes up in his comedy shows.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jim Morrison", "text": "Jim Morrison\n\nJames Douglas Morrison (December 8, 1943 – July 3, 1971) was an American singer, poet and songwriter who was the lead vocalist of the rock band the Doors. Due to his wild personality, poetic lyrics, distinctive voice, unpredictable and erratic performances, and the dramatic circumstances surrounding his life and early death, Morrison is regarded by music critics and fans as one of the most influential frontmen in rock history. Since his death, Morrison's fame has endured as one of popular culture's top rebellious and oft-displayed icons, representing the generation gap and youth counterculture.\n\nTogether with pianist Ray Manzarek, Morrison founded the Doors in 1965 in Venice, California. The group spent two years in obscurity until shooting to prominence with their number-one single in the United States, \"Light My Fire\", taken from their self-titled debut album. Morrison recorded a total of six studio albums with the Doors, all of which sold well and received critical acclaim. He was well known for improvising spoken word poetry passages while the band played live. Manzarek said Morrison \"embodied hippie counterculture rebellion\".\n\nMorrison developed an alcohol dependency throughout the band's career, which at times affected his performances on stage. On July 3, 1971, Morrison died unexpectedly in Paris at the age of 27, amid several conflicting witness reports. His premature death is often linked with the 27 Club. Since no autopsy was performed, the cause of Morrison's death remains disputed.\n\nAlthough the Doors recorded two more albums after Morrison died, his death severely affected the band's fortunes, and they split up two years later. In 1993, Morrison was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame along with the other Doors members. In 2011, a \"Rolling Stone\" readers' pick placed Morrison in fifth position on the magazine's \"Best Lead Singers of All Time\", and in another \"Rolling Stone\" list of \"The 100 Greatest Singers of All Time\", he was ranked 47th. He was also ranked the 22nd greatest singer in rock by \"Classic Rock\" magazine.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jim Carrey", "text": "Jim Carrey\n\nJames Eugene Carrey (; born January 17, 1962) is a Canadian-American actor, comedian and artist. Known for his energetic slapstick performances, Carrey first gained recognition in 1990, after landing a role in the American sketch comedy television series \"In Living Color\" (1990–1994). He broke out as a star in motion pictures with \"\", \"The Mask\" and \"Dumb and Dumber\" (all 1994). This was followed up with \"\", \"Batman Forever\" (both 1995) and \"Liar Liar\" (1997).\n\nIn the 2000s, he gained further notice for his portrayal of the Grinch in \"How the Grinch Stole Christmas\" and for the comedy \"Me, Myself & Irene\" (both in 2000), as well as \"Bruce Almighty\" (2003), \"Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events\" (2004), \"Fun with Dick and Jane\" (2005), \"Yes Man\", \"Horton Hears a Who!\" (both 2008), and \"A Christmas Carol\" (2009). In the 2010s, Carrey appeared in the films \"Mr. Popper's Penguins\" (2011), \"The Incredible Burt Wonderstone\", \"Kick-Ass 2\" (both 2013), \"Dumb and Dumber To\" (2014), and portrayed Leap Day William in the sitcom \"30 Rock\" (2012). In 2020, he portrayed Dr. Robotnik in \"Sonic the Hedgehog\" and its 2022 sequel and Joe Biden in six episodes of \"Saturday Night Live\" in the leadup to the 2020 United States presidential election.\n\nAlthough largely typecast as a comedic actor, Carrey has had success in dramatic roles. His first dramatic success was for starring in the Emmy-nominated made-for-television film \"Doing Time on Maple Drive\" (1992). Carrey gained attention for his leading roles in \"The Truman Show\" (1998) and \"Man on the Moon\" (1999), earning Golden Globe Awards for each film. He later starred in the psychological science fiction romantic drama film \"Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind\" (2004); this performance is repeatedly lauded as the seminal in Carrey's career and for which he was nominated for both the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role and another Golden Globe Award. He was also praised for his dramatic role of Jeff Piccirillo in the Showtime tragicomedy series \"Kidding\" (2018, 2020), for which he was nominated for another Golden Globe. Multiple film critics and media outlets have cited Carrey as one of the best actors never to have received an Academy Award nomination. \n\nIn 2006, Carrey received a Grammy award nomination for Best Spoken Word Album for Children. In 2013, Carrey published his first book, a children's story titled \"How Roland Rolls\", which was awarded a 2013 Gelett Burgess Children's Book Award. In 2020, Carrey published his first novel, \"Memoirs and Misinformation\", which he co-authored with Dana Vachon.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jim Jordan (American politician)", "text": "Jim Jordan (American politician)\n\nJames Daniel Jordan (born February 17, 1964) is an American politician serving as the U.S. representative for since 2007. His district stretches from Lake Erie to just below Urbana in north-central and western Ohio and includes Lima, Marion, Tiffin, Norwalk, and Elyria. A member of the Republican Party, Jordan is a former collegiate wrestler and college wrestling coach.\n\nJordan is a founding member of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, serving as its first chair from 2015 to 2017, and as its vice chair since 2017. He was the ranking member of the House Oversight Committee from 2019 to 2020. He vacated that position to become the ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee.\n\nJordan is a close ally of former president Donald Trump. During Trump's presidency, Jordan sought to discredit investigations into Russian interference in the 2016 election and staged a sit-in to prevent a Trump impeachment inquiry hearing over the Trump-Zelenskyy telephone controversy. After Joe Biden won the 2020 presidential election and Trump refused to concede while making claims of election fraud, Jordan supported lawsuits to invalidate the election results and voted not to certify the Electoral College results. He has refused to cooperate with the United States House Select Committee in connection with the January 6, 2021 storming of U.S. Capital by election fraud protesters, which subpoenaed him on May 12, 2022.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jim Kenney", "text": "Jim Kenney\n\nJames Francis Kenney (born August 7, 1958) is an American politician who is the 99th Mayor of Philadelphia. Kenney was first elected on November 3, 2015, defeating his Republican rival Melissa Murray Bailey after winning the crowded Democratic primary contest by a landslide on May 19.\n\nBefore he became mayor, Kenney was a member of the Philadelphia City Council for 23 years, serving as a Councilman at Large from January 1992 until January 29, 2015, when he resigned to run for mayor.\n\nKenney was re-elected to a second term as mayor on November 5, 2019. His term will expire in 2024.", "score": null }, { "id": "10647592", "title": "Jim Burgess (producer)", "text": " Burgess was born on July 21, 1953 in Okeechobee, Florida. He trained as a classical tenor and opera singer, and was described as having \"an amazing ear\". He began his career as a DJ in Florida in the early-mid 1970s and then moved onto Limelight, a gay club in Atlanta, Georgia, where he was \"discovered\" by Tony Martino and Alan Harris, the owners of the New York club 12 West.", "score": "1.6545138" }, { "id": "13787822", "title": "Jim Berkenstadt", "text": " James Allan Berkenstadt (born June 26, 1956) is an American writer, record producer, and historical entertainment consultant. Berkenstadt was born in Winnetka, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. He is the third of three children born to Lois Berkenstadt, his mother, and Edward Berkenstadt, his father. Berkenstadt, previously an attorney of many years, has consulted on a number of audio, video, and online projects for George Harrison, as well as for The Beatles' company Apple Corps and many others in the music industry.", "score": "1.6517076" }, { "id": "32471563", "title": "Jim Roslof", "text": " Jim Roslof was born November 21, 1946, in Chicago, Illinois, to Edward E. and Gertrude (Kibitlewski) Roslof. Early in his career in the late 1960s, Jim Roslof was a contributor of cover art to the counterculture underground newspaper Chicago Seed.", "score": "1.6368291" }, { "id": "7180423", "title": "Jim Ameche", "text": " Born James Amici in Kenosha, Wisconsin,. When his elder brother, Don, left his position as the host and announcer for The Chase and Sanborn Hour in the early 1940s, Jim took over for the remainder of the show's run. He also was heard as mountie Jim West on ABC's Silver Eagle (1951–55). Other shows Ameche was heard on included Grand Hotel, Hollywood Playhouse, and Big Sister. In the 1940s, he had several programs on WGN radio in Chicago. He was heard on stations in Los Angeles and Palm Springs in the late 1950s and early 60s. For many years he was a popular local radio personality in the New York City area. By the late 1960s, he was working as an announcer on New York's WHN and the TV pitchman for a Longines Symphonette Society mail-order record album featuring clips of old-time radio broadcasts. In the 1960s he also read radio advertisements for Gibson wines. For many years, he was the afternoon announcer on WQXR, the classical radio station of The New York Times, and was a familiar and beloved voice. He also recorded numerous radio ads in Phoenix, Arizona in his later years.", "score": "1.6364532" }, { "id": "7664003", "title": "Jim Bannon", "text": " Born in 1911 in Kansas City, Missouri, Bannon attended Rockhurst High School and Rockhurst University, where he played football, baseball, and polo. In 1944, he was ineligible (classified 4-F) for World War II service, owing to an ulcer, and therefore served as a civilian flight instructor.", "score": "1.6358116" }, { "id": "13094276", "title": "Jim Green (councilman)", "text": " Born in Birmingham, Alabama, Green moved to Canada to avoid being drafted for the Vietnam War. Green held a Masters in Anthropology from the University of British Columbia, a Bachelor of Arts from the University of South Carolina, and studied at the Sorbonne, the Millennium Film Institute in New York, and the University of Colorado.", "score": "1.6340535" }, { "id": "10669014", "title": "Jim Lee", "text": " Jim Lee was born on August 11, 1964, in Seoul, South Korea. He grew up in St. Louis, Missouri, where he lived a \"typical middle-class childhood\". Though given a Korean name at birth, he chose the name Jim when he became a naturalized U.S. citizen at age 12. Lee attended River Bend Elementary School in Chesterfield and later St. Louis Country Day School, where he drew posters for school plays. Having had to learn English when he first came to the U.S. presented the young Lee with the sense of being an outsider, as did the \"preppy, upper-class\" atmosphere of Country Day. As a result, on ", "score": "1.631017" }, { "id": "30045664", "title": "Jim Gaylord", "text": " Jim Gaylord (born 1974) is an American artist living and working in New York City. Based in a tradition of collage, his work is usually made from heavy paper that is cut out and pieced together into relief-like pictures. Gaylord was born in Washington, North Carolina. He received a degree in Film from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro in 1997, and an MFA from the University of California at Berkeley in 2005. Gaylord’s work has been exhibited internationally and is in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the West Collection and the Progressive Art Collection.", "score": "1.6265471" }, { "id": "27447463", "title": "Jim Measures", "text": " Measures was born in St. Helens, Lancashire, England.", "score": "1.6245778" }, { "id": "1398144", "title": "Jim Boyd (actor)", "text": " James Andrew Boyd (November 11, 1933 – January 2, 2013) was an American actor, born in Philadelphia.", "score": "1.6176999" }, { "id": "8624872", "title": "Jim Delligatti", "text": " Michael James Delligatti was born in Uniontown, Pennsylvania, on August 2, 1918, the son of James Delligatti, a farrier, cobbler and candy maker, and his wife, Lucille Dandrea. He was educated there and at Fairmont Senior High School in Fairmont, West Virginia, before serving in Europe during World War II with the United States Army, where he was discharged after suffering from trench foot.", "score": "1.6171415" }, { "id": "32335974", "title": "Jim Harrison", "text": " Harrison was born in Grayling, Michigan, to Winfield Sprague Harrison, a county agricultural agent, and Norma Olivia (Wahlgren) Harrison, both avid readers. Harrison was born 18 months after oldest child John, with whom Jim was close. Jim's younger siblings are Judith and then Mary and David. He became blind in one eye after a childhood accident. He wrote about his eye in an early poem: Harrison graduated from Haslett High School (Haslett, Michigan) in 1956. When he was 24, on November 21, 1962, his father and sister Judy died in an automobile accident. In 1959, he married Linda King, with whom he had two daughters. He was educated at Michigan State University, where he received ", "score": "1.616206" }, { "id": "26809403", "title": "Joseph James and Joseph James Jr.", "text": " Joe Jim Jr. was born about 1820 and his place of birth was given as \"Big Bottom\", also a place along the Kansas River. (Joe Jim Jr.'s birth date on his tombstone is given as 1814, but that date is inconsistent with other statements concerning his age.) He was apparently illiterate. In 1846 and 1847, during the Mexican–American War, Peter Revard, a mixed blood Osage, and he drove a herd of cattle from Kansas to New Mexico to feed American soldiers. He worked as a teamster during a military campaign against the Navajos. While returning to Kansas in a wagon train, he survived a ", "score": "1.615767" }, { "id": "26561142", "title": "Jim Braude", "text": " Braude was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1949. He graduated from Central High School in Philadelphia in 1966. He went to the University of Pennsylvania for his bachelor's degree and to New York University School of Law for his law degree. He has two daughters adopted from China.", "score": "1.6152499" }, { "id": "33145429", "title": "Jim Sheets", "text": " Sheets was born in Arkansas City in Cowley County in southeastern Kansas, to June P. Sheets (1903-1982), originally from Fargo in Ellis County in northwestern Oklahoma, and the former Mae Robinson (1904-2002), a native of Pierce City in Lawrence County in southwestern Missouri. June Sheets was employed in Arkansas City as an agent for the Frisco Railroad, but in 1943, he was transferred as a dispatcher to Enid in northern Oklahoma. Therefore, Jim Sheets graduated in 1949 from Enid High School. After having received his Bachelor of Arts degree in Bible and English in 1953, Sheets immediately joined the JBU staff as manager of the campus radio station. ", "score": "1.6152153" } ]
In what city was James Brown born?
[ "Leith" ]
place of birth
James Brown (footballer, born 1907)
2,842,700
73
[ { "id": "11615791", "title": "James Brown", "text": " Brown was born on May 3, 1933, in Barnwell, South Carolina, to 16-year-old Susie (née Behling; 1916–2004) and 21-year-old Joseph Gardner Brown (1912–1993) in a small wooden shack. Brown's name was supposed to have been Joseph James Brown, but his first and middle names were mistakenly reversed on his birth certificate. In his autobiography, Brown stated that he had Chinese and Native American ancestry and that his father was of mixed African-American and Native American descent, while his mother was of mixed African-American and Asian descent. The Brown family lived in extreme poverty in Elko, South Carolina, which was an impoverished town at the time. They later moved to Augusta, Georgia, when James was four or five. ", "score": "1.7228347" }, { "id": "11615787", "title": "James Brown", "text": " James Joseph Brown (May 3, 1933 – December 25, 2006) was an American singer, dancer, musician, record producer, and bandleader. The central progenitor of funk music and a major figure of 20th century music, he is often referred to by the honorific nicknames \"Godfather of Soul\", \"Mr. Dynamite\", and \"Soul Brother No. 1\". In a career that lasted over 50 years, he influenced the development of several music genres. Brown was one of the first 10 inductees into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame at its inaugural induction in New York on January 23, 1986. Brown began his career as a gospel singer in Toccoa, Georgia. He came to ", "score": "1.6664413" }, { "id": "27129665", "title": "James Brown (actor)", "text": " Brown was born to Floyd Estle Brown, a carpenter, and Cordie Mae (née Bowen) Brown in Desdemona, Texas, then a petroleum boomtown. He attended elementary and some of his high school years in Waco, Texas. He attended Schreiner Institute in Kerrville, Texas, where he played tennis, sang in the glee club, and played sousaphone in the school band. After high school he enrolled at Baptist-affiliated Baylor University in Waco. After a brief period as a competitive tennis player, Brown launched a four-decade career as an actor, with roles in more than 40 films, including Wake Island (1942), Air Force (1943), Bing Crosby's Going My Way (1944), Objective, Burma! (1945), The Fabulous Texan (1947), John Wayne's Sands of Iwo Jima (1949), The Charge at Feather River (1953), Five Guns to Tombstone (1960), Gun Street (1961), and a film noir, When the Clock Strikes (1961).", "score": "1.612926" }, { "id": "6810208", "title": "C. J. Brown", "text": " Brown was born Charles James Brown in Eugene, Oregon. He is of African American descent.", "score": "1.6001959" }, { "id": "29584262", "title": "James Brown (artist)", "text": " James Brown (September 11, 1951 – February 22, 2020) was an American-born painter active in Paris and Oaxaca, Mexico. He was most well known in the 1980s for his rough painterly semi-figurative paintings, bearing affinities to Jean-Michel Basquiat and East Village painting of the time, but with influences from primitive art and classical Western modernism.", "score": "1.5827775" }, { "id": null, "title": "James Brown", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Daniel James Brown", "text": "Daniel James Brown\n\nDaniel James Brown (born 1951) is an American author of narrative nonfiction books.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "James Brown (sportscaster)", "text": "James Brown (sportscaster)\n\nJames Talmadge Brown (born February 25, 1951) is an American sportscaster known for being the studio host of \"The James Brown Show\" and \"The NFL Today\" on CBS Sports. He is also a Special Correspondent for CBS News.\n\nHe is additionally known for serving as the former host of Fox Sports' NFL pregame show \"Fox NFL Sunday\" for eleven years.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "James Brown (footballer, born 1987)", "text": "James Brown (footballer, born 1987)\n\nJames Peter Brown (born 3 January 1987) is a retired English footballer who played as a winger.\n\nBrown started out as a striker for Football League side Hartlepool United but started playing on the wing during the club's promotion season in 2006–07. Brown also spent two seasons in the National League for Gateshead. Brown's career was ravaged by injuries and he retired from professional football aged 27, following this he played part-time for Northern Premier League side Whitby Town for two seasons.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "James Brown (American football guard)", "text": "James Brown (American football guard)\n\nJames Brown (born November 30, 1988) is a former American football guard. He went undrafted in the 2012 NFL Draft, and was signed by the Chicago Bears after the draft. He played college at Troy. He was also a member of the Cleveland Browns.", "score": null }, { "id": "7473070", "title": "James Brown (Scottish politician)", "text": " James brown was born in the Whitletts area of Ayr, to James Brown (1839-1895) and Christina O'Hara (1840-1923) but lived most of his life in Annbank where he went to school. In 1888, he married Catherine McGregor Steel who was 3 years his senior and they had 5 children together, Christina Brown (died young), James Brown (died young), Matthew Brown (1891-1969), John Brown (1893-1946) and David Brown (1896-1916), their son David died in WW1. He lived most of his life in Annbank where he went to school. He had started working in pits from the age of 12 and he later would become Secretary ", "score": "1.5769007" }, { "id": "1896923", "title": "James Brown (sportscaster)", "text": " James Brown was born on February 25, 1951 in Washington, D.C. to John and Maryann Brown. He attended high school at DeMatha Catholic High School, and later graduated from Harvard University with a degree in American Government. A standout on the basketball court, he received All-Ivy League honors in his last three seasons at Harvard and captained the team in his senior year. His roommate was future Harvard professor and activist Cornel West.", "score": "1.5671426" }, { "id": "8621271", "title": "James Graham Brown", "text": " Born in Madison, Indiana, he moved to Louisville in 1903 and founded, with his brother and father, the W.P. Brown and Sons Lumber Company. Brown also began developing commercial buildings, concentrated around Downtown Louisville, including the Brown Hotel, Brown Theater, Brown Garage, the Commonwealth Building (originally the Martin Brown Building), and Kentucky Towers. From 1944 until 1947, Brown owned the Newell B. McClaskey House and plantation in Bloomfield, Kentucky.", "score": "1.5528603" }, { "id": "12227208", "title": "James Brown (hair stylist)", "text": " Brown grew up near Croydon in the 1970s. His introduction to hairdressing came early when he landed his first job in a Croydon salon at the age of 15 and where he first encountered schoolgirl Kate Moss. Moving into London, Brown completed his apprenticeship at Zoo in Covent Garden, before moving onto salon 'Brinks and Huck' where he began as a session hairdresser for style magazines i-D and The Face. Brown is a vintage clothes collector. Aged 24, he re-located to New York to pursue his freelance career. In 2005 he made London his permanent base once more to focus on building his own haircare brand James Brown London. In 2009 James starred in his own TV shows, ‘James Brown’s Supermodel Salon’ created by E4 that revolved around his life and his celebrity friends. ‘The Great British Hairdresser’ was another TV show with Jo Elvin editor of Glamour and Abbey Clancy, which attracted almost a million viewers each week in the UK. It has since been aired around the world in countries including Australia, Sweden and The Netherlands. James Brown also appeared on Supermodel Salon in 2009 and on Stephen Fry’s 100 Best Gadgets in 2011.", "score": "1.5495975" }, { "id": "30750502", "title": "James Brown (footballer, born 1998)", "text": " Brown was born in Dover, Kent and attended Dover Grammar School for Boys in the town. He is of Maltese descent.", "score": "1.5486197" }, { "id": "77173", "title": "James Brown Scott", "text": " Scott was born at Kincardine, Ontario, Canada. He was educated at Harvard University (A.B., 1890; A.M., 1891). As Parker fellow of Harvard he traveled in Europe and studied in Berlin, Heidelberg (J.U.D.), and Paris.", "score": "1.5474725" }, { "id": "13638728", "title": "James Brown Humphrey", "text": " Humphrey was born on the Cornland plantation in Sellers, Louisiana, a former town northwest of New Orleans in St. Charles Parish that is now part of Norco, Louisiana. The son of a slaveholder and a slave, he was sent away by his father to live with a free black family. Although exiled from his original birthplace, his father continued to support him financially. This support included a monetary allocation for music lessons. Due to this exposure, Humphrey became a proficient classically trained musician.", "score": "1.5439864" }, { "id": "25669834", "title": "Charlotte L. Brown", "text": " Brown was born in Maryland in 1839, the daughter of James E Brown, who was born enslaved, and Charlotte Brown, a free seamstress. The elder Charlotte Brown purchased her husband's freedom and in 1850 they were living as Free people of color in Baltimore, Maryland, with several children, including Charlotte. Some time between 1850 and 1860 they moved their family to San Francisco, which was booming as a result of the California Gold Rush, and became a part of that city's burgeoning black middle class. The black population of the city at that time was 1,176 people, or about 2 percent. In San Francisco, James E Brown ran a livery stable, was a partner in the black newspaper Mirror of the Times, an antislavery crusader, and a member of the San Francisco Literary Society, a discussion and debate group for prominent African American men. In 1855, Charlotte was the teenage bridesmaid at the San Francisco wedding of her sister Margaret, who married the wealthy Black entrepreneur George Washington Dennis.", "score": "1.5398992" }, { "id": "29584263", "title": "James Brown (artist)", "text": " Born in Los Angeles, California, he received a BFA from Immaculate Heart College, Hollywood. He then spent years in Paris, and attended the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts, Paris, France. He rebelled against the classical training there, which he considered irrelevant, but stayed as he wanted to stay in Paris. Tours of Europe seeing renaissance and especially medieval painting of Italy influenced his work. During the 1980s, his paintings, mixing the modernist tradition of painterly application and adherence to the picture surface with clear influences from tribal art. In the early 1980s he began exhibiting in New York, and in ", "score": "1.538209" }, { "id": "4074976", "title": "J. Anthony Brown", "text": " James Anthony Brown (born in Columbia, South Carolina) is an American comedian, actor and radio personality. He received the Peabody Award and the NAACP Image Award.", "score": "1.5350529" }, { "id": "29584265", "title": "James Brown (artist)", "text": " the context of a post-war European modernism in the tradition of Jean Dubuffet. James and Alexandra had their first child, Degenhart Maria Grey Brown, on 24 September 1989 in New York. In 1991 their second boy, Cosmas And Damian Maria Todosantos Brown, was born on 6 June in Paris. On 16 April 1993, their daughter was born, Dagmar Maria Jane Brown, in New York. In 1995 he moved out to the valley of Oaxaca (Mexico) with his family, where they lived in a hacienda for nine years. During that time, James Brown continued exhibiting in Europe, the United States and ", "score": "1.5347528" }, { "id": "2157787", "title": "James E. Brown III", "text": " James Brown III was born in Bluefield, West Virginia, on August 15, 1954, and grew up in Birmingham, Alabama. His interest in flying developed with help from his father, who was an amateur pilot. The young man dreamed of one day becoming an astronaut. He attended the Virginia Military Institute (VMI) in Lexington, Virginia and graduated in 1976 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Civil Engineering. Brown's first solo flight occurred in February 1976.", "score": "1.534189" }, { "id": "11615792", "title": "James Brown", "text": " family first settled at one of his aunts' brothels. They later moved into a house shared with another aunt. Brown's mother eventually left the family after a contentious and abusive marriage and moved to New York. Brown spent long stretches of time on his own, hanging out in the streets and hustling to get by. He managed to stay in school until the sixth grade. He began singing in talent shows as a young child, first appearing at Augusta's Lenox Theater in 1944, winning the show after singing the ballad \"So Long\". While in Augusta, Brown performed buck dances for change to entertain troops from Camp Gordon at the start of World War II as their convoys ", "score": "1.5333085" }, { "id": "31055518", "title": "Charles Brown (actor)", "text": " Charles Brown was born in Talladega, Alabama, and raised in Cleveland, Ohio, the son of Mack Brown Sr. His siblings included brothers Mack Jr. and Ramon and sister Shirley. After serving in the U.S. Navy during the Vietnam War, Brown studied theater at Howard University, in Washington, D.C. He performed with that city's D.C. Black Repertory Company, and elsewhere. Brown became a regular member of the Negro Ensemble Company, where his roles included Southern farmer Cephus Miles in Samm-Art Williams' Home (1979) and military investigator Captain Richard Davenport in 1944 Louisiana in Charles Fuller's A Soldier's Story (1981). Home moved to Broadway in 1980, earning Brown a Tony Award nomination for Best Actor in a Play. In 2001 he received his second, for Best Featured Actor in a Play, for his role as the gambler and ", "score": "1.5300187" }, { "id": "28520424", "title": "James Harvey Brown", "text": " James Harvey Brown (April 26, 1906 – July 10, 1995) was a City Council member in Los Angeles, California, between 1959 and 1964 and then municipal court judge in that city from 1964 to 1985.", "score": "1.5272037" } ]
In what city was Andrea di Alessandro born?
[ "Brescia", "Lioness of Italy" ]
place of birth
Andrea di Alessandro
3,324,967
86
[ { "id": "13520807", "title": "Andrea di Alessandro", "text": " Andrea di Alessandro was an Italian sculptor of the Renaissance period. He was born in Brescia and active there and in Venice during the latter half of the 16th century. He was a pupil of Alessandro Vittoria, and his masterpiece is the bronze candelabra for the church of Santa Maria della Salute in Venice.", "score": "1.7474087" }, { "id": "13589724", "title": "Alessandro Di Pardo", "text": " Di Pardo was born in Rimini, Italy, to a father from Campobasso, Italy.", "score": "1.703864" }, { "id": "3145659", "title": "Andrea De Carlo", "text": " Andrea De Carlo grew up in Milan. His \"love-hatred\" relationship with the capital of Lombardy would come to be detailed in his novels. He attended the liceo classico Giovanni Berchet (which appears in the initial chapters of Due di Due); then he graduated in modern literature, with a degree in contemporary history. He worked for a time as a photographer, initially as second assistant to Oliviero Toscani, and then doing portraits and reportage on his own. He traveled widely in the United States, living first in Boston, then New York City, Santa Barbara and Los Angeles, where he did odd jobs and taught Italian. Then he moved on to Australia, staying ", "score": "1.6622317" }, { "id": "15775658", "title": "Alessandro Di Battista", "text": " Di Battista was born in Rome to parents of Civita Castellana and Vittorio Di Battista. His father was an entraprenuer in the healthcare sector and municipal councilor for the Italian Social Movement. Di Battista graduated high school from Liceo Scientifico Statale Farnesina located in Rome. Later on, he graduated from the University of Roma Tre with a dissertation A multi-speed European monetary union as a realistic strategy. He also obtained the Level 2 Master in International Protection of Human Rights from Sapienza University of Rome. Later in 2010 he worked for a year as a cooperator in Guatemala, and also collaborated with educational projects in other countries such as Chile. On 11 February 2021, Di Battista announced his resignation from the 5 Star Movement, as he opposed the group's decision of being part of the new government formed by Mario Draghi, during the 2021 Italian government crisis.", "score": "1.6453254" }, { "id": "30673975", "title": "Alessandro Del Vecchio", "text": " Alessandro Del Vecchio (born 21 April 1979) is an Italian multi-instrumentalist and producer, best known for his collaborations with hard rock and heavy metal artists such as Jørn Lande, Revolution Saints, Hardline, Fergie Frederiksen, Ted Poley, Kelly Keeling and Mat Sinner, and for his work as the in-house producer for Neapolitan record label Frontiers Music SRL from his personal Ivorytears Music Works Studio located just north of Milan.", "score": "1.6386662" }, { "id": null, "title": "Andrea di Alessandro", "text": "Andrea di Alessandro\n\nAndrea di Alessandro was an Italian sculptor of the Renaissance period. He was born in Brescia and active there and in Venice during the latter half of the 16th century. He was a pupil of Alessandro Vittoria, and his masterpiece is the bronze candelabra for the church of Santa Maria della Salute in Venice.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Andrea Palladio", "text": "Andrea Palladio\n\nAndrea Palladio ( ; ; 30 November 1508 – 19 August 1580) was an Italian Renaissance architect active in the Venetian Republic. Palladio, influenced by Roman and Greek architecture, primarily Vitruvius, is widely considered to be one of the most influential individuals in the history of architecture. While he designed churches and palaces, he was best known for country houses and villas. His teachings, summarized in the architectural treatise, \"The Four Books of Architecture\", gained him wide recognition.\n\nThe city of Vicenza, with its 23 buildings designed by Palladio, and 24 Palladian villas of the Veneto are listed by UNESCO as part of a World Heritage Site named City of Vicenza and the Palladian Villas of the Veneto. The churches of Palladio are to be found within the \"Venice and its Lagoon\" UNESCO World Heritage Site.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Alessandro Del Piero", "text": "Alessandro Del Piero\n\nAlessandro Del Piero Since 2015, he has worked as a pundit for Sky Sport Italia. A technically gifted and creative supporting forward who was also a free-kick specialist, Del Piero is widely regarded as one of the greatest players of his generation and as one of the best Italian players of all time. He won the Serie A Italian Footballer of the Year award in 1998 and 2008 and received multiple nominations for the Ballon d'Or and FIFA World Player of the Year.\n\nA prolific goal-scorer, he is currently the second highest all-time Italian top-scorer in all competitions, with 346 goals, behind only Silvio Piola, with 390 goals; he is also the joint ninth highest goalscorer in Serie A history, with 188 goals, alongside Giuseppe Signori and Alberto Gilardino. After beginning his career with Italian club Padova in Serie B in 1991, he moved to Juventus in 1993, where he played for 19 seasons (11 as captain), and holds the club records for most goals (290) and appearances (705). During his time at the club, he won six Serie A titles, the Coppa Italia, four Supercoppa Italiana titles, the UEFA Champions League, the UEFA Super Cup, the UEFA Intertoto Cup, and the Intercontinental Cup. After leaving the club in 2012, he also spent two seasons with Australian side Sydney FC; he retired in 2014, after a season with Delhi Dynamos FC in the Indian Super League.\n\nDel Piero has scored in every competition in which he has participated. In 2004, he was named in the FIFA 100, a list of the 125 greatest living footballers selected by Pelé as a part of FIFA's centenary celebrations. In the same year, he was also voted into the UEFA Golden Jubilee Poll, a list of the 50 best European players of the past 50 years. Along with six awards in Italy for gentlemanly conduct, he has also won the Golden Foot award, which pertains to personality as well as playing ability.\n\nAt international level, Del Piero has also represented the Italian national team at three FIFA World Cups and four UEFA European Football Championships, most notably winning the 2006 FIFA World Cup, and reaching the final of UEFA Euro 2000 with Italy. He is the joint fourth highest scorer for the Italian national team, with 27 goals, alongside Roberto Baggio, and behind only Silvio Piola with 30 goals, Giuseppe Meazza with 33 goals, and Luigi Riva with 35 goals; with 91 appearances for Italy between 1995 and 2008, he is also his nation's eleventh-most capped player of all-time. In his career Del Piero scored 462 goals.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Sandro Botticelli", "text": "Sandro Botticelli\n\nAlessandro di Mariano di Vanni Filipepi (<ref name=\"Ettl\"/> – May 17, 1510), known as Sandro Botticelli (, ), was an Italian painter of the Early Renaissance. Botticelli's posthumous reputation suffered until the late 19th century, when he was rediscovered by the Pre-Raphaelites who stimulated a reappraisal of his work. Since then, his paintings have been seen to represent the linear grace of late Italian Gothic and some Early Renaissance painting, even though they date from the latter half of the Italian Renaissance period.\n\nIn addition to the mythological subjects for which he is best known today, Botticelli painted a wide range of religious subjects (including dozens of renditions of the \"Madonna and Child\", many in the round tondo shape) and also some portraits. His best-known works are \"The Birth of Venus\" and \"Primavera\", both in the Uffizi in Florence, which holds many of Botticelli’s works. Botticelli lived all his life in the same neighbourhood of Florence; his only significant times elsewhere were the months he spent painting in Pisa in 1474 and the Sistine Chapel in Rome in 1481–82.\n\nOnly one of Botticelli's paintings, the \"Mystic Nativity\" (National Gallery, London) is inscribed with a date (1501), but others can be dated with varying degrees of certainty on the basis of archival records, so the development of his style can be traced with some confidence. He was an independent master for all the 1470s, which saw his reputation soar. The 1480s were his most successful decade, the one in which his large mythological paintings were completed along with many of his most famous Madonnas. By the 1490s his style became more personal and to some extent mannered. His last works show him moving in a direction opposite to that of Leonardo da Vinci (seven years his junior) and the new generation of painters creating the High Renaissance style, and instead returning to a style that many have described as more Gothic or \"archaic.\"", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Andrés D'Alessandro", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "904880", "title": "Alberto Savinio", "text": " Born in Athens, Greece, Andrea De Chirico was the third child of Evaristo De Chirico and Gemma Cervetto De Chirico (a Genoese noble). At the time of his birth Andrea's parents were living as Italian expatriates in Greece while his father worked on the Greek railway system as an engineer for the Societé des Chemins de Fer de la Thessalie. His elder brother, three years his senior, was the renowned artist Giorgio de Chirico. Andrea also had an elder sister named Adele (or Adelaide), who died six months before his birth. Later in his life, Andrea would reflect upon his foreign birth as a special opportunity to determine his own destiny through determination of his own national identity.", "score": "1.6381142" }, { "id": "32374214", "title": "Lorenzo d'Alessandro", "text": " He was born in San Severino Marche. He painted in the salimbenian style inherited from the Salimbeni brothers and influenced another important local painter, Niccolò Di Liberatore, also known as “L'Alunno” (from Foligno, who lived two years in San Severino and painted there a polyptych signed in 1468). Lorenzo was also inspired by Carlo Crivelli and Piero della Francesca. D’Alessandro blended the typical elements of the late Gothic culture and of the Renaissance in his expressive style. Among his pupils is Bernardino di Mariotto of Perugia, and his children: Antonio, Giangentile, and Severino.", "score": "1.6361222" }, { "id": "30519663", "title": "Alessandro Di Benedetto", "text": " Alessandro Di Benedetto is an Italian-French sailor born on 5 January 1981 in Rome, Italy. He is known for his solo sailings of the Atlantic (2002) and pacific (2006) on sports catamarans (5.96 m), and for his solo, non-stop and unassisted round-the-world trip on a 6.50-metre Mini sailboat (2009-2010). And his participation in the 2012-2013 Vendee Globe finishing 11th.", "score": "1.634202" }, { "id": "4009125", "title": "Andrea Di Paolo", "text": " Andrea Di Paolo (born in Atessa, Italy, on February 24, 1978) is an Italian pianist and composer of contemporary classical music and neoclassical music.", "score": "1.6214051" }, { "id": "3920961", "title": "Andrea De Paoli", "text": " He was born in Genoa and, after starting in the school team, he was noticed by the Genoa observers who immediately signed him. In Genoa, the Italian Serie A team was the owner of all the youth teams until the Primavera (18 years old). In the meantime he studied until he reached the diploma of the Linguistic Lyceum.", "score": "1.6165063" }, { "id": "5858127", "title": "Andrea di Niccolò", "text": " Andrea di Niccolò was an artist from Siena. Archival documents reveal in 1469 he married Angelica di Francesco di Michele, and in 1470 he collaborated with Giovanni di Paolo on some works for Santa Maria della Scala (Siena), and in that same year worked on creating a tabernacle for Oratorio della Campania in San Bernardino. In the year 1477 he frescoed additional works in this Oratorio with scenes of the life of Saint Lucy. Andrea di Niccolò worked primarily around Siena and its surrounding towns. The art scholar Bernard Berenson noted Andrea was a pupil of Vecchietta, and demonstrated influences of Matteo di Giovanni and Pietro Perugino.", "score": "1.6149712" }, { "id": "28352361", "title": "Alessandro Sani", "text": " Alessandro Sani (1856-1927) was an Italian painter, mainly of genre subjects. He was born and resident in Florence. Considered one of the last great Italian painters, Alessandro was one of few artists who remained in Italy during the mass immigration to the US in the late 1800s and early 1900s, making his works some of the only Italian artwork produced during that period. Among his works: La tentazione, completed in 1879; Una lezione di mandolino; Scacco matto; Il piatto favorito; Una partita a scacchi; Soldati e Ostessa; Un cercatore mal capitato; Le promesse; La visita alla balia; Il saggio del vino; his paintings faithfully reproduce interior scenes.", "score": "1.6146419" }, { "id": "6248780", "title": "Andrea Di Giovanni", "text": " Di Giovanni was born in Rome on June 25, 1994. Growing up in Italy, the strict environment limited their ability to express their sexuality and identity. They began taking piano lessons at age 3 singing lessons at age 8. Di Giovanni left Christianity at age 17. At age 19, they moved to London and enrolled at the BIMM Institute, where they felt more able to express their queer identity.", "score": "1.614286" }, { "id": "26469969", "title": "Matteo D'Alessandro", "text": " Born in Sondrio, Lombardy, D'Alessandro started his career at Calcio Como. On 31 August 2006 he was signed by Genoa C.F.C.. In 2009, he was signed by Reggiana in temporary deal. In July 2010, the loan was extended to another season. On 31 January 2011, Reggiana bought him in co-ownership deal for a peppercorn of €500. On 31 August 2011 Reggina bought D'Alessandro from Reggiana for €100,000, with Genoa retained 50% registration rights. In June 2013 Genoa gave up the remain 50% registration rights to Reggina. On 2 September 2013 D'Alessandro left for Lega Pro Seconda Divisione club Cuneo. After the club relegated, he joined Lega Pro club Monza in June 2014. In January 2015 he joined Serie B club Pro Vercelli as a free agent. He took no.2 shirt from Andrea Marconi. On 10 December 2015 he was signed by Pro Patria. On 14 January 2017 D'Alessandro joined Lumezzane. In August 2019, D'Alessandro signed with Piccardo Traversetolo ASD.", "score": "1.6031827" }, { "id": "12799579", "title": "Andrea Alessi", "text": " Andrea Alessi (Andrea Nikollë Aleksi, Andrija Aleši, 1425–1505) was an Albanian architect and sculptor born in Durazzo (Albania Veneta), considered one of the most distinguished artists of Dalmatia. Alessi was born in Durazzo (modern Durrës, Albania) in Albania Veneta, and may have been of local Albanian origin rather than Italian. Other sources say he was of Italian origin. He moved to Split in Dalmatia during the Republic of Venice, where he studied under sculptor Mark Troja. He lived most of his life and conducted much of his work in Dalmatia. Alessi was a disciple of Giorgio da Sebenico, and his best-known work is with Niccolò di Giovanni Fiorentino on the expansion ", "score": "1.6016269" }, { "id": "15775657", "title": "Alessandro Di Battista", "text": " Alessandro Di Battista (born 4 August 1978) is an Italian politician, deputy of the XVII Legislature of the Italian Republic. He was part of the Five Stars Movement from 2009 to 2021. He left the movement in February 2021 because he was against the formation of the Draghi government.", "score": "1.5973628" }, { "id": "3859717", "title": "Andrea", "text": " Caroline of Monaco ; Andrea Cesalpino (1519–1603), Italian physician, philosopher and botanist ; Andrea Cinciarini (born 1986), Italian basketball player ; Andrea Cordero Lanza di Montezemolo (born 1925), Archbishop of Tuscania ; Andrea Costa (1851–1913), Italian socialist activist ; Andrea Debono (1821–1871), Maltese trader and explorer ; Andrea Doria (1466–1560), Genoese condottiere and admiral ; Andrea Dovizioso (born 1986), Italian motorcycle racer ; Andrea Ferrara, 16th century Scottish artificer who introduced the manufacture of the high-quality steel blades bearing his name ; Andrea Figallo (born 1972), Italian composer and conductor ; Andrea da Firenze (?-1415), Italian composer ; Andrea del Verrocchio (c. 1435–1488), Florentine sculptor ", "score": "1.5950696" }, { "id": "10350034", "title": "Alessandro Carloni", "text": " Born in Bologna, Carloni spent his childhood in Urbino, a walled city and World Heritage site southwest of Pesaro, known for its remarkable legacy of independent Renaissance culture and for being the birthplace of Renaissance master Raphael Santi. But Carloni was not a young artist, at least not officially. Not even though his father worked as an illustrator for magazines, book covers and advertisements. “I was exposed to his work, but he never pushed me to be part of his studio,” Carloni says. “He taught me many things. He wanted me to explore on my own.” He became an artist almost despite himself. Carloni entered ", "score": "1.5924205" }, { "id": "2322307", "title": "Alessandro Vellutello", "text": " Born in Lucca, Vellutello moved to Venice permanently in 1525, after fleeing from Milan due to the battle of Pavia which took place in February of that year. He still maintained close ties to his birth city, dedicating his Petrarchian commentary to the Lucchese patrician Martino Bernardin. His exact death date is unknown.", "score": "1.5901479" }, { "id": "1846426", "title": "Alessandro D'Errico", "text": " Alessandro D'Errico was born in the Frattamaggiore comune of the Metropolitan City of Naples on 18 November 1950 to Alberto and Rosa née Vitale, the first of five children. He studied at the seminary in Aversa and was ordained a priest of the Diocese of Aversa on 24 March 1974. He then earned a degree in philosophy at the University of Naples and a licenciate in canon law at the Pontifical Lateran University, and a bachelor’s in theology at the San Luigi Papal Theological Seminary of Southern Italy. Finally he earned a diploma from the Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy. He entered the diplomatic service of the ", "score": "1.588993" } ]
In what city was Gregorio Selser born?
[ "Buenos Aires", "Buenos Ayres", "Autonomous City of Buenos Aires", "CABA", "Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires" ]
place of birth
Gregorio Selser
4,286,548
55
[ { "id": "29434236", "title": "Gregorio Selser", "text": " Gregorio Selser (July 2, 1922 — August 27, 1991) was an Argentine journalist and historian. He published an extensive bibliography critical of globalization, imperialism, and covert operations implemented by the CIA in Latin America, in particular. Selser was born in Buenos Aires. He earned a degree in journalism at the University of Buenos Aires, and in 1955, was hired by the Uruguayan weekly journal, Marcha, as its chief Argentine correspondent. That year, he published his first book, a biography on Nicaraguan nationalist Augusto Sandino. He returned to Buenos Aires in 1956, and joined the editorial board of La Prensa. Selser joined the IPS news agency in 1964. He and his family left Argentina following the March 1976 coup, and was hired as researcher by the Latin American Institute of Latin ", "score": "1.7433808" }, { "id": "26606039", "title": "Tonio Selwart", "text": " Antonio Franz Theus \"Tonio\" Selmair-Selwart (June 9, 1896 &ndash; November 2, 2002) was a German actor and stage performer.", "score": "1.5146205" }, { "id": "30748853", "title": "Gregorio Prestopino", "text": " Prestopino was born in New York City's Little Italy. He was the second of three children born to Antonino Prestopino (1877–1937) and Letteria Rando (1866–1962), immigrants from Messina, Sicily, Italy. At the age of 14 he was awarded a scholarship to the National Academy of Design, with Charles Hawthorne. Early in his career he came under the influence of the French Impressionists, but was soon drawn to the American realists of the Ashcan School painters, whose work led him directly to the study of urban life. He won the 1972 Rome Prize.", "score": "1.5134592" }, { "id": "8607323", "title": "Nicolas Tenorio Cerero", "text": " Nicolas was born in Villalba del Alcor, Spain. Orphaned at age 5, Cerero moved to Seville. He studied at the University of Seville between 1881 and 1886, where he pursued a legal career. After graduating he worked as a journalist for several years.", "score": "1.5128307" }, { "id": "27523944", "title": "Arlen F. Gregorio", "text": " Gregorio was born in San Francisco on September 11, 1931 to a family who has lived in California for four generations. He grew up in the Bernal Heights district until his family moved to Burlingame, California, where he attended Hoover School, Burlingame High School and the College of San Mateo. Gregorio served as a U.S. Naval Air Officer for three years in the 1950s receiving the China Service Medal for combat duty. He received his bachelor's and law degrees from Stanford University in 1955. He was an adjunct faculty member at Stanford University, Notre Dame University in Belmont, and College of San Mateo.", "score": "1.5032899" }, { "id": null, "title": "Gregorio Selser", "text": "Gregorio Selser\n\nGregorio Selser (July 2, 1922 — August 27, 1991) was an Argentine journalist and historian. He published an extensive bibliography critical of globalization, imperialism, and covert operations implemented by the CIA in Latin America, in particular.\n\nSelser was born in Buenos Aires. He earned a degree in journalism at the University of Buenos Aires, and in 1955, was hired by the Uruguayan weekly journal, \"Marcha\", as its chief Argentine correspondent. That year, he published his first book, a biography on Nicaraguan nationalist Augusto Sandino. He returned to Buenos Aires in 1956, and joined the editorial board of \"La Prensa\". Selser joined the IPS news agency in 1964.\n\nHe and his family left Argentina following the March 1976 coup, and was hired as researcher by the Latin American Institute of Latin American Studies (ILET). His three daughters, Irene, Gabriela and Claudia Selser, each became journalists in their own right.\n\nSelser was recognized by critics as \"a Latin Americanist committed to freedom and justice.\" His books covered a wide array of contentious Latin American issues and events, including the 1903 Separation of Panama from Colombia, the installation of the Somoza dynasty in Nicaragua, the 1954 Guatemalan coup d'état, the Alliance for Progress, the 1964 overthrow of Dominican Republic President Juan Bosch and the subsequent U.S. occupation, the 1973 coup in Chile, psy-ops carried out in Latin America, the 1980 Cocaine Coup in Bolivia, the Salvadoran Civil War, the 1989 Operation Just Cause, and other topics.\n\nSelser would be afflicted with a terminal illness, and he committed suicide in Mexico City in 1991.\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "José Santos Zelaya", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Argentine emigrants to Mexico", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Enrique Krauze", "text": "Enrique Krauze\n\nEnrique Krauze (Mexico City, September 16, 1947) is a Mexican historian, essayist, editor, and entrepreneur. He has written more than twenty books, some of which are: \"Mexico: Biography of Power\", \"Redeemers\", and \"El pueblo soy yo\" (\"I am the people\"). He has also produced more than 500 television programs and documentaries about Mexico’s history. His biographical, historical works, and his political and literary essays, which have reached a broad audience, have made him famous.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Manuel C. Téllez", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "29434237", "title": "Gregorio Selser", "text": " Studies (ILET). His three daughters, Irene, Gabriela and Claudia Selser, each became journalists in their own right. Selser was recognized by critics as \"a Latin Americanist committed to freedom and justice.\" His books covered a wide array of contentious Latin American issues and events, including the 1903 Separation of Panama from Colombia, the installation of the Somoza dynasty in Nicaragua, the 1954 Guatemalan coup d'état, the Alliance for Progress, the 1964 overthrow of Dominican Republic President Juan Bosch and the subsequent U.S. occupation, the 1973 coup in Chile, psy-ops carried out in Latin America, the 1980 Cocaine Coup in Bolivia, the Salvadoran Civil War, the 1989 Operation Just Cause, and other topics. Selser would be afflicted with a terminal illness, and he committed suicide in Mexico City in 1991.", "score": "1.4845692" }, { "id": "10195805", "title": "Larry Seilhamer Rodríguez", "text": " Seilhamer Rodríguez was born in New York City on December 13, 1954. His parents were George Seilhamer and Isabel Rodríguez, and he is the youngest of four children. Seilhamer was raised in Ponce, Puerto Rico, where he studied his elementary and high school at the Santa María Academy. In 1976, Seilhamer received his bachelor's degree in civil engineering from the University of New Haven, graduating cum laude. In 1979, he completed a second bachelor's degree in Science, with a concentration in Pre-medicine, from the University of Puerto Rico at Mayagüez. In 1983, Seilhamer joined the College of Engineers and Surveyors of Puerto Rico as a licensed engineer.", "score": "1.4801313" }, { "id": "3671744", "title": "Gregorio Vardanega", "text": " Vardanega was born in Possagno, Italy. Vardanega's family migrated to Argentina when he was three years old. He attended the Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes in Buenos Aires from 1939 to 1946.", "score": "1.4766953" }, { "id": "8607325", "title": "Nicolas Tenorio Cerero", "text": " editor of a magazine, The Sevillian Newscaster (El Noticiero Sevillano), from its founding in 1893, and worked for other publications, such as The Future (El Porvenir). In his second assignment as Judge, in October 1900 he moved from Seville to Viana do Bolo (Ourense, and Galicia). He later practiced in Vienna until 1906, when he moved to Vilamartín de Valdeorras (Ourense, Galicia). in 1910, he moved to Mule (Murcia), where he practiced in Cadiz. Later he moved to America as fiscal Lieutenant of the Hearing. In 1917 he finished his judicial career in Seville, as a civil justice. Parallel to his judicial career, he devoted himself to historical studies, writing books about the medieval epoch in Seville, and its juridical and political institutions. He died in Seville in 1930.", "score": "1.4740942" }, { "id": "10158605", "title": "Allan Gregorio", "text": " Allan Gregorio was born in São Paulo. From a young age, he has been involved with the arts, including drawing and painting. At age seventeen, he started working as an assistant for a photographer of his hometown. Later, he studied photography and graphic design at Serviço Nacional de Aprendizagem Comercial São Paulo. Alongside his work as a photographer, Gregorio has also worked as a graphic designer and visual artist in many countries. Now, Gregorio is responsible for developing augmented reality filters. (AR) for Instagram Allan Gregorio is also an activist for LGBT+ rights.", "score": "1.4738374" }, { "id": "27190775", "title": "Guillermo Gregorio", "text": " Guillermo Gregorio (born May 1, 1941, Buenos Aires) is an Argentine jazz and free improvisation clarinetist, saxophonist, and composer. Gregorio was born into a musical family. He became interested in experimental music in the early 1960s, culminating in his Unheard Music project (later released on the album Otra Música: Tape Music, Fluxus, and the Improvisation in Buenos Aires 1963-1970). In addition to his musical work, Gregorio also worked as a professor of architecture and as an author on classical and modern music avant-garde forms. Gregorio also participated in the then Fluxus activities of the Argentine performance groups Movimiento Música Mús and other experimental groups in Buenos Aires and La Plata. In the mid-1980s Gregorio left Buenos Aires and moved to ", "score": "1.4579818" }, { "id": "12882546", "title": "Severiano Briseño", "text": " On February 21, 1902, he was born in the small mountain town of San José de Canoas in the state of San Luis Potosí, to father Ramón Briseño and mother Petra Chavez. At six years of age, his family emigrated to the Huasteca Region. From an early age, he had an inclination towards music, and his ability to compose songs was encouraged by his parents. His first song, called \"Escolleras\", was dedicated to the Tamaulipas port of Tampico and the song was well received because townsfolk were honoured to have been mentioned. Severiano Briseño Married Jovita Marquez in Altamira, Tamaulipas on June 7, 1932. With his brothers Guillermo and Rafael, he formed the ", "score": "1.4537055" }, { "id": "422476", "title": "Gregorio Luperón", "text": " Gregorio Luperón was born 8 September 1839 in Puerto Plata to Pedro Castellanos and Nicolasa Duperrón (the surname would later become \"Luperón\", to sound more Castillian). His parents owned a ventorrillo (rudimentary market stall) that sold homemade foodstuffs such as piñonate, a local delicacy made of sweetened pine-nut kernels. Most of these were sold on the street by Gregorio and his siblings in order to help the family livelihood. Around the age of 14, Gregorio began working for Pedro Eduardo Dubocq, a local timber businessman of French origin. While working there, he displayed a strong strength of character and a knack for getting any job assigned to him completed in the best possible fashion. Because of this, Mr. Dubocq promoted Gregorio to a management position. Mr. Dubocq also allowed Gregorio ", "score": "1.4479175" }, { "id": "13015656", "title": "SelgasCano", "text": " José Selgas was born in Madrid in 1965. He graduated from ETSA Madrid in 1992 and has worked with Francesco Venecia in Naples from 1994 to 1995. He won the Rome Prize in the Spain Academy of Fine Arts in Rome 1997 – 1998. Lucía Cano Pinto was born in Madrid in 1965. She graduated from ETSA Madrid in 1992 and has worked with Julio Cano Lasso, her father, from 1997 until 2001.", "score": "1.4437459" }, { "id": "26606040", "title": "Tonio Selwart", "text": " Selwart was born in Wartenberg, Bavaria, Germany, and raised in Munich. After studying medicine like his father (a well known surgeon), he decided instead to become an actor, following a lifelong interest in theater. Selwart thereafter studied acting and appeared in many plays throughout Europe. He appeared in a variety of stage productions, including classics such as Shakespeare and modern popular works like Heinrich von Kleist's romantic dream play, The Prince of Homburg, in which he played the title role. After further honing his skills as a director, Selwart decided to try his luck in the United States of America. His ", "score": "1.4406444" }, { "id": "13558770", "title": "Escadaria Selarón", "text": " Jorge Selarón was born in Chile in 1947. He traveled, lived and worked as a painter and sculptor in over 50 countries around the world before arriving and deciding to settle in Rio de Janeiro in 1983. He began painting the steps on a whim in 1990. Many times, his phone was cut off and he was threatened to be evicted from his house due to being unable to afford the living costs. He sold many paintings and accepted donations from locals and travelers to continue his work. Since 1977, Selarón claimed to have sold over 25,000 portraits, all featuring the same pregnant woman which mostly funded his work. It was a labor of love for the artist who resided in the same house by the steps he lived in when he started the work. He was mostly unfazed by the attention given to him by curious onlookers and tourists alike. He was constantly spotted at the steps working by day and treating drunken revelers to fascinating anecdotes by night. Selarón was found dead on January 10, 2013, on the famous Lapa steps. His body was found with burn marks.", "score": "1.4391167" }, { "id": "26416506", "title": "Gregorio Baro", "text": " Gregorio Baró was an Argentine scientist born in Santiago Temple, Córdoba on June 19, 1928 and died in Buenos Aires on May 28, 2012.", "score": "1.4367136" }, { "id": "29416195", "title": "Gregorio Blasco", "text": " Born in Mundaka in the Basque Country, Blasco emigrated to Mexico where he married Maria Victoria González in 1943 and with whom he had 3 children, Gregorio, José Maria and Victoria.", "score": "1.4324884" }, { "id": "9159368", "title": "Jozsef Gregor", "text": " József Gregor (8 August 1940 - 27 October 2006) was a renowned Hungarian operatic bass who enjoyed success first in Hungary, then in France, Belgium and Canada, and finally in the United States. József Gregor was born in Rákosliget, a small town that is now part of Budapest. He studied violin for ten years and then, voice at the Liszt Academy in Budapest for one year but did not graduate. He started singing with the Hungarian Army chorus in 1958 before becoming a soloist in National Theatre of Szeged in Hungary. In Europe he sang in many opera houses, including Vlaamse Opera and La Scala in Milan. Beginning in 1989, József Gregor appeared in the US with the Portland Opera and later with the Houston Grand Opera (with Cecilia Bartoli at her American debut) and the Metropolitan Opera (with Bryn Terfel). His ", "score": "1.4322582" }, { "id": "13810982", "title": "Odo Josef Struger", "text": " Struger was born in 1931 in Unterloibl. This is a town in the municipality of Ferlach in Carinthia of Austria. He moved to the United States in the 1950s and lived in the Cleveland area most of his life.", "score": "1.4314942" } ]
In what city was Anne Brusletto born?
[ "Geilo" ]
place of birth
Anne Brusletto
3,827,230
44
[ { "id": "2393098", "title": "Anne Paolucci", "text": " She was born on July 31, 1926, in Rome, Italy. At the age of eight, she moved to New York City with her widowed mother and two siblings. She attended Barnard College, graduating with a B.A. in English in 1947. She studied Italian literature under Giuseppe Prezzolini and Dino Bigongiari at Columbia University, receiving her M.A. in 1950. She spent a year as a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Rome. Her doctoral dissertation on The Women in Dante's Divine Comedy and Spenser's Faerie Queene earned her a Woodbridge Honorary Fellowship, and she received a Ph.D. in comparative literature from Columbia in 1963.", "score": "1.6748497" }, { "id": "610204", "title": "Anne Burrell", "text": " Burrell was born September 21, 1969, in Cazenovia, New York. She attended Canisius College in Buffalo and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree in English and Communications in 1991. A year later, Burrell enrolled at the Culinary Institute of America, eventually graduating in 1996 with an Associate in Occupational Studies (A.O.S.). She also studied at the Italian Culinary Institute for Foreigners in Asti in the Piedmont region.", "score": "1.6595927" }, { "id": "26658199", "title": "Anne Casale", "text": " Anne Lovi was born in Perth Amboy, New Jersey and raised in North Plainfield, New Jersey, the daughter of Amadeo M. Lovi and Rose F. Guarnieri Lovi. She had a twin sister, Louise. Her father ran a restaurant, and she worked in his kitchen as a girl. \"I swore I would never get into food, and here I am,\" she recalled in 1988, while promoting her third cookbook. She graduated from North Plainfield High School in 1948, and attended a nearby secretarial school.", "score": "1.6566851" }, { "id": "1924557", "title": "Anna Maria Enriques Agnoletti", "text": " Anna Maria Enriques Agnoletti was born in Bologna. Her father Paolo Enriques was Jewish; her mother Maria Clotilde Agnoletti Fusconi was Catholic. Neither of her parents was religiously observant, so Anna Maria and her brother Enzo received a lay education. Her father was an important biologist who taught at various universities. Because of his job, the family moved to various Italian cities; he was in Naples, Sassari and finally in Florence. Anna Maria attended her studies at the Liceo Classico Michelangelo in Florence. In 1926 she began studying for her Letter and Philosophy degree. In 1930 she obtained her degree discussing her thesis with Nicolaj Ottokar. ", "score": "1.6536397" }, { "id": "25664412", "title": "Anne Bancroft", "text": " Bancroft was born Anna Maria Louisa (or Luisa) Italiano in the Bronx, New York City, the middle of three daughters of Mildred (née DiNapoli), a telephone operator, and Michael G. Italiano, a dress pattern maker. Her parents were Italian immigrants. In an interview, she stated that her family was originally from Muro Lucano, in the province of Potenza. She was of Roman Catholic faith. Bancroft was raised in Little Italy, Bronx, in the Belmont neighborhood of the Bronx, attended P.S. 12, later moving to 1580 Zerega Ave. and graduating from Christopher Columbus High School in 1948. She later attended HB Studio, the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, the Actors Studio and the American Film Institute's Directing Workshop for Women at the University of California, Los Angeles. After appearing in a number of live television dramas, including Studio One and The Goldbergs under the name Anne Marno, later, at Darryl Zanuck's insistence, she chose the less Mediterranean surname of Bancroft \"because it sounded dignified\".", "score": "1.6325086" }, { "id": null, "title": "Anne Brusletto", "text": "Anne Brusletto\n\nAnne Brusletto (born 24 January 1951) is a Norwegian alpine skier. She was born in Geilo. She participated at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo, where she competed in slalom and giant slalom.\n\nShe became Norwegian champion in giant slalom in 1970.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Hol", "text": "Hol\n\nHol is a municipality in Viken county, Norway.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Alpine skiers at the 1972 Winter Olympics", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Automatically assessed Norway articles", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Missing articles by nationality ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "11670447", "title": "Anne Balsamo", "text": " Anne Marie Balsamo (born January 7, 1959) is a writer who focuses on the connections between art, culture, gender, and technology.", "score": "1.631731" }, { "id": "28328264", "title": "Lauren Ambrose", "text": " Lauren Anne D'Ambruoso was born in New Haven, Connecticut on February 20, 1978. She is the daughter of Frank D'Ambruoso, a caterer and Anne (née Wachtel), an interior designer. She is of Italian descent on her father's side, and German, English, and Irish on her mother's. Ambrose attended Choate Rosemary Hall, Wilbur Cross High School, High School in the Community, and the ACES Educational Center for the Arts in New Haven as part of the class of 1996. She is also a trained opera singer who studied voice and opera at the Boston University Tanglewood Institute.", "score": "1.5998116" }, { "id": "26141750", "title": "Anne Polinario", "text": " Polinario was born on 5 August 1979 in Havana, Cuba and now resides in Montreal, Quebec. She had Drop Foot Paralysis in her left foot at birth. She started swimming at a young age and moved to Canada as a teenager. She made it into Canada's national swimming team while her mother and father were in Cuba's National Swimming Team.", "score": "1.5900223" }, { "id": "8004265", "title": "Anne Pramaggiore", "text": " Anne Pramaggiore was born on August 9, 1958 to Alfred Pramaggiore and Jeanne Lacy Pramaggiore. Alfred Pramaggiore was born in Brooklyn, NY to parents who emigrated from Italy. After graduating from City College of New York, Alfred pursued a career as a civil engineer. Jeanne Lacy Pramaggiore was a girl scout leader who later worked on political campaigns. She also served as a president of the Ohio Genealogical Society. Pramaggiore graduated from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio in 1980 with a bachelor's degree in theater. She later attended DePaul University College of Law and served as the editor-in-chief of the school's Law Review. She earned her law degree in 1989.", "score": "1.5879238" }, { "id": "15760456", "title": "Anne Bremer", "text": " Anne Milly Bremer was born in San Francisco on May 21, 1868, to upper-middle-class German-Jewish immigrants Joseph and Minna Bremer. In 1880-81, she traveled in Europe with her parents, and they brought back a cousin, Albert Bender, from Dublin, Ireland, to live with them and work for another uncle, William Bremer. She studied art with Emil Carlsen at the San Francisco Art Students League and with Arthur Mathews and others at the California School of Design, Mark Hopkins Institute of Art, receiving a Certificate of Proficiency in 1898. By the time she graduated, she was on the board of the Sketch Club, an ", "score": "1.5859054" }, { "id": "30775893", "title": "Mercedes Bresso", "text": " Bresso was born in Sanremo, Province of Imperia, Liguria. In 1969, she received her degree in Economics; since 1973, she is a University professor of economic institutions at the Politecnico di Torino (Faculty of Engineering).", "score": "1.5847726" }, { "id": "9427930", "title": "Ann Marie Buerkle", "text": " Buerkle was born Ann Marie Colella in 1951 in Auburn, New York, the daughter of Sadie M. (née Fiduccia) and Alfred D. \"Al\" Colella. All of her grandparents were born in Italy. After graduating as a registered nurse from St. Joseph's Hospital School of Nursing in Syracuse, New York, she worked at Columbia-Presbyterian Hospital in New York City and at St. Joseph's. She was a substitute school nurse for many years before obtaining her J.D. degree from Syracuse University School of Law. She was married to August Buerkle from 1972 to 1997. She served as an Assistant New York State Attorney General from 1997 to 2010. She also served one term on the Syracuse, New York Common Council. Buerkle is divorced and has six children.", "score": "1.5833967" }, { "id": "10912205", "title": "Minnie Minoprio", "text": " Born Virginia Anne Minoprio in Ware, Hertfordshire, Minoprio after graduating from the Arts Educational School, where she studied acting and singing, debuted at 15 in a stage version of \"Cinderella\". Two years later moved in Italy where she starred in the revue Io e Margherita, alongside Walter Chiari. At the same time she began a career as a jazz singer, recording a music album of dixieland and collaborating with other musicians; just with a duet with another singer, Fred Bongusto, she obtained in 1971 her major discographic success, the song \"Quando mi dici così\", which ranked 20 in the Italian hit parade. Her variegated career also includes radio, television, cinema and two novels, Il passaggio (1992) and Benvenuti a bordo (2007).", "score": "1.575321" }, { "id": "30046482", "title": "Cecilia Zoppelletto", "text": " She was born and raised in Padua, Italy. Since 1994, she has been based in London. She has a PhD in Film Studies from the University of Westminster.", "score": "1.5749165" }, { "id": "26658198", "title": "Anne Casale", "text": " Anne Lovi Casale (July 15, 1930 – December 2, 2002) was an Italian-American cookbook author.", "score": "1.574719" }, { "id": "30692396", "title": "Anne Frasier", "text": " Iowa, a river town settled by German, Irish, and Dutch immigrants. Her blue-collar parents divorced when she was six, and the next twelve years were spent in poverty, moving to and from Florida, Iowa, California, Illinois, and New Mexico. She graduated from Artesia High School, Artesia, New Mexico. After high school she worked as a waitress, a factory worker at Albuquerque's Levi Strauss (where she sewed the Levi's logo on the back pocket of jeans), followed by a secretarial position at Wally's LP Gas in Santa Fe, New Mexico. At age nineteen, she joined her uncle at his bar in rural ", "score": "1.5742545" }, { "id": "28846433", "title": "Anna Ogino", "text": " Ogino was born as Anna Gaillard in Naka-ku, Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture, to a Japanese mother and a French-American father. She was naturalized during elementary school, and received her undergraduate and master's degree in French literature from Keio University, as well as receiving a scholarship to Paris-Sorbonne University to study Rabelais. In 2002 she became a full professor at Keio.", "score": "1.5710351" }, { "id": "786771", "title": "Anne MacLeod", "text": "Standing by Thistles (1997) ; Just the Caravaggio (1999) Anne MacLeod (born 1951) is a Scottish writer. She was born in Aberfeldy and grew up in Inverness. MacLeod studied medicine at the University of Aberdeen and works as a dermatologist. She is the mother of four children. MacLeod lives on the Black Isle. She has published two collections of poetry: both of which were well-received by critics. She has also published two novels The Dark Ship (2001) and The Blue Moon Book (2004).", "score": "1.5676845" }, { "id": "6289642", "title": "Ippolita Rostagno", "text": " Born December 10, 1963 in Florence, Italy, Ippolita Rostagno is the daughter of an American artist and an Italian intellectual. Raised and educated in the hills of Tuscany, Ippolita attended elementary school in a one-room medieval schoolhouse and went on to study sculpture and earn her baccalauréat degree from the Istituto D’Arte in Florence. Ippolita immigrated to the United States at age 18, moving to Los Angeles where she continued her studies at Occidental College and founded an alternative poetry and dance company called Rime together with Anna Stump in 1984. After completing her BA in English Literature, Ippolita moved to New York City in 1986 and married a fashion photographer and gave birth to her daughter Maya in 1988.", "score": "1.5674286" }, { "id": "7326926", "title": "DJ Baby Anne", "text": " DJ Baby Anne (born Marianne Breslin; November 17, 1972 ) is an Orlando-based DJ who works with live sets and original mixes that fuse Electro with Miami Bass and funky breaks.", "score": "1.5672293" } ]
In what city was Arthur Thomson born?
[ "Edinburgh", "Edinburg", "Edinburgh, Scotland", "City of Edinburgh", "Edina", "Modern Athens" ]
place of birth
Arthur Thomson (footballer, born 1948)
3,387,429
35
[ { "id": "11200689", "title": "Arthur Thomson (footballer, born 1948)", "text": " Arthur Campbell Thomson (2 September 1948 – 7 March 2002) was a Scottish footballer, who played as a central defender in the Football League. He was born in Edinburgh.", "score": "1.8358645" }, { "id": "13676842", "title": "Arthur Landsborough Thomson", "text": " He was born in Edinburgh on 8 October 1890 the son of John Arthur Thomson FRSE and his wife Margaret Stewart. The family lived at 10 Kilmaurs Road. He was educated at the Royal High School, Edinburgh until 1899, when his father moved to Aberdeen as Professor of Natural History at Aberdeen University. Arthur completed his education at Aberdeen Grammar School. The family then lived at 15 Chanonry in Aberdeen. Arthur then studied Natural History (under his own father) at Aberdeen University, graduating MA in 1911. In the First World War he served as a Lt Colonel in the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders. He received a Military OBE for his services. After the war (from 1919) he became a medical researcher and remained in this role until retiral in 1957. He was created ", "score": "1.7743809" }, { "id": "5140924", "title": "Arthur Thomson (naturalist)", "text": " He was born at Pilmuir east of East Saltoun, East Lothian, the second son of Isabella Landsborough (1828-1905) and the Rev Arthur Thomson (1823-1881), a minister in the Free Church of Scotland, originally from Muckhart. He studied natural history at the University of Edinburgh graduating with an MA in 1880. He had already established a reputation as a worthy scientist within his first years and in 1887, aged 25, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Patrick Geddes, J. T. Cunningham, Sir John Murray and Robert McNair Ferguson. He taught at the Royal (Dick) Veterinary College from 1893 until 1899 then University of Aberdeen from 1899 until 1930 as Regius Professor of Natural History (Aberdeen), ", "score": "1.7497436" }, { "id": "4934500", "title": "Arthur Thomson (physician)", "text": " Sir Arthur Peregrine Thomson MC, LLD, MD, FRCP (1890 – 15 July 1977) was a British physician. Born in British Guiana the son of Arthur Henry Thomson, a colonial civil servant, he was educated at Dulwich College and Birmingham University, where he graduated in 1915 with first class honours in medicine, surgery and midwifery. He was also awarded the gold medal in clinical medicine, the Russell Memorial Prize, and was both Queen's and Ingleby Scholar. After graduation, he joined the Royal Army Medical Corps as a Captain and served as a Regimental Medical Officer with the Guards Division in France during World War I, where he was awarded the Military Cross and the Croix de Guerre, and was Mentioned in Despatches twice by the British and once by the French. After the war he was appointed Assistant Physician at ", "score": "1.7192078" }, { "id": "10741901", "title": "Virgil Thomson", "text": " Thomson was born in Kansas City, Missouri. As a child he befriended Alice Smith, great-granddaughter of Joseph Smith, founder of the Latter-day Saint movement. During his youth he often played the organ in Grace Church, (now Grace and Holy Trinity Cathedral), as his piano teacher was the church's organist. After World War I, he entered Harvard University thanks to a loan from Dr. Fred M. Smith, the president of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, and father of Alice Smith. His tours of Europe with the Harvard Glee Club helped nurture his desire to return there. At ", "score": "1.6548668" }, { "id": null, "title": "Arthur Thompson (gangster)", "text": "Arthur Thompson (gangster)\n\nArthur Thompson (September 1931 – 13 March 1993) was a Scottish gangster who was active in Glasgow from the 1950s and took charge of organised crime in the city for over thirty years.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Arthur Thomson (footballer, born 1948)", "text": "Arthur Thomson (footballer, born 1948)\n\nArthur Campbell Thomson (2 September 1948 – 7 March 2002) was a Scottish footballer, who played as a central defender in the Football League. He was born in Edinburgh.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Arthur Thomson (naturalist)", "text": "Arthur Thomson (naturalist)\n\nSir John Arthur Thomson (8 July 1861 – 12 February 1933) was a Scottish naturalist who authored several notable books and was an expert on soft corals.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Arthur Thomson (physician)", "text": "Arthur Thomson (physician)\n\nSir Arthur Peregrine Thomson MC, LLD, MD, FRCP (1890 – 15 July 1977) was a British physician.\n\nBorn in British Guiana the son of Arthur Henry Thomson, a colonial civil servant, he was educated at Dulwich College and Birmingham University, where he graduated in 1915 with first class honours in medicine, surgery and midwifery. He was also awarded the gold medal in clinical medicine, the Russell Memorial Prize, and was both Queen's and Ingleby Scholar.\n\nAfter graduation, he joined the Royal Army Medical Corps as a Captain and served as a Regimental Medical Officer with the Guards Division in France during World War I, where he was awarded the Military Cross and the Croix de Guerre, and was Mentioned in Despatches twice by the British and once by the French.<ref name=dulwich/><ref name=times/><ref name=bmj/>\nAfter the war he was appointed Assistant Physician at Birmingham General Hospital, where he was elected MRCP in 1920 and obtained his\nMD in 1923. He worked as a physician all his life specialising in diabetes. At the Birmingham Children's Hospital he took special interest in Rheumatic Fever and the Baskerville School for children with rheumatic heart disease. Later in life he focussed his research activity on to ageing and chronic sickness, giving the Lumleian Lectures on the subject in 1949. He had been elected a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in 1930 and gave their Harveian Oration in 1961.\n\nIn 1947 Birmingham University appointed him part-time Professor of Therapeutics, after which he became Dean of the Medical Faculty and in 1952 vice-principal of the University. He was knighted in 1959.\n\nHe married Minnie Scott Hutchings (née Lindsley) in Birmingham in 1912; they had one adopted daughter.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Arthur Thomson (footballer, born 1903)", "text": "Arthur Thomson (footballer, born 1903)\n\nArthur Thomson (July 1903 – \"unknown\") was an English footballer who played as a forward. Born in West Stanley, County Durham, he played for West Stanley, Craghead United, Morecambe, Southend United and Manchester United.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "3321383", "title": "David Thomson (writer)", "text": " David Robert Alexander Thomson was born in British colonial India to Scottish parents. His father served in the Indian Army and was wounded in the Great War. As a child, Thomson lived in Scotland, as well as in Derbyshire and London, where he attended University College School. At the age of eleven, he sustained an eye injury which nearly blinded him. Unable to continue at school, he was sent to the home of his maternal grandmother in Nairn, Scotland, where he was taught by private tutors. At fourteen, Thomson returned to London and the progressive King Alfred School, London to complete his schooling. As an undergraduate he studied Modern History at Lincoln College, Oxford. At this time he also started to tutor a daughter of an Anglo-Irish family, the Kirkwoods, at Woodbrook House in County Roscommon, Ireland.", "score": "1.6535339" }, { "id": "13676841", "title": "Arthur Landsborough Thomson", "text": " Sir Arthur Landsborough Thomson FRSE PZS CB LLD (8 October 1890 – 9 June 1977) was a Scottish medical researcher, mainly remembered as an amateur ornithologist and ornithological author and acknowledged expert on bird migration.", "score": "1.6321564" }, { "id": "4934501", "title": "Arthur Thomson (physician)", "text": " General Hospital, where he was elected MRCP in 1920 and obtained his MD in 1923. He worked as a physician all his life specialising in diabetes. At the Birmingham Children's Hospital he took special interest in Rheumatic Fever and the Baskerville School for children with rheumatic heart disease. Later in life he focussed his research activity on to ageing and chronic sickness, giving the Lumleian Lectures on the subject in 1949. He had been elected a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in 1930 and gave their Harveian Oration in 1961. In 1947 Birmingham University appointed him part-time Professor of Therapeutics, after which he became Dean of the Medical Faculty and in 1952 vice-principal of the University. He was knighted in 1959. He married Minnie Scott Hutchings (née Lindsley) in Birmingham in 1912; they had one adopted daughter.", "score": "1.6297563" }, { "id": "9013091", "title": "Balfron", "text": "Alexander 'Greek' Thomson (1817 – 1875) was born in Balfron to a father who was a bookkeeper at Ballindalloch Mill. He became an eminent Glaswegian architect and architectural theorist and a pioneer in sustainable building. ; George Thomson (1819 – 1878), brother of Alexander Thomson, was born in Balfron. After an early career as an architect became a baptist missionary in Limbe, Cameroon (then known as \"Victoria\"), where he combined his religious activities with a passion for botany. An epiphytic orchid of the genus Pachystoma was named Pachystoma thomsonianum in his honour. ; Harold and Frank Barnwell, known as the Barnwell Brothers, were also from Balfron. They began their love affair with gliders and planes in the grounds ", "score": "1.6264358" }, { "id": "4508772", "title": "David Thomson (New Zealand politician)", "text": " Thomson was born in Stratford, the son of former Stratford mayor Percy Thomson. He was a dairy farmer. He served in the Army in the Middle East in World War II and was a Prisoner of War in 1942. He was awarded the Military Cross (MC) later in 1942. He married June Grace Adams in April 1942. They had one son and three daughters. In the post-war years he was chairman of Federated Farmers.", "score": "1.625548" }, { "id": "29370137", "title": "Alfred Thomson", "text": " Thomson was born in Bangalore in India where his father George was a British civil servant who had married an Irish woman, Florence Green. Thomson was deaf from birth and when the family returned to Britain from India he attended the Royal School for Deaf Children at Margate. While at the school, he learnt sign language. By the time he was 13, he was already six feet tall. His father was unhappy that he had not learnt to speak terribly well, and transferred him to a small private oral school run by a Mr Barber at Brondesbury. Later in life he was known, in the press, as the \"deaf and dumb\" artist. Although Thomson attended the London Art School in Kensington for a ", "score": "1.6214488" }, { "id": "26267166", "title": "Arthur Erickson", "text": " Arthur Charles Erickson (June 14, 1924 – May 20, 2009) was a Canadian architect and urban planner. He studied Asian languages at the University of British Columbia, and later earned a degree from McGill University's School of Architecture. He is renowned for designing some of the most recognizable buildings and sites in Canada, including Roy Thomson Hall, Robson Square, the Museum of Glass and the Simon Fraser University campus.", "score": "1.6211467" }, { "id": "16508354", "title": "Alexander McDonald Thomson", "text": " Thomson was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1822 to immigrants from Scotland and Holland. His family moved to Ohio when he was a child. He moved to Hartford, Wisconsin, in 1848 and to Janesville, Wisconsin, in 1864. From 1870 to 1873, he was editor of the Milwaukee Sentinel. Thomson also authored A Political History of Wisconsin. He died in Milwaukee in 1898.", "score": "1.6186978" }, { "id": "5140923", "title": "Arthur Thomson (naturalist)", "text": " Sir John Arthur Thomson FRSE LLD (8 July 1861 – 12 February 1933) was a Scottish naturalist who authored several notable books and was an expert on soft corals.", "score": "1.6174362" }, { "id": "14881887", "title": "David Cleghorn Thomson", "text": " Thomson was born in Edinburgh, the son of Dr John Thomson FRCPE and his wife, Isobel Macphail. The family lived at 14 Coates Crescent in Edinburgh's fashionable West End. He was educated at Edinburgh Academy, the University of Edinburgh and Balliol College, Oxford.", "score": "1.616728" }, { "id": "26435707", "title": "James Thomson (poet, born 1834)", "text": " Thomson was born in Port Glasgow, Scotland, and, at the age of eight (after his sister died and his father suffered a stroke), he was sent to London where he was raised in an orphanage, the Royal Caledonian Asylum on Chalk (later Caledonian after the asylum) Road near Holloway. Soon after this his mother died. He spoke with a London accent. He trained as an army schoolmaster at the Royal Military Asylum in Chelsea and served in Ireland, where in 1851, at the age of 17, he made the acquaintance of the 18-year-old Charles Bradlaugh, who was already notorious as a ", "score": "1.6152333" }, { "id": "757374", "title": "Arthur Saunders Thomson", "text": " Arthur Saunders Thomson (29 December 1816 &ndash; 4 November 1860) was a notable New Zealand military surgeon, medical scientist, writer and historian. He was born in Arbroath, Angus, Scotland in 1816. He joined the British Army in 1838 as an assistant surgeon and was stationed in India until 1847. There, he wrote about the epidemic of fever among his regiment during the monsoon season. Upon his return to England, he was appointed surgeon to the 58th Regiment of Foot and sent to New Zealand. In New Zealand he wrote extensively about disease statistics among Māori and European populations and climatology. Thompson's book The Story of New Zealand: Past and Present, Savage and Civilized (1859) is generally considered to be the first scholarly history of the island country. He was promoted to surgeon major in 1858 and was sent back to England. A year later, he was placed in charge of the hospital steamship Mauritius and sent to China. He died there in 1860.", "score": "1.6133595" }, { "id": "11106086", "title": "Arthur MacManus", "text": " Arthur MacManus was born in Belfast, Ireland, in 1889, later moving to Glasgow, Scotland, with his parents.", "score": "1.6124609" }, { "id": "4727339", "title": "Dugald Thomson", "text": " Thomson was born in Camberwell, London, England, to Scottish parents Jane (née Duncan) and John Thomson. His father was an insurance broker. The family emigrated to South Australia the year after he was born, and later moved to Victoria. Thomson completed his education in England and trained at his uncle's business in Liverpool. After spending two years at sea, he returned to Melbourne at the age of 19 and joined the merchant firm of Robert Harper. He set up a Sydney branch in 1877 and was a managing partner until 1892. He also established the North Shore Steam Ferry Company with James Garvan.", "score": "1.5958526" }, { "id": "33010263", "title": "Godfrey Thomson", "text": " Godfrey Thomson was born in Carlisle, Cumbria on 27 March 1881. He was the son of Charles Thomson and his wife, Jane Hilton. His parents separated when he was a young boy, and his mother moved the two of them to her native town of Felling located in Tyneside. It was here that he attended High Felling School. He was then awarded a scholarship to Rutherford College of Technology. He proceeded to study at Armstrong College in Newcastle and then moved on to study at the University of Strasbourg under Professor Ferdinand Braun, working on Hertzian waves. He worked at Armstrong College, Newcastle ", "score": "1.5958264" } ]
In what city was Miloš Žeravica born?
[ "Zrenjanin", "Bečkerek" ]
place of birth
Miloš Žeravica
2,412,381
54
[ { "id": "10407830", "title": "Ranko Žeravica", "text": " Born to father Milorad, and mother Gordana, in the village of Dragutinovo (before it merged with Beodra into Novo Miloševo), Žeravica's education started in his village and continued in Kikinda, where he traveled every day by train. His family stemmed from Herzegovina by ancestry, having moved several generations before his birth to the Mošorin area, where they became wealthy farmers and land owners.", "score": "1.7855777" }, { "id": "28156608", "title": "Miloš Radivojević", "text": "Silver Mermaid and Roberto Paolela (Naples, 1975) – Testament ; Bronze Palm (Valencia, 1989) – Čavka ; Lokarno, 1979 - Kvar' Miloš \"Miša\" Radivojević (born 3 November 1939) is a television and movie director, and a professor at the Faculty of Dramatic Arts, Belgrade Miloš was born in 1939 in Čačak, Serbia. He started his higher education as a philosophy student and graduated in 1966 from Faculty of Dramatic Arts in Belgrade in 1966, as one of the first students of Aleksandar Petrović with the medium length film Adam & Eva 66. He worked as assistant director under Puriša Đorđević between 1961 ", "score": "1.6591339" }, { "id": "1456182", "title": "Andrija Milošević", "text": " Milošević was born in Titograd, SR Montenegro, SFR Yugoslavia as the elder son of mother Vera and father Peka. He has a younger brother Velibor. He spent his childhood in Nikšić where he actively played football for Sutjeska. At the age of sixteen he became a student in the first generation of the Faculty of Dramatic Arts in Cetinje. In the second year of studies he had first major role in theater and then he collaborated with theater director Milan Karadžić. In Montenegro, he played in various shows. He moved to Belgrade in 2000, at the invitation of Svetozar Cvetković, who engaged him in Atelje 212 in show Coat of a dirty man. In 2003, he began working in a TV series Gej Brak with director Milan Afrojack and writer Stevan Koprivica. Montenegrin director Marija Perović awarded him with the lead role in the film Opet pakujemo majmune. In 2005, he founded the Udruženje ljubitelja filma production company in Podgorica. He is the host of the Serbian version of the reality-show Survivor.", "score": "1.6479263" }, { "id": "4116072", "title": "Miloš Savčić", "text": " He was born in Svilajnac, in Resava, on 26 July 1865 (Old Style) to Teodor and Jelena Savčić. His father was a well-to-do merchant. In his hometown, he finished both elementary school and high school, and in Belgrade, in 1885 he graduated with a B.Sc. from Grandes écoles. For his post-graduate studies, he went to Germany and enrolled at the Technical University of Munich. In 1889 he graduated from the master's program in Civil Engineering. His professor was Carl von Linde.", "score": "1.6472846" }, { "id": "31382283", "title": "Miloš Krstić (footballer, born 1988)", "text": " Born in Kragujevac in central Serbia, but have never actually lived there, Krstić spent his infant years living in Priština, until NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999. Apart from playing football, he had simultaneously attending education and got a diploma of a Faculty of Traffic and Transport Engineering at University of Belgrade.", "score": "1.6344612" }, { "id": null, "title": "Miloš Žeravica", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Žeravica (surname)", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of foreign Úrvalsdeild players", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Grindavík men's football players", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of people from Serbia", "text": "List of people from Serbia\n\nList of people from Serbia is a list of notable people from Serbia. The list contains names of people who are associated with Serbia and its territory by their place of birth, and also by naturalization, domicile, citizenship or some other similar connection, modern or historical. List is territorially defined, and includes all people from Serbia, regardless of their ethnic, linguistic, religious or some other personal distinctions.\n\n\n\n\n\"See: List of Serbian Revolutionaries\"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\"For Serbian American military personnel, see\" this list\n\n\n\nFor Serbian-American American football players, see this list; for baseball players, see this list.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "30148098", "title": "Miloš Tošanić", "text": " Tošanić was born in the Belgrade municipality of Zemun, in what was then the Socialist Republic of Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He received a degree from the Faculty of Industrial Management at Union University in 2009, obtained a master's degree in 2010, and has pursued doctoral studies at the University of Novi Sad Faculty of Technical Sciences. He has been an advisor to Serbia's minister of energy, development, and environmental protection and has led the sports centre Kolubara.", "score": "1.6320894" }, { "id": "11948908", "title": "Miloš Velimirović", "text": " Velimirović was born in Belgrade, Serbia, Yugoslavia to Milorad and Desanka (Jovanović) Velimirović, a physician and a piano teacher respectively. In his boyhood in Serbia, he learned to play the violin and piano. He learnt several languages, and had a lifelong passion for music. During his adolescent years he studied music history and music theory. Velimirović began a program of studies in music history at the University of Belgrade, also studying violin and piano at the conservatory. In 1941, with the invasion of the Axis powers, the university was closed, and Velimirović's studies there were suspended until after the war.", "score": "1.6224437" }, { "id": "9415098", "title": "Miloš Milojević", "text": " Miloš S. Milojević, son of a parish priest, was born at Crna Bara in Mačva, Serbia, on 16 October 1840. He graduated with a law degree from Belgrade's Velika škola in 1862; studied philosophy, philology and history at the University of Moscow, from 1862 to 1865. His professor was Osip Bodyansky. He didn't wait to graduate and in 1866 Milojević returned to Serbia to work for the government judicial system, and later taught at high schools in Valjevo, Belgrade and Leskovac. He died in Belgrade on 24 June 1897. He was buried in Novo Groblje.", "score": "1.6167163" }, { "id": "1759145", "title": "Milosav Zdravković", "text": " The family of Milosav Zdravković-Resavac is from the village of Lomnica in Gornja Resava. Milosav Zdravković's father is Prince Milija Zdravković, a member of the Governing Council for the Ćuprija nahiya, a native of Lomnica, the Resava principality of the Ćuprija nahiya. Before Milosavlje's birth, Milija Zdravković left his birthplace and went with his family to the village of Brestovo, which today belongs to the Municipality of Despotovac and is almost equally distant from its municipal center, Despotovac, as well as from Svilajnac and Jagodina. Milosav Zdravković was born here in Brestovo around 1780. He started reading and writing very early. He acquired his first knowledge in the village of Ivankovac, near Ćuprija, and then with the Resava protege Miloje in Lomnica. Shortly after the outbreak of the First Serbian Uprising in 1804, Milija Zdravković became Karađorđe's advisor for the Ćuprija nahiya. When the Great School was opened in Belgrade in 1808, he enrolled his son Milosav. Thus, Milosav Zdravković, together with Karađorđev's son Aleks, Vuk Karadžić and fifteen other young men, became a student of the first generation of the French modelled institution of higher learning in Belgrade called Visoka škola, hence Grandes écoles.", "score": "1.6148179" }, { "id": "1876239", "title": "Leo Martin", "text": " Martin was born as Miloš Jović (Милош Јовић) on 6 March 1942 in the village of Rašica near Blace, Serbia. When he was two years old, his family moved to Belgrade. His family was poor, so he had to work hard since the young age. Jović was loading coal in the building of the Music Academy in Belgrade when he heard classical music. That led him to his musical career. He enrolled at the musical school, studying piano and clarinet. In 1961, he enrolled at the Faculty of Law of the University of Belgrade, but did not graduate.", "score": "1.6139292" }, { "id": "15817921", "title": "Miša Vacić", "text": " He was born in 1985 in Belgrade. When he was 16, he moved with his parents to Germany. He studied at the University of Belgrade Faculty of Law but never graduated. He returned to Serbia in 2004 because according to him he loves his country and that every injustice done to the Serbs really hurts him.", "score": "1.6092942" }, { "id": "2630003", "title": "Miloš Antić", "text": " Miloš Antić was born in Zürich in 1994, where he grew up with three sisters. His parents fled from Gnjilane, Kosovo to Switzerland in 1990. His father Blagoje Antić is a successful businessman, who became self-employed in 1994 and has since founded various companies in the fields of real estate, real estate development, construction and construction services and invested in real estate throughout Switzerland at an early age, with a focus on Zürich. Today, the entire business portfolio is consolidated under the umbrella of DHG Holding AG, where his father is Chairman of the Board of Directors. Milos Antić attended and graduated from the MSP Private School in Zurich and the Private Business School in Rome.", "score": "1.6072241" }, { "id": "9660936", "title": "Miloš Pantović", "text": " Pantović was born in Munich, after his parents moved there from Arilje, Serbia.", "score": "1.6048176" }, { "id": "16366166", "title": "Nenad Milosavljević", "text": " Milosavljević was born on February 6, 1954 in Niš, to father Čedomir and mother Branislava Milosavljević. His brother Predrag was born three years earlier. He went to Ratko Vukićević Elementary School in Niš. As a child, he learned to play the accordion, participating in elementary school competitions playing it. He learned to play the guitar in high school. At the same time, he sang in Dr Vojislav Vučković Music School choir and in Culture and Arts Society Veljko Vlahović choir. As a teenager he was under a strong influence of the hippie movement. He started performing in parks in Niš and in parks and on the beaches on the Adriatic coast, playing rock hits on acoustic guitar and harmonica.", "score": "1.6046293" }, { "id": "27866570", "title": "Velika Plana", "text": "Kosta Manojlović, ethnomusicologist, co-founder and the first dean of the Conservatory of Music at the University of Arts in Belgrade, born and grew up in Krnjevo ; Aleksandar Tirnanić, a pre-WW II football (soccer) player and coach, born in Krnjevo ; Radomir Lukić, jurist and the youngest person ever appointed as professor at the University of Belgrade Law School was born and grew up in Miloševac ; Velimir Živojinović Massuka, poet, translator, director in chief of the National Theatre in Belgrade, born and grew up in Velika Plana ; Vladimir Petković, art historian and archeologist, member of the Serbian Academy of Arts and Sciences ; Vojislav Koštunica, former President of Yugoslavia and Prime Minister of Serbia (spent summers in Miloševac during all of his childhood, see :sr: Милошевац and :sr: Војислав Коштуница) ; :sh:Snežana Savić, movie actress and singer, was born in Velika Plana. ; Miodrag Kojadinović, Canadian writer, lived in Velika Plana as a child. ", "score": "1.6013106" }, { "id": "13113845", "title": "Miloš Bojanić", "text": " Bojanić was born to a family of ethnic Bosnian Serbs in Bijeljina, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, SFR Yugoslavia, and lived in Ruhotina, near Bijeljina. He moved to Serbia at a young age. He has homes in Novi Sad (where he lives), Belgrade, and on the Montenegrin littoral. His sons, Bane and Mikica, are singers as well. Bane lives in Chicago.", "score": "1.5981216" }, { "id": "32338950", "title": "Philip Zepter", "text": " Philip Zepter was born in Kozarska Dubica (in modern-day Bosnia and Herzegovina) on 23 November 1950. He is the son of Milisav Jankovic and Nada Reljan. From their union is born in addition to Philip, Gojko, the youngest son. Zepter's education was strict, focusing on mathematics lessons and intensive sports practice. He completed his secondary education at the secondary school of Bosanska Dubica (Bosnia and Herzegovina), then went to study Economics and graduated with a master's degree from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Economics. He is fluent in Serbian, German and English. On February 21, 1976, he married Madlena Horvat, professor of literature. They have a daughter Emma, born in 2000.", "score": "1.5941005" }, { "id": "25045378", "title": "Miloš Grlica", "text": " events. He was born on January 3, 1979, in Čačak, Serbia. He entered the secondary school for children with special needs ˝Veljko Ramadanović˝ in Zemun, Belgrade, because of the problems with his eyesight. He then graduated from the medical high school, department for Physiotherapy for physiotherapists with impaired eyesight. Then he graduated athletics coach and goalball coach on Faculty of Sport and Physical Education, University of Niš. Grlica entered the field of sports when he was 11 years old. He has been a member of the sport representation of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, then the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro and finally of the Republic of Serbia since 1995. So far, ", "score": "1.5879184" }, { "id": "26194198", "title": "Miloš Degenek", "text": " Degenek was born in 1994 in Knin, Croatia, which was the capital of internationally unrecognized proto-state Republic of Serbian Krajina. His family was part of the Serb population of Croatia and fled during the Croatian War of Independence to Yugoslav and Serbian capital Belgrade in 1995 during Operation Storm where they lived as refugees. In 2000 his family emigrated to Sydney, Australia.", "score": "1.5848743" }, { "id": "14805626", "title": "Miloš Šestić", "text": " Born in Milosavci, a village near Laktaši (in present-day Republika Srpska, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina), Šestić grew up in Stara Pazova (in present-day Vojvodina, an autonomous province of Serbia), making his first football steps at local club Jedinstvo.", "score": "1.5842031" } ]
In what city was Giovanni Speranza born?
[ "Gießen", "Giessen" ]
place of birth
Giovanni Speranza
714,110
68
[ { "id": "9233780", "title": "Giovanni Speranza de' Vajenti", "text": " Giovanni Speranza (c. 1470 – 1540s) was an Italian painter. He was born and was active in Vicenza, where he was a follower of Benedetto Montagna. His exact birth and death years are not confirmed with one claiming he was born in 1480 and died in 1546. He is mentioned briefly by Giorgio Vasari, in his entry on Jacopo Sansovino. He later claims both Montagna and Speranza were pupils of Andrea Mantegna. It is unclear if he is related to the Baroque painter Giovanni Battista Speranza.", "score": "1.8498394" }, { "id": "25291451", "title": "Roberto Speranza", "text": " Roberto Speranza was born in Potenza, Basilicata, in 1979. During the 2000s he graduated in political science at the Luiss Guido Carli of Rome.", "score": "1.8192393" }, { "id": "5225611", "title": "Giovanni Speranza", "text": " Giovanni Speranza (born 6 March 1982 in Giessen) is a German-Italian footballer.", "score": "1.690717" }, { "id": "5130776", "title": "Giovanni Frezza", "text": " Giovanni Frezza was born in Potenza, Basilicata, Italy.", "score": "1.6464934" }, { "id": "32253586", "title": "Alessandro Speranza", "text": " Alessandro Speranza (1728 - 17 November 1797) was an Italian composer. His opera I due Figaro was very popular during his lifetime and enjoyed revivals in Italy after his death well into the 19th century; including at La Scala in 1840 with Raffaele Scalese in the title role.", "score": "1.6327746" }, { "id": null, "title": "Giovanni Speranza", "text": "Giovanni Speranza\n\nGiovanni Speranza (born 6 March 1982 in Giessen) is a German-Italian footballer.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Giovanni Speranza de' Vajenti", "text": "Giovanni Speranza de' Vajenti\n\nGiovanni Speranza (c. 1470 – 1540s) was an Italian painter. He was born and was active in Vicenza, where he was a follower of Benedetto Montagna. His exact birth and death years are not confirmed with one claiming he was born in 1480 and died in 1546.\n\nHe is mentioned briefly by Giorgio Vasari, in his entry on Jacopo Sansovino. He later claims both Montagna and Speranza were pupils of Andrea Mantegna. It is unclear if he is related to the Baroque painter Giovanni Battista Speranza.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Benedetto Montagna", "text": "Benedetto Montagna\n\nBenedetto Montagna (c. 1480–1555/58) was an Italian engraver and painter. Montagna was born in Vicenza, the son of the leading painter of the city, Bartolomeo Montagna, with whom he trained and perhaps continued to work. His approximately 53 engravings seem to have been produced in the period from about 1500 until his father died in 1523 and he inherited the workshop; in these years he was \"the most prolific engraver of his generation in northern Italy\". He ran the workshop into at least the 1540s, but his paintings fell behind the development of Italian styles as they largely follow his father's style, less successfully. Many do not survive. His prints are generally found more significant by art historians.\n\nHe engraved primarily subjects from classical mythology, with a middle period with many religious subjects in about 1506–12.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Marcello Fogolino", "text": "Marcello Fogolino\n\nMarcello Fogolino (active 1510–1548) was an Italian painter of the Renaissance or Mannerist style. Originally from San Vito in the Friuli, he worked early in his life he worked in Vicenza, under the painter Bartolomeo Montagna. He was also influenced by Giovanni Speranza and Pordenone.\n\nReturning to Friuli in 1520–21, he came to reflect the painterly style of \"Il Pordenone\". He completed a painting of \"Saints Francis and John the Baptist with Prophet Daniel\" for the Duomo in Pordenone.\n\nHe was banished from Venetian territories, along with his brother the architect Matteo, for complicity in a murder in 1527, and went to Trento. In Trento, he befriended the bishop Bernardo Clesio, which gave the brothers some protection. It appears that they became informants for the Venetian Republic, and finally were allowed to return to the Veneto. He painted frescoes in the Tridentine region, including Castel Buonconsiglio, Castello Malpaga, Villa Salvotti, and Palazzo Sardagna. He was also an engraver.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Felice Romani", "text": "Felice Romani\n\nGiuseppe Felice Romani (31 January 178828 January 1865) was an Italian poet and scholar of literature and mythology who wrote many librettos for the opera composers Donizetti and Bellini. Romani was considered the finest Italian librettist between Metastasio and Boito.", "score": null }, { "id": "2712554", "title": "Speranza Scappucci", "text": " Speranza Scappucci (born 9 April 1973 in Rome) is an Italian conductor and pianist.", "score": "1.6207235" }, { "id": "28219907", "title": "Giovanni Capellini", "text": " Giovanni Capellini was born on 23 August 1833 in La Spezia, Liguria, son Pietro Francesco Capellini and Margherita Ferrarini. His family originated in Porto Venere. His parents intended that he should make a career as a musician, and then in the church. As a boy he collected interesting natural objects. In 1853 the future King Umberto I of Italy visited La Spezia, and Capellini was presented to him when he came to view the collection. Later Umberto called Capellini his oldest friend. Capellini remained in the monks' school until his father died in 1854. To make a living he worked as a bookbinder, a teacher in a college of La Spezia and a manufacturer of electrical equipment. He was finally able to devote himself to geology thanks to the Rector of the Seminary of Pontremoli, who offered him the post of prefect at the seminary, and he continued his studies thanks to the Municipality of La Spezia, which paid for his costs at the University of Pisa. After graduating he embraced the profession of a geologist, and began his exploratory research on the Apuan Alps.", "score": "1.6041899" }, { "id": "15283173", "title": "Cerreto di Spoleto", "text": " The Renaissance humanist and poet Iovianus Pontanus (Giovanni Gioviano Pontano) was born here in 1426—although after his father had been murdered in a civil brawl his mother escaped with the boy to Perugia.", "score": "1.5883462" }, { "id": "14320285", "title": "Giovanni Spagnolli", "text": " He was born on 26 October 1907 in Rovereto, a city in the Austro-Hungarian Tyrol at the time. He began his high school studies at the Imperial Regio Ginnasio in Rovereto. Refugee with his family (originally from Isera) in Dornbirn, in Vorarlberg during the Great War, he returned to his city after 1918, to complete his studies there until the end of high school. At 19, he chose Milan for the university, convinced that this \"leap from the province\" could benefit his future: he earned two degrees, and Agostino Gemelli retained him as Administrative Deputy Secretary of the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart. The Feltrinelli Legnami company, with many contacts in Trentino, called him in turn as administrator. During the years of the Resistance, he worked in Brianza and Milan to shake consciences and organize the ranks of the new party of the Christian Democrats, of which he became the Milanese secretary. He collaborated from Rome in the reconstruction of Italy through UNRRA-CAASAS plans to give new homes to millions of homeless.", "score": "1.5833641" }, { "id": "14314074", "title": "Sfera Ebbasta", "text": " Sfera was born in the Milanese town of Sesto San Giovanni, but grew up in the neighbouring town of Cinisello Balsamo. His parents separated two years after his birth, and his father died when he was only 13. He dropped out of school at the age of 14.", "score": "1.5790284" }, { "id": "16372590", "title": "Joseph Speranza", "text": " Joseph Speranza (born 4 February 1840) was a British army officer who joined the Royal Malta Fencibles Artillery at a young age and rose to be its Colonel. He was also one of the founders of the Philatelic Society, London, which later became The Royal Philatelic Society London. On 2 December 1926, Major J.E. Speranza presented to the Royal Philatelic Society the original pages of their meetings of April, May, and October, 1869, together with two photographs of his father, one probably taken on 13 April 1869. In recognition of this gift, Major J.E. Speranza was elected an honorary fellow of the society.", "score": "1.5771389" }, { "id": "13132305", "title": "Giovanni Pontano", "text": " Pontano was born at Cerreto in the Duchy of Spoleto, where his father was murdered in one of the frequent civil brawls which then disturbed the peace of Italian towns. His date of birth is given in various sources between 1421 and 1429; it is often given as 1426, but may have been 1429. His mother escaped with the boy to Perugia, and it was here that Pontano received his first instruction in languages and literature. Failing to recover his patrimony, he abandoned Umbria, and at the age of twenty-two established himself at Naples, which continued to be his chief place of residence ", "score": "1.5673066" }, { "id": "25514267", "title": "Giovanni Merlini", "text": " Giovanni Merlini was born in Spoleto on 28 August 1795 as the third of thirteen children to Luigi Merlini and Antonia Claudi. His father - who settled in Spoleto - was descended from a noble Sicilian line but set up a business in Spoleto. He attended school in his hometown where he was noted for his pious temperament and he received his First Communion in 1808 in the Sant'Ansano church from the Barnabite Bishop (and future cardinal) Antonio Maria Cadolini. He decided to pursue the priesthood despite his parents making their objections known to him and commenced his studies for the priesthood in 1809 in Spoleto. He received his ", "score": "1.5670202" }, { "id": "6296700", "title": "Sperone Speroni", "text": " Born April 12, 1500 in Padua, Sperone was the second child of Bernardino Speroni degli Alvarotti and Lucia Contarini. In 1518 he obtained the artibus degree from the University of Padua and joined the Guild (Sacro Collegio) of artists and physicians. He lectured on philosophy at Padua, under the Chair of Logic. He interrupted his teachings to study at Bologna under Pietro Pomponazzi but, after Pietro's death, returned to Padua where he obtained an Extraordinary Chair of Philosophy, a post he held for another three years. His literary career began with the publication of the Dialoghi (\"Dialogues\") at Venice (1542). Very famous and influential ", "score": "1.5652444" }, { "id": "28395582", "title": "Carlo Alberto Sperati", "text": " Carlo Alberto Sperati (December 29, 1860 – September 12, 1945) was a Norwegian-American composer and music professor. Sperati was born in Kristiania (now Oslo), Norway, the son of the conductor Paolo Sperati. He went to sea in 1877, and then enrolled in theological studies at Luther College in Decorah, Iowa in 1884. He graduated in 1888. He married Emma Hoffoss in 1891 and became a priest in the Lutheran church that same year. He became a teacher in Tacoma, Washington in 1894, and he also worked at Pacific Lutheran University, where, among other events, he conducted a band that played on Mount Rainier. Sperati is best known for his work at Luther College, where he was a professor of music from 1905 to 1943. He conducted the Luther College Concert Band on tours in Europe and the United States.", "score": "1.5425483" }, { "id": "27804651", "title": "Christopher Speranzo", "text": " He was born on October 24, 1972 in Pittsfield, Massachusetts and graduated from St. Joseph Central High School. He graduated from Boston College with a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science and later a Master of Philosophy degree in history from the University of Cambridge. He later earned his J.D. degree from Boston College Law School in 2001. After graduating from the University of Cambridge he worked for the municipal government of Pittsfield negotiating city and state projects with General Electric.", "score": "1.538542" }, { "id": "4875947", "title": "Giovanni Spertini", "text": " Giovanni Spertini (Pavia, 1821 - Milan, 1895) was an Italian sculptor. Beginning in 1836, he studied sculpture at the Brera Academy, and then privately under Gianmaria Benzoni, Giovanni Antonio Labus, and Pietro Magni (sculptor). He became an honorary associate at the Brera. His first main work as: La scrittrice, also known as the Leggitrice del Magni, which was donated to the Brera. His Columbus Messenger was awarded a prize at the 1876 Exposition of Philadelphia. He won a national contest to sculpt a bust of Mazzini once found in Campidoglio. His statue of Un colpo sicuro was sold at the 1878 Paris Exposition. Among his other notable works, are the larger than life busts of Amilcare Ponchielli and Victor Hugo (stucco, 1886 Exhibition of Fine Arts in Milan). He won ", "score": "1.5290385" }, { "id": "10232816", "title": "Giovanni (name)", "text": " (1810–1887), Italian archaeologist ; Giovanni Bernardo Gremoli, Catholic bishop ; Giovanni Jona-Lasinio (born 1932), Italian theoretical physicist ; Giovanni Lapentti (born 1983), Ecuadorian tennis player ; Giovanni Lavaggi (born 1958), Italian racing driver ; Giovanni Marradi (1852–1922), Italian poet ; Giovanni Marradi (musician) (born 1952), pianist, composer and arranger ; Giovanni Giorgio Moroder (born 1940), Italian record producer, songwriter, performer, and DJ ; Giovanni Paisiello (1740–1816), Italian composer ; Giovanni Palandrani (born 1996), American drag queen better known by the stage name Aquaria ; Giovanni Papini (1881–1956), Italian journalist, essayist, literary critic, poet, and novelist ; Giovanni I Participazio ", "score": "1.5252345" }, { "id": "12329921", "title": "Marco Speranza", "text": " Marco Speranza is an Italian footballer who plays as a left back for Pisa in the Lega Pro Prima Divisione. He is on loan from Milan.", "score": "1.5239902" }, { "id": "26658152", "title": "Paolo Sperati", "text": " Paolo Agostino Sperati (March 26, 1821 – May 20, 1884) was an Italian conductor, musician, and composer that was active in the theater and opera life of Christiania (now Oslo), Norway in the 19th century.", "score": "1.5237229" } ]
In what city was Anton Lui born?
[ "Rabaul" ]
place of birth
Anton Lui
3,356,649
33
[ { "id": "15320472", "title": "Anton Lui", "text": " Anton Lui (born July 27, 1985 in Rabaul, East New Britain) is a sprinter from Papua New Guinea.", "score": "1.667541" }, { "id": "30865290", "title": "Marco Lui", "text": " Lui was born in Milan, Italy. Lui has a degree in physical education from the University of Verona. He began his career about 18 years performing in certain places as a cabaret artist and imitator of Michael Jackson, and later as a tourist entertainer. He later made some television appearances as a guest for Mediaset programs, including \"Beato fra le donne\", \"Rose Rosse\", \"La febbre del sabato sera\" e \"Sotto a chi tocca\" Since autumn 2005 creates the screens of Italy 1 to the character of Mr. Lui, a mime in a very short gag comic that appears just before the end of advertising aimed at children (morning and afternoon). The short vignettes are inspired by the comic ", "score": "1.6078501" }, { "id": "31252855", "title": "Mochammad Anton", "text": " Anton (Chinese: 魏兴安 Goei Hing An) was born in Malang on 31 December 1965 from Goei Heng An and Sumiati. He worked as a driver throughout high school and when he was studying at a university in Surabaya, and continued to do so after dropping out due to financial reasons.", "score": "1.5861018" }, { "id": "11549807", "title": "Lui Shou-Kwan", "text": " Lui was born in Guangzhou. His father, Lui Can Ming, was also a painter. He studied economics at Guangzhou University. He moved to Hong Kong in 1948. While there, he worked as an inspector for the Hongkong and Yaumati Ferry Company until 1966.", "score": "1.5701509" }, { "id": "95088", "title": "Anton Muscatelli", "text": " Anton Muscatelli was born on 1 January 1962 in Italy to Ambrogio and Rosellina Muscatelli. His father, who was head of a shipping company, relocated the family first to Holland and then to Glasgow. Anton was educated at The High School of Glasgow and the University of Glasgow, where he graduated M.A. (Hons) in Political Economy (1984) and took a PhD in Economics (1989). He was a Lecturer and Senior Lecturer at the University of Glasgow from 1984 to 1992, and Daniel Jack Professor of Political Economy from 1992 until 2007. He was Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences, 2000 to 2004, and Vice-Principal (Strategy, Budgeting and Advancement) from 2004 until 2007.", "score": "1.5473194" }, { "id": null, "title": "Anton Lui", "text": "Anton Lui\n\nAnton Lui (born July 27, 1985 in Rabaul, East New Britain) is a sprinter from Papua New Guinea.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Anton Pann", "text": "Anton Pann\n\nAnton Pann (; born Antonie Pantoleon-Petroveanu , and also mentioned as \"Anton Pantoleon\" or \"Petrovici\"; 1790s—2 November 1854) was an Ottoman-born Wallachian composer, musicologist, and Romanian-language poet, also noted for his activities as a printer, translator, and schoolteacher. Pann was an influential folklorist and collector of proverbs, as well as a lexicographer and textbook author.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Anton Webern", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Antonie van Leeuwenhoek", "text": "Antonie van Leeuwenhoek\n\nAntonie Philips van Leeuwenhoek ( ; ; 24 October 1632 – 26 August 1723) was a Dutch microbiologist and microscopist in the Golden Age of Dutch science and technology. A largely self-taught man in science, he is commonly known as \"the Father of Microbiology\", and one of the first microscopists and microbiologists. Van Leeuwenhoek is best known for his pioneering work in microscopy and for his contributions toward the establishment of microbiology as a scientific discipline.\n\nRaised in Delft, Dutch Republic, van Leeuwenhoek worked as a draper in his youth and founded his own shop in 1654. He became well recognized in municipal politics and developed an interest in lensmaking. In the 1670s, he started to explore microbial life with his microscope. This was one of the notable achievements of the Golden Age of Dutch exploration and discovery ().\n\nUsing single-lensed microscopes of his own design and make, van Leeuwenhoek was the first to observe and to experiment with microbes, which he originally referred to as \"dierkens\", \"diertgens\" or \"diertjes\" (Dutch for \"small animals\" [translated into English as \"animalcules\", from Latin \"animalculum\" = \"tiny animal\"]). He was the first to relatively determine their size. Most of the \"animalcules\" are now referred to as unicellular organisms, although he observed multicellular organisms in pond water. He was also the first to document microscopic observations of muscle fibers, bacteria, spermatozoa, red blood cells, crystals in gouty tophi, and among the first to see blood flow in capillaries. Although van Leeuwenhoek did not write any books, he described his discoveries in letters to the Royal Society, which published many of his letters, and to persons in several European countries.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Lui (surname)", "text": "Lui (surname)\n\nLui is a surname in various cultures. It may be a variant spelling of two Chinese surnames ( Léi and Lǚ), as well as an Italian surname. The surname Lui can also be found on various Pacific Islands.", "score": null }, { "id": "7292235", "title": "Antonio Lukich", "text": " Antonio Lukic (Ukrainian: Антоніо Лукіч) is a Ukrainian filmmaker who was born in Uzhgorod, Western Ukraine. Throughout his career, Antonio has achieved much success, gaining awards at an international and nationally recognised level. One such award is the Merited Artist of Ukraine awarded to him in March, 2021. This state honorary decoration is awarded to those who make significant contributions and achieve notable success in film and art for the country of Ukraine.", "score": "1.5455704" }, { "id": "30890874", "title": "Anton Crihan", "text": " Anton Crihan (born July 10, 1893, Sîngerei, Bessarabia Governorate – January 9, 1993, St. Louis, Mo, United States of America) was a Bessarabian politician, lawyer, author, economist, professor and journalist, member of Sfatul Țării (1917), adviser to the Secretary of State for Agriculture in the General Directorate of the Republic of Moldova (1917), deputy in the Parliament of Romania (1919, 1920, 1922, 1932), adviser to the Secretary of State at the Ministry of Agriculture and Domains (1932–1933), professor at the Polytechnic University of Iasi and at the Faculty of Agronomy in Chisinau (1934–1940).", "score": "1.5449185" }, { "id": "11771787", "title": "David Y. H. Lui", "text": " Of Chinese heritage, Lui was born in Vancouver, British Columbia, and attended Kitsilano Secondary School and the University of British Columbia. Lui was an important cornerstone at the forefront of Vancouver's cultural scene. A crucial member of the city's art community for more than 40 years, he helped found the Ballet of British Columbia.", "score": "1.5407529" }, { "id": "1806712", "title": "Anton Lembit Soans", "text": " Anton Lembit Soans (September 17, 1885 Oranienbaum, Russia – November 26, 1966 Tallinn, Estonia) was an Estonian architect, urban planner and lecturer. One of the founding members of the Estonian Architects Union.", "score": "1.5325141" }, { "id": "32578871", "title": "Severo Antonelli", "text": " Born in Fara Filiorum Petri, Chieti, Italy, in 1907, Antonelli arrived in Philadelphia with his family when he was fourteen. His father, a cabinet maker working for the Victor company, died when he was seventeen. Antonelli left school to support the family. In the evenings he attended classes at the Graphic Sketch Club in Philadelphia. In 1925 he opened his own studio in Philadelphia. He received international acclaim during the late 1920s and early 1930s. Antonelli's photographs received top awards at major shows in Paris, London, Barcelona, Rotterdam, Brussels, Rome, and Tokyo. Considered a major \"futurist\" artist and photographer, as well as a \"photo-picturalist\", he built his international reputation and career on his imaginative portrayals of the human figure and face, works that range from playful to provocative; he was also renowned for his industrial and commercial art.", "score": "1.5246004" }, { "id": "9034640", "title": "Edoardo Anton", "text": " Born in Rome as Edoardo Antonelli, Anton was the son of the playwright and journalist Luigi Antonelli. He entered the cinema industry in mid-thirties and soon became a prolific screenwriter specialized in comedy films. His work as filmmaker is marginal, mainly confined to the co-direction of a few international co-productions; the only work entirely attributable to him is Il lupo della frontiera.", "score": "1.5234952" }, { "id": "32633116", "title": "Ray Lui", "text": " Lui was born in a Hoa family in Chợ Lớn, Saigon, South Vietnam in 1956. His father, a businessman, moved from China to Vietnam in the 1940s. In 1967, during the Vietnam War, Lui moved to Hong Kong with his family and was encouraged by his father to join an actors' training class. He enrolled in TVB's Artists Training Class in the 1970s and began acting as extras or minor characters in various television series produced by the television network. In 1980, Lui rose to fame after playing \"Ting Lik\" in the period television series The Bund, co-starring with Chow Yun-fat and Angie Chiu. He continued to portray \"Ting Lik\" in the two sequels to The Bund (The Bund II and The Bund III). Since then, Lui has been playing the leading roles of various TVB-produced television series in the 1980s. Lui retired from TVB in 1989 and went to work on films and mainland Chinese television series. He returned to TVB in 2009, starring as \"Marcus Cheuk\" in the television drama Born Rich.", "score": "1.5219474" }, { "id": "16584705", "title": "Joseph Lui", "text": " Lui was the son of Lui Lifu (also known as Getano Lui of Lifu), a Pacific Islander from Lifou Island in the Loyalty Islands who moved to the Torres Strait and married a Murray Island woman. His father was a teacher with the London Missionary Society, sometimes described as a pastor. Prior to ordination, Lui was the helmsman on the mission lugger the Torres Herald I. He was also an interpreter for the mission, as he understood all the dialects of the Torres Strait Islands.", "score": "1.507078" }, { "id": "11126260", "title": "Anton Anton", "text": " He was born in Timișoara, attending the Polytechnic University of Timișoara from 1967 to 1972 and becoming an engineer. From 1973 to 1974, he pursued post-graduate studies in Information Science and Mathematics at the University of Bucharest. He was a Fulbright scholar at Johns Hopkins University in 1977, and from that year until 1986, worked on an Engineering doctorate at the Bucharest Construction Institute (ICB; now the Technical University of Civil Engineering of Bucharest, UTCB). Anton began teaching and researching at ICB in 1972; he was a faculty assistant until 1979 and head of the hydraulics laboratory from 1972 to ", "score": "1.50676" }, { "id": "25100520", "title": "Anton Geesink", "text": " Geesink was born and raised in Utrecht. His family was poor and he started work as a builder aged 12. He died in 2010 aged 76 in the town of his birth. He was survived by Jans Geesink, his wife of more than 50 years; his daughters Willy and Leni; and son Anton jr..", "score": "1.5024378" }, { "id": "27908463", "title": "Anton Doll", "text": " Anton Doll was born the son of a teacher in Munich on 3 March, 1826 (1826-1887) was a German painter and was a member of the Munich Kunstverein.", "score": "1.4954481" }, { "id": "31732342", "title": "Anton Lubowski", "text": " Born in Lüderitz, South West Africa, Lubowski attended Paul Roos Gymnasium in Stellenbosch, South Africa. He then did a year of military training with the South African Defence Force in Pretoria, before attending Stellenbosch University for law and the University of Cape Town for an LLB.", "score": "1.4941213" }, { "id": "29429138", "title": "Antonio D'Antoni", "text": " D'Antoni was born in Palermo to a musical family and gained local fame when in 1813, at the age of 12, he conducted his own composition, a Mass for St. Cecilia's Day. By 1817, he had become the city's maestro concertatore (music director). A friend of Meyerbeer, Bellini, and Donizetti, D'Antoni worked in England, Frankfurt, Venice, and Florence before settling in Trieste. In 1828, he became the music director of Trieste's newly formed Società Filarmonico-Drammatica (Philharmonic and Dramatic Society). Amongst the works he composed for the Society were a cantata, Il genio di Trieste (The Spirit of Trieste) and a comédie en vaudeville, La festa dell'archibugio (The Arquebus Festival). He composed four operas, the first of which, Un duello (A Duel), premiered at the Teatro Carolino in Palermo in 1817. His last opera, Giovanna Grey (based on the life of Lady Jane Grey) was to be performed at the Teatro Grande in Trieste but was cancelled because of the Revolutions of 1848. He also composed various pieces of church music, marches, dances, and songs. D'Antoni committed suicide in Trieste in 1859.", "score": "1.4937849" }, { "id": "1313235", "title": "Lui Shtini", "text": " Lui Shtini (born 1978 in Kavajë, Albania) is an artist, currently living and working in New York. He received his BFA in 2000 from the Academy of Arts in Tirana. Since his move to New York, he has attended Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, and was the recipient of a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in painting in 2010.", "score": "1.4887135" }, { "id": "15517504", "title": "Antoni", "text": "Brian Antoni (born 1958), American author ; Dmitri Antoni (born 1983), Estonian figure skater ; Janine Antoni (born 1964), Bahamian artist ; Jennipher Antoni (born 1976), German actress ; Lorenc Antoni (1909 – 1991), Kosovo Albanian composer ; Mark De Gli Antoni (born 1962), American composer ; Robert Antoni (born 1958), West Indian writer ; Robert \"Stewkey\" Antoni (born 1947), American musician ; Valdete Antoni (born 1953), Albanian poet ", "score": "1.4878372" } ]
In what city was Paul Walker born?
[ "Kilwinning", "The Crossroads of Ayrshire" ]
place of birth
Paul Walker (footballer, born 1977)
5,405,575
74
[ { "id": "13970142", "title": "Paul Walker (footballer, born 1960)", "text": " Paul James Walker (born 17 December 1960) is an English former professional footballer who played as a midfielder in the Football League for Brentford and is the club's youngest-ever debutant. He captained England Schoolboys and later managed in non-League football.", "score": "1.704498" }, { "id": "28674525", "title": "Paul Walker (footballer, born 1992)", "text": " Paul Walker (born 18 April 1992) is an English-born Wales international footballer who is currently plays for AFC Sudbury after playing a spell at Haverhill Borough and Kettering after being released by Northampton Town. He plays as a goalkeeper.", "score": "1.7036015" }, { "id": "3859929", "title": "Paul Walker", "text": " Walker was born on September 12, 1973 in Glendale, California. He had mostly English, as well as German, Swiss, and Irish ancestry. His mother, Cheryl (née Crabtree), was a fashion model, and his father, Paul William Walker III, was a sewer contractor and former amateur boxer, who was a two-time Golden Gloves champion. Walker's paternal grandfather, William, had a short-lived boxing career as \"Irish\" Billy Walker, while another raced factory cars for Ford in the 1960s. Raised a Mormon, Walker had four younger siblings: Aimee, Ashlie, Caleb, and Cody. He spent the majority of his early life in the Sunland neighborhood of Los Angeles, and graduated from Village Christian School in 1991. Walker subsequently attended several community colleges in Southern California, majoring in marine biology.", "score": "1.6639065" }, { "id": "26337055", "title": "Larry Walker (artist)", "text": " Walker was born in Franklin, Georgia, on October 22, 1935. In 1941, several years after his father's passing, Walker's family moved to Harlem where he was inspired by the urban life around him. Walker mentions people-watching from his apartment building's sixth story fire escape, experiences taking the train as a southerner in a large city, and his 145th street community as some of the major inspirations behind his work.", "score": "1.6415875" }, { "id": "28674527", "title": "Paul Walker (footballer, born 1992)", "text": " He has played for the Wales national under-17 football team, having been capped twice and has been called up to the Under 19 national team.", "score": "1.6281443" }, { "id": null, "title": "Paul Walker", "text": "Paul Walker\n\nPaul William Walker IV (September 12, 1973 – November 30, 2013) was an American actor. He was known for his role as Brian O'Conner in the \"Fast & Furious\" franchise.\n\nWalker began his career as a child actor in the 1980s, gaining recognition in the 1990s after appearing in the television soap opera \"The Young and the Restless\"; he received praise for his performances in the teen comedy \"She's All That\" and the comedy-drama \"Varsity Blues\" (both 1999), and saw international fame by starring in \"The Fast and the Furious\" (2001).\n\nWalker also starred in the commercially successful road thriller \"Joy Ride\" (2001), becoming an action star. He followed this with the box-office disappointments \"Into the Blue\" (2005) and \"Running Scared\" (2006), although he earned praise for his performance in the survival drama \"Eight Below\", and for his portrayal of Hank Hansen in \"Flags of Our Fathers\" (both 2006). Outside of these, Walker largely appeared in low budget action films, but starred in the commercially successful heist film \"Takers\" (2010).\n\nWalker died of injuries sustained from a single-vehicle collision on November 30, 2013, while speeding. His father and daughter filed separate wrongful death lawsuits against Porsche, which resulted in settlements. At the time of his death, Walker had not completed filming \"Furious 7\" (2015); it was released after rewrites and stand-ins, including his brothers Cody and Caleb, both of whom filled in for Walker, while the song \"See You Again\" by Wiz Khalifa and Charlie Puth was commissioned as a tribute.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Kyle Walker", "text": "Kyle Walker\n\nKyle Andrew Walker (born 28 May 1990) is an English professional footballer who plays as a right-back for club Manchester City and the England national team.\n\nWalker started his career at his boyhood club Sheffield United which he had joined at the age of seven. He was promoted to the first-team where he made his full Sheffield United debut at 18 years old against Leyton Orient after a loan spell at Northampton Town. He impressed whilst playing for the Blades and played in the 2009 Championship play-off final in their defeat against Burnley. His performances earned him a move to Premier League club Tottenham Hotspur, before being immediately loaned back to Sheffield United. After further loan spells at Queens Park Rangers and Aston Villa, he cemented his place in Tottenham's first team. His performances earned him a call-up to the England national team where he made his debut against Spain. After five more seasons at Tottenham, Walker joined Manchester City for a fee of £45 million. He has since won four Premier League titles, four EFL Cup trophies and one FA Cup whilst at City. He has also played for England at UEFA Euro 2016, the 2018 FIFA World Cup and UEFA Euro 2020. He has been named in the PFA Team of the Year three times in: 2011–12, 2016–17 and 2017–18.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Cody Walker (actor)", "text": "Cody Walker (actor)\n\nCody Beau Walker (born June 13, 1988) is an American actor. He is the youngest brother of actor Paul Walker, and helped complete the final scenes for his character Brian O'Conner in the film \"Furious 7\" (2015) following his brother's death. Walker made his acting debut in \"Abandoned Mine\" (2013).<ref name=\"Abandoned Mine\"/> He went on to appear in films \"\" (2016)<ref name=\"nydailynews\"/><ref name=\"RFord\"/> and \"The Last Full Measure\" (2020).", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Matthew Walker (scientist)", "text": "Matthew Walker (scientist)\n\nMatthew Paul Walker is an English scientist and professor of neuroscience and psychology at the University of California, Berkeley. He is a public intellectual focused on the subject of sleep.\n\nAs an academic, Walker has focused on the impact of sleep on human health. He has contributed to many scientific research studies.\n\nWalker became a public intellectual following the publication of \"Why We Sleep\", his first work of popular science, in 2017. It became an international bestseller.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Paul Walker (footballer, born 1992)", "text": "Paul Walker (footballer, born 1992)\n\nPaul Walker (born 18 April 1992) is an English-born Wales international footballer who is currently plays for AFC Sudbury after playing a spell at Haverhill Borough and Kettering after being released by Northampton Town. He plays as a goalkeeper.", "score": null }, { "id": "13970143", "title": "Paul Walker (footballer, born 1960)", "text": " Walker joined Brentford on schoolboy forms in September 1975 and made his professional debut on 14 August 1976, aged just 15 years, 7 months, 28 days. He made a total of 71 appearances for Brentford in the Football League, scoring five goals. Walker later played in South Africa for Johannesburg Rangers.", "score": "1.6204143" }, { "id": "8882348", "title": "Clay Walker (filmmaker)", "text": " Walker was born in Memphis on March 15, 1968. He first attended college at Georgia Institute of Technology as an industrial design major and then transferred to Laguardia Community College in Queens to study photography and journalism. From there he transferred to the University of Southern California's School of Cinematic Arts, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in television & film production.", "score": "1.6054667" }, { "id": "14614656", "title": "Paul Walker (footballer, born 1977)", "text": " Paul Walker (born 20 August 1977 in Kilwinning, North Ayrshire, Scotland) is a Scottish footballer who played as a winger. Having been developed as a player through Dundee United 's youth system, Walker made six league appearances for the United first team, his last coming in September 1997. In December 1998, he joined St Mirren but would make just one substitute league appearance before joining Stranraer three months later. His stay at Stair Park lasted two-and-a-half years, where he managed 14 goals from 61 league appearances; his stay included a short loan spell with Queens Park. In 2001, he headed to Partick Thistle, where he spent two seasons, before a similar time with Greenock Morton. A year back at Stranraer followed, before a short-lived spell at Montrose. Walker signed for Ayr United in August 2006 before joining East Fife at the start of the 2007–08 season. After playing just once in the 2008–09 season, Walker moved to Junior level with Irvine Meadow.", "score": "1.6041038" }, { "id": "26216492", "title": "Tommy Walker (footballer, born February 1952)", "text": " Walker was born in Newcastle-under-Lyme and began his career with local side Stoke City. Due to Stoke having a large number of fixtures in the 1971–72 season he made two appearances for Stoke in April 1972, away at Chelsea and Manchester United. He left Stoke at the end of the season for Burnley but failed to make an appearance and later played for non-league Yeovil Town.", "score": "1.5942866" }, { "id": "14574888", "title": "Paul Walker (businessman)", "text": " Paul Ashton Walker (born 17 May 1957) is a British businessman.", "score": "1.5930307" }, { "id": "30562247", "title": "Paul Walker (Arctic explorer)", "text": " Paul Walker is an Arctic explorer and Polar Guide. He is owner and Director of Greenland Expedition Logistics & Consultancy (GELCO), a trading name of California Ocean Northumbria Ltd. He is owner and Director of Futures Greenland ApS, a Greenland based expedition logistics, storage and rental company. He is also co-owner of the luxury UK campervan rental company California Ocean Northumbria Ltd. He was previously owner and Director of Tangent Expeditions Ltd, which closed in 2020 due to COVID-19 after 31 years. He was born in Shrewsbury, England on 09 March 1966. He achieved a B.Ed Honours degree in Outdoor Education and Mathematics after graduating from Charlotte Mason College, Ambleside (UK) in 1988; the teaching arm of Lancaster University. Since ", "score": "1.5920913" }, { "id": "29337002", "title": "Paul Walker (footballer, born 1949)", "text": " Paul Graham Walker (born 3 April 1949 in Bradford) is a former professional footballer, who played for Wolverhampton Wanderers, Watford, Swindon Town, Peterborough United, Barnsley and Huddersfield Town. In the summer of 1976, he played abroad in Canada's National Soccer League with Ottawa Tigers.", "score": "1.5888761" }, { "id": "9753606", "title": "Andrew Kevin Walker", "text": " Walker was born in Altoona, Pennsylvania, though some time during his childhood, he moved to Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania, where he was raised. He attended the Mechanicsburg Area Senior High School until his graduation in 1982. Walker soon enrolled in Penn State University to pursue a career in film production. He graduated from Penn State in 1986, with a Bachelor of Arts in film and video.", "score": "1.5873046" }, { "id": "8996938", "title": "Paul Walker (American football)", "text": " Paul Frederick Walker (July 9, 1925 – October 20, 1972) was an American football player who played one season with the New York Giants of the National Football League. He was drafted by the Detroit Lions in the tenth round of the 1945 NFL Draft. Walker played college football at Yale University and attended Oak Park and River Forest High School in Oak Park, Illinois. He was a consensus All-American in 1944.", "score": "1.5833806" }, { "id": "5340745", "title": "Adam Walker (British politician)", "text": " Walker was born in Bishop Auckland in 1969 into a working-class background. The eldest of three children, his father was a joiner and his mother a seamstress.", "score": "1.5803778" }, { "id": "3763849", "title": "Stephen Walker (sculptor)", "text": " Walker was born in Balwyn or Colac, Victoria in Australia in 1927. He left school at age 13 but attended Melbourne Teachers' College from 1945 to 1947 before moving to Hobart in 1948. In the 1950s he repeatedly traveled to Europe, studying sculpting under Henry Moore from 1954 to 1956 and visiting Rome, Florence and Prague through scholarships. On his return to Australia he settled in Tasmania.", "score": "1.5793234" }, { "id": "30562249", "title": "Paul Walker (Arctic explorer)", "text": " Born in Shrewsbury, Shropshire Walker moved to Wetherby aged 8 and later graduated from Charlotte Mason College, Ambleside in 1988 with a B.Ed Honours degree in Outdoor Education and Mathematics. It was here he led his first Greenland expedition, a 2 month climbing trip to the Schweizerland Alps, beginning a lifelong obsession. At just 23, Walker became one of the UK's youngest Winter Mountain Leaders. In 1993 he made the first ascent of the 28 pitch northeast ridge of Mont Forel in east Greenland. At 3360m Mont Forel was once thought to be the highest mountain in the Arctic Circle before the discovery of Gunnbjørnsfjeld 3693m. ", "score": "1.5754833" }, { "id": "26010816", "title": "Paul Baxendale-Walker", "text": " Paul Baxendale-Walker was born of Anglo-Brazilian parents, but he was orphaned and grew up in Children's Homes. He read for a degree in law at Hertford College, Oxford and subsequently qualified as a barrister and solicitor.", "score": "1.5750821" }, { "id": "1769715", "title": "James F. Walker", "text": " Walker was born in Kirksville, Missouri, to James Franklin Walker Sr. and Mable Azalea Hunt. Walker's father was a landscape artist and an early influence, and his brother is also an artist. Walker's passion for art evolved over his lifetime into a career as artist and teacher. He studied at the University of Iowa in Iowa City receiving a BFA. He then moved to New York City, where he studied at the American Artists School and at the studio of Nahum Tschacbasov. His work was influenced by Tschacbasov's surrealist images. Walker joined the army in 1941, serving in the Aleutian Islands until 1945. During the war, he married Leona Buchanan. They had one child, Joy Walker Hall. After ", "score": "1.573949" }, { "id": "31374777", "title": "John Clay Walker", "text": " John Clay Walker was born in Washington D.C. at Walter Reed Hospital. In 1968, Walker enlisted in the United States Marine Corps. He was honorably discharged after being wounded twice in Vietnam, for which he received two Purple Hearts. Taking advantage of the G.I. Bill, Walker attended the University of Minnesota and earned a B.A. in Journalism in 1976. Throughout the late 1970s and early 1980s, Walker worked as a reporter and photographer at small papers in Minnesota and Iowa. In 1983, Walker and his family relocated to Guadalajara, Mexico for a sabbatical year so that Walker could pursue a career as a novelist full-time. On January 30, 1985, John Walker and his friend Albert Radelat were planning on going to ", "score": "1.5714902" } ]
In what city was Kristian Outinen born?
[ "Copenhagen", "København", "CPH", "Köpenhamn", "Kööpenhamina", "Kopenhagen", "Kobenhavn", "Köbenhavn", "Hafnia", "Hafn", "Havn" ]
place of birth
Kristian Outinen
4,886,186
37
[ { "id": "13544394", "title": "Kristian Outinen", "text": " Kristian McGrady Outinen (born January 23, 1983) is a Danish swimmer. He is a current member of the Danish national swimming team. Outinen is a Danish national record holder in both the 100 meter individual medley (IM) and the 50 meter breaststroke. He currently swims for the Vestegnens Aqua Team (VAT) based out of Copenhagen. Outinen attended the University of Kentucky receiving his degree in liberal arts specializing in classical guitar. He completed his degree in three and a half years. Outinen was named to the Deans list in 2005 having a GPA of 4.0 for the semester. Outinen was an integral part of the University of Kentucky varsity swim team. His versatility was widely recognized and cherished by the coaches. He was especially close ", "score": "1.8341722" }, { "id": "6341556", "title": "Kristian Meurman", "text": " Kristian Meurman (born 6 November 1979 in Espoo), is a Finnish singer. He was a finalist in the third series of the Finnish Idols in 2007. His first album Ensiaskeleet (translation: The first steps) was released in 2007. He also participated in the qualifying of the Eurovision Song Contest 2008 with a song called \"Jos en sua saa\" (translation: If I can't have you).", "score": "1.6652068" }, { "id": "6764313", "title": "Outinen", "text": "Kati Outinen (born 1961), Finnish actress ; Mikko Outinen (born 1971), Finnish ice hockey player ; Kristian Outinen (born 1983), Danish swimmer Outinen is a Finnish surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.6582206" }, { "id": "12798111", "title": "Kristian Gullichsen", "text": " Kristian Valter Alexander Gullichsen (29 September 1932, in Helsinki – 17 March 2021, in Helsinki ) was a Finnish architect. The son of Harry and Maire Gullichsen, he was born into a family of industrialists, designers and artists. His siblings were the renowned Finnish philosopher Lilli Alanen and Johan Gullichsen, a professor of engineering. Kristian Gullichsen had three sons and two daughters, one of the sons was the artist Alvar Gullichsen (born 1961). Gullichsen was married twice; his second wife was architect Kirsi Gullichsen (née Parkkinen) (born 1964). Kristian Gullichsen was a member of the board of governors of the Alvar Aalto Academy and the committee of the Alvar Aalto Symposium. From 1988 to 1993 he held the title of Finnish State Artist Professor.", "score": "1.6240057" }, { "id": "12798112", "title": "Kristian Gullichsen", "text": " The Gullichsen family home was the world-famous Villa Mairea (1938–39) in Noormarkku, designed by Alvar Aalto, one of the seminal houses of 20th century modernist architecture. Kristian was seven years old when his family moved into the house in August 1939. The family was close friends of the Aalto family, and Aalto was responsible for designing the company factories and communities, as part of the company ideology of enculturation. Kristian played with the Aalto children and did odd jobs in the Aalto architects' office.", "score": "1.5895276" }, { "id": null, "title": "Kristian Outinen", "text": "Kristian Outinen\n\nKristian McGrady Outinen (born January 23, 1983) is a Danish swimmer. He is a current member of the Danish national swimming team. Outinen is a Danish national record holder in both the 100 meter individual medley (IM) and the 50 meter breaststroke. He currently swims for the Vestegnens Aqua Team (VAT) based out of Copenhagen.\n\nOutinen attended the University of Kentucky receiving his degree in liberal arts specializing in classical guitar. He completed his degree in three and a half years. Outinen was named to the Deans list in 2005 having a GPA of 4.0 for the semester. Outinen was an integral part of the University of Kentucky varsity swim team. His versatility was widely recognized and cherished by the coaches. He was especially close with the weight training staff. Kristian still holds top ten times in five events for the Wildcats.\n\nThe yard based training provided a perfect background for Outinen's return to Europe's 25 meter based events. After returning from the United States, Outinen resumed swimming and quickly excelled on the national scene. In October 2008 he broke his first Danish national record in the 50 meter breaststroke in Kolding, Denmark. He then proceeded to also break the 100 meter IM national record at the same meet. In December 2008 Outinen broke his own record in the 50 meter breaststroke at the European Short Course Championships in Rijeka, Croatia.\n\nOutinen later joined a Danish progressive metal band, BOIL. BOIL released aXiom, a critically acclaimed album, on February 19, 2013.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Outinen", "text": "Outinen\n\nOutinen is a Finnish surname. Notable people with the surname include:\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Finns", "text": "List of Finns\n\nThis is a list of notable people from Finland. Finland is a Nordic country located between Sweden, Norway and Russia.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:KooKoo players", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Missing articles by occupation ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "29644270", "title": "Jyrki Katainen", "text": " Katainen was born in Siilinjärvi, a town in Finland. He graduated from Siilinjärvi Senior High School in 1990. He obtained a Master's degree in political science from the University of Tampere, spending one year at the University of Leicester as an Erasmus exchange student. Jyrki Katainen has two children: Saara (born in 2005) and Veera (2009). In addition to Finnish, Katainen speaks English, French and Swedish. Katainen is an accomplished chef.", "score": "1.5878716" }, { "id": "5302778", "title": "Tom of Finland", "text": " Laaksonen was born on 8 May 1920 and raised by a middle-class family in Kaarina, a town in southwestern Finland, near the city of Turku. Both of his parents Suoma and Edwin Laaksonen were schoolteachers at the grammar school that served Kaarina. The family lived in the school building's attached living quarters. He went to school in Turku and in 1939, at the age of 19, he moved to Helsinki to study advertising. In his spare time he also started drawing erotic images for his own pleasure, based on images of male laborers he had seen from an early age. At first he kept these ", "score": "1.5840261" }, { "id": "13544395", "title": "Kristian Outinen", "text": " the weight training staff. Kristian still holds top ten times in five events for the Wildcats. The yard based training provided a perfect background for Outinen's return to Europe's 25 meter based events. After returning from the United States, Outinen resumed swimming and quickly excelled on the national scene. In October 2008 he broke his first Danish national record in the 50 meter breaststroke in Kolding, Denmark. He then proceeded to also break the 100 meter IM national record at the same meet. In December 2008 Outinen broke his own record in the 50 meter breaststroke at the European Short Course Championships in Rijeka, Croatia. Outinen later joined a Danish progressive metal band, BOIL. BOIL released aXiom, a critically acclaimed album, on February 19, 2013.", "score": "1.5655268" }, { "id": "12865165", "title": "Kristian Smeds", "text": " Tomi Kristian Smeds (born 1 December 1970) is a Finnish playwright and theatre director. Kristian Smeds has worked in Finland, Estonia, Belgium and Lithuania. His plays are wild, energetic, and filled with many distinctive voices. They can be interpreted in many different ways, and can take full advantage of a wide variety of theatrical techniques. His language is rich and colorful, but at the same time natural. In Smeds world, the personal and the political are indistinguishable, and his work is characterized by a deep concern for human beings. In the autumn of 2007, he dramatized and directed an explosive production of Väinö Linnas \"The Unknown Soldier\" at the Finnish National Theatre. This re-interpretation of a cherished Finnish novel has ", "score": "1.558783" }, { "id": "9406133", "title": "Kristian Pulli", "text": " Kristian Henri Mikael Pulli (born 2 September 1994) is Finnish athlete specialising in the long jump. He has 2 golden, 3 silver and 1 bronze medal from Finnish Championships Kalevan Kisat. Most of them from long jump. In triple jump he has won silver twice. His current record in long jump is 8.27 m which he jumped in Espoo in June 2020. This is also the current national record, while his indoor record is 8.24 from Toruń in March 2021. He has qualified to represent Finland at the 2020 Summer Olympics.", "score": "1.5584248" }, { "id": "13556478", "title": "Lauri Kristian Relander", "text": " Relander was born in Kurkijoki, in Karelia, the son of Evald Kristian Relander, an agronomist, and Gertrud Maria Olsoni. He was christened Lars Kristian, but he Finnicized his forenames to Lauri Kristian during his time at school. Relander followed in his father's footsteps by enrolling at the University of Helsinki in 1901 to study agronomy. He gained his first Bachelor's Degree in Philosophy in 1905, and his second – in Agronomy – the following year. That year also saw his marriage to Signe Maria Österman (1886–1962). They had two children, Maja-Lisa (1907–1990) and Ragnar (1910–1970). The major subjects for Relander's Master's Degree, which ", "score": "1.557933" }, { "id": "6376938", "title": "August Ahlqvist", "text": " He was born in Kuopio, Finland. He was the illegitimate child of Baron Johan Mauritz Nordenstam (1802-1882); his mother Maria Augusta Ahlqvist (1806-1886) was a servant. He became a student at the Imperial Alexander University (now University of Helsinki) in 1844. He was a Philosophy candidate 1853, Licentiate of Law 1854 and took a Doctor of Philosophy in 1859. In 1863, he became a professor of Finnish language and literature at the University of Helsinki. He became Dean of the History-Linguistic Section 1882–1884. He served as the university's Rector from 1884 to 1887. He resigned as emeritus in 1888. He died in 1889 at Helsinki, Finland. In 1846 and 1847, he traveled through the eastern part of Ostrobothnia, as well as Finnish and Russian Karelia, partly gathering local folk tales and partly to investigate minorities languages. In 1854–55, he spent on research trips among the Finnish ", "score": "1.5562906" }, { "id": "15308345", "title": "Kristofer Hivju", "text": " Hivju was born in Oslo, Norway. In 2004, he graduated from the Danish (Aarhus) subdivision of the Russian Academy of Theatre Arts (GITIS).", "score": "1.5506604" }, { "id": "27349323", "title": "Kristian Aadnevik", "text": " Aadnevik was born in Bergen, Norway. After finishing his education at Bergen Yrkesskole he moved to London to pursue an MA at the Royal College of Art, where he received numerous awards. During his studies he worked as a design assistant at Alexander McQueen.", "score": "1.5470519" }, { "id": "10097969", "title": "Jari Halonen", "text": " Jari Juhani Halonen (born 30 September 1962) is a Finnish film and theatre director, writer and occasional actor. Known as a controversial and outspoken person, his films, such as Lipton Cockton in the Shadows of Sodoma (1995) and Joulubileet (1996), have garnered a cult following while also having been met with mixed reception by critics.", "score": "1.5464746" }, { "id": "31444437", "title": "Pori", "text": " 1977), sociologist and politician • Olli Lindholm (1964–2019), singer and guitarist • Kari Mäkinen (born 1955), archbishop • Visa Mäkinen (born 1945), film director, producer, screen writer and actor • Nooralotta Neziri (born 1992), 100 meter hurdler • Joonas Nordman (born 1986), actor, comedian, impersonator, director and screenwriter • Risto E. J. Penttilä (born 1959), businessman and politician • Emil von Qvanten (1827–1903), poet, librarian, publisher and politician • Marjatta Raita (1944–2007), actress • Henry Saari (born 1964), actor, director and porn star • Tero Saarinen (born 1964), dance artist and choreographer • Sakari Salminen (born 1988), professional ice hockey player • Johan Eberhard von Schantz (1802–1880), admiral, ship designer and explorer • Jorma Uotinen (born 1950), dancer, singer and choreographer • Joel Armia (born 1993), professional ice hockey player • Jesperi Kotkaniemi (born 2000), professional hockey player", "score": "1.5463148" }, { "id": "5107082", "title": "Kristian Baller", "text": " Baller was born in Abercynon, Wales.", "score": "1.5444996" }, { "id": "5434886", "title": "Antero Laukkanen", "text": " Antero Jorma Laukkanen (born May 30, 1958), is a Finnish priest and politician, who has represented the Christian Democrats in the City Council of Espoo since 2001 and in the Parliament of Finland since 2015. He was elected to the Parliament from the Uusimaa constituency in the 2015 elections with 2,520 votes. Laukkanen was born in Kouvola. He was the founder of the Majakka Church in Espoo and he still serves the church as a priest.", "score": "1.5412129" }, { "id": "14286722", "title": "Janne Kyttanen", "text": " Kyttanen was born in 1974 in Hämeenlinna, Finland. He attended Escola de Disseny (School of Design), Elisave in Barcelona, Spain in 1996. He graduated from the Gerrit Rietveld Academie in Amsterdam in 2000 and worked with design for 3D printing during his studies. His earliest work included a collection of 3D printed lamps.", "score": "1.5402672" }, { "id": "6391449", "title": "Arild Kristo", "text": " Arild Kristo, born in Oslo, was the son of the cabaret singer and writer Einar Kristoffersen. At the age of 18 he enrolled on a commercial trade ship, spent a few months in New York and was offered a job as a sailor by the photographer Finn Bergan in the remake of Windjammer. Kristo got photographic education at ArtCenter College of Design and received a letter of recommendation by the editor Richard Pollard at Life (magazine).", "score": "1.5398414" } ]
In what city was Matthijs Dulken born?
[ "Roermond", "Remunj" ]
place of birth
Matthijs Dulken
1,715,386
59
[ { "id": "8947475", "title": "Matthijs Dulken", "text": " Matthijs, Matthias or Matheus van Dulcken (died 1634 in Winterswijk) was mayor of Roermond in 1610, 1616 and 1629. In 1627 he was the Spanish governor of Grol (Groenlo), and Licensor of Upper Guelders. He commanded Groenlo during the 1627 siege by Frederick Henry and, though wounded by a musket ball, he survived the battle and on 19 August that year signed the agreement that handed the town over to States troops. After his final year as mayor in 1629 he served for a period as schepen. He married Helwich van Wessum and they had one son, Christophorus, in 1593.", "score": "1.8355901" }, { "id": "27859321", "title": "Matthijs", "text": " Jr. (born 1965), Dutch filmmaker ; Matthijs Huizing (born 1960), Dutch politician ; O. J. Matthijs Jolles (1911–1968) American translator from German ; Matthijs Kleyn (born 1979), Dutch television presenter ; Matthijs Langhedul (died circa 1636), Flemish organ builder ; Matthijs de Ligt (born 1999), Dutch footballer ; Matthijs Maris (1839–1917), Dutch painter ; Matthijs van Miltenburg (born 1972), Dutch politician ; Matthijs Musson (1598–1678), Dutch painter ; Matthijs Naiveu (1647–1726), Dutch painter ; Matthijs van Nieuwkerk (born 1960), Dutch television presenter ; Matthijs Pool (1676–1732), Dutch engraver ; Matthijs Quast (died 1641), Dutch explorer ; Matthijs Röling (born 1943), Dutch ", "score": "1.7211452" }, { "id": "27859320", "title": "Matthijs", "text": "Matthijs/Matthys ; Matthijs Accama (1702–1783), Dutch painter ; Matthijs Balen (1684–1766), Dutch painter ; Matthijs van den Bergh (1618–1687), Dutch painter ; Matthijs van den Bos (born 1969), Dutch academic ; Mattijs Branderhorst (born 1993), Dutch footballer ; Matthijs Bril (1550–1583), Flemish painter ; Matthijs Brouwer (born 1980), Dutch field hockey player ; Matthijs Büchli (born 1992), Dutch track cyclist ; Matthijs Clavan (1929–1983), Dutch footballer ; Matthijs Cock (c.1505–1548), Flemish landscape painter and draughtsman ; Matthijs van Dulcken (c.1560s–1634), Dutch mayor and governor ; Matthijs Harings (1593–1667), Dutch painter ; Matthijs van Heijningen (born 1944), Dutch film producer ; Matthijs van ", "score": "1.7141511" }, { "id": "30530664", "title": "Achtkarspelen", "text": "Derk Holman (1916 in Buitenpost – 1982 in Groningen) a Dutch sculptor and ceramist ; Louw de Graaf (born 1930 in Kootstertille) a retired Dutch politician and trade union leader. ; Gerriet Postma (1932 in Twijzelerheide – 2009) a Dutch painter ; Johannes Lützen Bouma (born 1934 in Twijzelerheide) a Dutch economist and academic ; David Porcelijn (born 1947 in Achtkarspelen) a Dutch composer and conductor ; Joop Atsma (born 1956 in Surhuisterveen) a Dutch politician and sport administrator. ; Meindert Talma (born 1968 in Surhuisterveen) a Dutch lo-fi singer and keyboardist ; Oedo Kuipers (born 1989 in Stroobos) a Dutch singer and actor in musical theatre ", "score": "1.7095736" }, { "id": "11356983", "title": "Martijn Bolkestein", "text": " Bolkestein was born on March 13, 1972 in the North Holland city Haarlem and grew up in the nearby villages Overveen and Bloemendaal. He attended the Stedelijk Gymnasium Haarlem before studying economics at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam between 1990 and 1997. During the last one and a half years of his study, he worked as financial manager at Russia Travel.", "score": "1.6877016" }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:1634 deaths", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Missing articles by occupation ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "4838722", "title": "Matthijs Vermeulen", "text": "Matthijs Vermeulen Matthijs Vermeulen (born Matheas Christianus Franciscus van der Meulen) (8 February 1888 – 26 July 1967), was a Dutch composer and music journalist. Matthijs Vermeulen was born in Helmond. After primary school he initially wanted to follow in the footsteps of his father, who was a blacksmith. During a serious illness his inclination towards the spiritual gained the upper hand. Inspired by a thoroughly Catholic environment, he decided to become a priest. However, at the seminary, where he learned about the principles of counterpoint of the sixteenth-century polyphonic masters, his true calling – music – came to light.", "score": "1.5604917" }, { "id": "12060649", "title": "Matthijs van de Sande Bakhuyzen", "text": "Matthijs van de Sande Bakhuyzen Matthijs Nicolaas van de Sande Bakhuyzen (born 16 October 1988) is a Dutch movie and television actor and former child actor. Van de Sande Bakhuyzen was born on 16 October 1988 in Amsterdam, the son of movie director Willem van de Sande Bakhuyzen. In 1992 his little sister Roeltje van de Sande Bakhuyzen, who is also an actress, was born. His big break was in 1999, when he got the role of Erik in the VPRO television series \"De Daltons\". He later played small roles in several films directed by his father, including \"Cloaca\" (2003)", "score": "1.559715" }, { "id": "10252334", "title": "Dulcken", "text": "remained for the rest of his life; he is last mentioned in 1835. His daughter-in-law was Sophie Dulcken. Dulcken The Dulcken family were Flemish harpsichord makers of German origin. Joannes Daniel Dulcken (21 April 1706 – 11 April 1757) was born in Wingeshausen, the son of Georg Ludwig Dulcken (died Wingeshausen, before 1752). In 1736 he was in Maastricht, but by 1738 he had moved with his wife Susanna Maria Knopffell and their son to Antwerp where they became members of the Reformed church. He became an alderman in 1744, and lived in Hopland. He travelled to England in 1750", "score": "1.5583432" }, { "id": "27859322", "title": "Matthijs", "text": " ; Matthijs van de Sande Bakhuyzen (born 1988), Dutch actor ; Matthijs van Schelven (born 1989), Dutch cricket player ; Matthijs Siegenbeek (1774–1854), Dutch academic ; Matthijs Vellenga (born 1977), Dutch rower ; Matthijs Vermeulen (1888–1967), Dutch composer and music journalist ; Matthijs Verschoor (born 1955), Dutch pianist ; Matthijs Wulfraet (1648–1727), Dutch painter Mathijs ; Mathijs Bouman (born 1966), Dutch economist and journalist ; Mathijs Heyligers (born 1957), Dutch violin maker Mattijs ; Mattijs Branderhorst (born 1993), Dutch footballer ; Mattijs Visser (born 1958), Dutch organiser of art exhibitions and performances Matijs ; Matijs Dierickx (born 1991), Belgian badminton player ", "score": "1.6641446" }, { "id": "9560773", "title": "Zwijndrecht, Netherlands", "text": "Peter van Dalen (born 1958) politician and Member of the European Parliament ; Mohammed Benzakour (born 1972) a Moroccan-Dutch columnist, essayist, poet, writer and politician ; Nicolay (born Matthijs Rook in 1974) electronica, R&B and hip hop record producer ; Ralph Barendse (born 1977) a DJ and producer of electronic dance music ; Martijn Lakemeier (born 1993) actor ", "score": "1.6103127" }, { "id": "30806073", "title": "Velsen", "text": " in Driehuis – 2002) a controversial politician who was assassinated ; Jan Luiten van Zanden (born 1955 in IJmuiden) a Dutch economic historian and academic ; Peter Klashorst (born 1957 in Santpoort) a Dutch painter, sculptor and photographer ; Hans van de Ven (born 1958 in Velsen) an academic authority on the recent history of China ; Bernard Berkhout (born 1961 in Santpoort) a family doctor and a jazz clarinetist ; Franc Weerwind (born 1964) a Dutch politician, Mayor of Velsen 2009 to 2015 ; Cees Krijnen (born 1969 in Velsen) a Dutch artist and a theatre actor ; Marie-José van der Kolk (born 1974 in IJmuiden), stage name Loona, a singer, songwriter and dancer ; Lenneke Ruiten (born 1984 in Velsen) a Dutch soprano ", "score": "1.5989285" }, { "id": "5838461", "title": "Peel en Maas", "text": "Johannes Eillebrecht (1888 in Helden – 1954) a Greco-Roman wrestler, competed at the 1912 and the 1920 Summer Olympics ; Jan Hendrix (born 1949 in Maasbree) a Dutch-born artist, lives and works in Mexico ; Leon Thijssen (born 1968 in Baarlo) a Dutch show jumper ; Mustafa Amhaouch (born 1970 in Panningen) a Dutch politician ; Mark Verheijen (born 1976 in Baarlo) a Dutch former politician ; Martin Porter (born 1983 in Maasbree) a Dutch artist and songwriter ; Bert Selen (born 1985 in Kessel-Eik) music producer, TV/film composer, instrumentalist and songwriter ; Jorrit Hendrix (born 1995 in Panningen) a Dutch footballer ", "score": "1.596326" }, { "id": "12256271", "title": "Matthys du Toit", "text": " Matthys Michielse du Toit was born the oldest son of his parents in Montagu, where he worked in his father's general store after finishing school. He received his calling in 1891 during a major spiritual revival in Montagu, spurring him to begin a long spiritual education, first in Montagu and later in Stellenbosch, which led him and 16 other candidates to the ministry in December 1904.", "score": "1.5919015" }, { "id": "30530679", "title": "Dantumadiel", "text": "Maria Petronella Woesthoven (1760 in Dantumawoude – 1830) a Dutch poet ; Tjeerd Pasma (1904 in Rinsumageast – 1944) a Dutch modern pentathlete, competed at the 1928 Summer Olympics ; Piet Jongeling (1909 in Broeksterwâld – 1985) journalist, politician and children's books writer ; Theun de Vries (1907 in Feanwâlden – 2005) writer and poet ; Jannes van der Wal (1956 in Driezum – 1996) a Dutch/Frisian draughts player ; Syb van der Ploeg (born 1966 in Dokkum) musician and composer ; Theo Pijper (born 1980 in Dokkum) a Dutch motorcycle speedway rider in the UK ", "score": "1.5847859" }, { "id": "30952564", "title": "Alphen aan den Rijn", "text": "Quirijn van Brekelenkam (1622/29 in Zwammerdam – 1669/79) a Dutch Baroque genre painter ; George Pieter Willem Boers (1811 in Hazerswoude – 1884) an East Indies Army colonel and Governor of the Dutch Gold Coast ; J.C. Bloem (1887 Oudshoorn – 1966) a Dutch poet and essayist ; Maartje Offers (1891 in Koudekerk – 1944) a Dutch classical contralto singer ; Lykele Faber (1919 in Koudekerk - 2009) a Dutch resistance commando and radio operator ; Roel van den Broek (born 1931) a Dutch religious scholar and academic ; Matthijs van Heijningen (born 1944) a Dutch film producer ; Bas Eenhoorn (born 1946) a politician and management consultant, Mayor of Alpen 2010–2012 ; Harald Prins (born 1951) a Dutch anthropologist, ethnohistorian and filmmaker ; Marian Bakermans-Kranenburg (born 1965) a scientist and academic focused on pedagogy and family relations ; Liesbeth Spies (born 1966) a Dutch politician, Mayor of Alphen aan den Rijn since 2014 ; Abid Tounssi (born 1981) stage name Salah Edin, a Dutch Moroccan rapper and actor ", "score": "1.5789585" }, { "id": "8431328", "title": "Matthijs Wulfraet", "text": " Wulfraet was born in Arnhem. According to Houbraken he was born on New Year's Eve between midnight and one in the morning. His father, who came from Germany and was a language teacher and doctor, wanted his son to follow in his footsteps and sent him to Latin school. Young Mathijs had more interest in drawing than anything else and even though he was punished for drawing more often than studying, he went on collecting prints, drawings, and drawing utensils to keep up with his hobby. He met Abraham Diepraam who was visiting Arnhem and influenced the young amateur. Seeing that his son had already failed at two different schools, Mathijs father gave up and let Mathijs become Diepraam's pupil, especially since Diepraam had a good reputation in Arnhem and his paintings sold quite well there. ", "score": "1.577268" }, { "id": "25911990", "title": "Matthijs Röling", "text": " Röling was educated at the Royal Academy of Art, The Hague from 1960 to 1963, and at the Rijksacademie in Amsterdam in 1963-1964. His first museum exhibition took place in 1965 in the Drents Museum in Assen. In 1972 he became a lecturer at the Academie Minerva in Groningen, where he educated Peter Pander, Douwe Elias and Jan van der Kooi. He also lectured at the Classical Academy for fine art in Groningen. His artistic breakthrough came in 1976 with a series of still lifes, which he called cabinets. In 1983 he made his first big mural in the Nijsinghhuis in Eelde. Along with Wout Muller he stood in Groningen at the cradle of the Northern realism. He made together with Muller in 1987, the mural \"The tree of knowledge\" in the auditorium of the academy building of the University of Groningen. Right down on the painting can be recognized the faces of Professor Bert Röling, the father of Matthijs, and Professor of Art History Henk van Os, initiator for the mural.", "score": "1.5706799" }, { "id": "30953152", "title": "Katwijk", "text": "Willem Driebergen (1892 in Katwijk aan Zee – 1965) a Dutch fencer, competed in the individual and team épée events at the 1928 and 1936 Summer Olympics ; Cees de Vreugd, (1952 in Katwijk – 1998) a butcher, strongman and powerlifter ; Jan Siemerink (born 1970 in Rijnsburg) a retired tennis player ; Petra Grimbergen (born 1970 in Rijnsburg) a female road and track racing cyclist, competed at the 1992 Summer Olympics ; Jeffrey Talan (born 1971 in Katwijk) a former professional Dutch international footballer with over 250 club caps ; Marcus van Teijlingen (born 1973 in Rijnsburg) a Dutch dance instructor and professional Latin-American dancer ; Dirk Kuyt (born 1980 in Katwijk) a Dutch former professional footballer with 636 club caps ; Petra Hogewoning (born 1986 in Rijnsburg) a Dutch retired football defender ; Nick Driebergen (born 1987 in Rijnsburg) a Dutch former backstroke swimmer, competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics ; Jaap van Duijn (born 1990 in Katwijk) a Dutch football striker ; Dirk van Duijvenbode (born 1992 in Katwijk aan Zee) a Dutch Professional Darts Corporation player ", "score": "1.567868" }, { "id": "27859323", "title": "Matthijs", "text": "Matthijs ; Abraham Matthijs (1581–1649), Flemish painter ; Paul Matthijs (born 1976), Dutch football player ; Rudy Matthijs (born 1959), Belgian road bicycle racer Mathijs ; Ernest Mathijs (born c.1968), Canadian film professor ", "score": "1.567759" }, { "id": "28746094", "title": "O. J. Matthijs Jolles", "text": " Born in Berlin of a Dutch father and German mother, Jolles was brought up as a German and educated at the Universities of Leipzig, Hamburg, and Heidelberg. He received his doctorate in the philosophy of literature from Heidelberg in 1933. He then served one year as a volunteer in the horse artillery. Although he was not Jewish, his anti-Nazi politics got him into trouble. In 1934 he emigrated to France, where he studied at the Sorbonne. The following year he emigrated to Wales, where he taught German. Offered a teaching position at the University of Chicago, he entered the United States with his new British wife in 1938. He became a professor of German language and literature, obtaining American citizenship in 1945. Leaving Chicago in 1962, he spent the remainder of his life at Cornell.", "score": "1.5636538" }, { "id": "1060973", "title": "Hans Klok", "text": " Hans Klok was born in Purmerend, Netherlands. On his tenth birthday, he received a magic set as a present and began performing for friends at their birthday parties. He started his professional career in magic as a teenager. At the age of fourteen, he became youth champion of the Netherlands and Europe in conjuring, and won the Wenegini Prize. In 1990, Hans and his assistant Sittah won the Grand Prix of the Netherlands and the Henk Vermeijden Cup with \"the fastest metamorphosis in the world\". By age 23, he was part of a touring show with Dutch comedian André van Duin. In 1994, he performed for ", "score": "1.5577703" }, { "id": "31897419", "title": "Joop Falke", "text": " Joop Falke (1933–2016), born in Dordrecht on 23 March, died in Oss 3 October; was a Dutch artist and goldsmith.", "score": "1.5548528" }, { "id": "9089203", "title": "Guilliam du Gardijn", "text": " Gardijn was born in Cologne. According to the RKD he was the teacher of Johann Heinrich Roos who lived with him in his Amsterdam atelier in 1647. He probably knew the Roos family as part of a German expat community in Amsterdam that had fled the Thirty Years War. He painted Italianate landscapes with ruins, some of which are biblical scenes, and some of which have trees that appear human. A few of these are in the possession of the Stedelijk Museum Alkmaar, and one is in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam. He also made a series of drawings of Turkish figures after the 16th century Flemish painter and draughtsman Pieter Coecke van Aelst. He died in Amsterdam.", "score": "1.5530503" } ]
In what city was Sebastian Hofmann born?
[ "Sinsheim" ]
place of birth
Sebastian Hofmann
1,609,681
67
[ { "id": "27686267", "title": "Michael Hofmann", "text": " Michael Hofmann was born in Freiburg, West Germany into a family with a literary tradition. His father was the German novelist Gert Hofmann (died 1993). His maternal grandfather edited the Brockhaus Enzyklopädie. Hofmann's family first moved to Bristol in 1961, and later to Edinburgh. He was educated at Winchester College, and then studied English Literature and Classics at Magdalene College, Cambridge, graduating with a BA in 1979 and an MA in 1984. In 1983 Hofmann started working as a freelance writer, translator, and literary critic. He has since gone on to hold visiting professorships at the University of Michigan, Rutgers University, the New School University, Barnard College, and Columbia University. He was first a visitor to the University of Florida in 1990, joined the faculty in 1994, and became full-time in 2009. He has been teaching poetry and translation workshops. In 2008, Hofmann was Poet-in-Residence in the state of Queensland in Australia. Hofmann has two sons, Max (1991) and Jakob (1993). He splits his time between Hamburg and Gainesville, Florida.", "score": "1.7321345" }, { "id": "8850844", "title": "Artur Hofmann", "text": " Hofmann was born in Plauen, a mid-sized town in central southern Germany approximately 100 miles (160 km) south-west of Dresden. His father was a locksmith and his mother worked in a factory. On leaving school Hofmann got a job helping out in the market. In 1921 he undertook an apprenticeship, and then took a series of jobs as a locksmith/machinist and in related trades. He relocated several times in the 1920s, working successively in Thuringia, Bavaria and the Ruhr region. Between 1927 and 1929 he lived in The Netherlands, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Yugoslavia and, finally, Bulgaria. He then returned to Germany, taking a job in Hamburg with the shipbuilders Blohm + Voss in 1929/30. A period of unemployment followed.", "score": "1.730347" }, { "id": "26631984", "title": "Peter Hofmann", "text": " Hofmann was born in Marienbad, German Sudetenland (now modern Mariánské Lázně, Czech Republic), and grew up in Darmstadt. In his youth, before receiving any training in classical music, he was a singer in a rock band. He served seven years in the West German Armed Forces, during which time he began studying singing privately. After being honorably discharged with a financial bonus, he entered the Hochschule für Musik Karlsruhe where he was trained as an opera singer.", "score": "1.7231205" }, { "id": "26551817", "title": "Max Hofmann", "text": " Hofmann was born in 1974 in Tübingen, West Germany, and grew up in Schwäbisch Hall. His father is German, his mother was American, and in his early life he spent summers with his cousins in Indiana.", "score": "1.7229652" }, { "id": "199685", "title": "Louis Hofmann", "text": " Hofmann was born in the Bensberg district of Bergisch Gladbach and grew up in Cologne. His first experience in front of the camera was for Servicezeit, an evening magazine programme on WDR Fernsehen television network. He appeared in a section of the programme, Die Ausflieger, which tested family recreational activities. After two and a half years at Servicezeit, he decided to become an actor and applied to an acting agency. He was subsequently represented by Agentur Schwarz. In 2009 Hofmann guest-starred in legal comedy-drama Danni Lowinski and television series Der verlorene Vater. He also appeared in the television film Tod in Istanbul. In 2010 he performed in Wilsberg and Alarm for ", "score": "1.7105863" }, { "id": null, "title": "Sebastián Hofmann", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Sebastian Hofmann", "text": "Sebastian Hofmann\n\nSebastian Hofmann (born 12 September 1983) is a former professional footballer who played as a forward who plays for GSV Maichingen.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:SSV Jahn Regensburg players", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Stub-Class football in Germany articles", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:TSG 1899 Hoffenheim II players", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "32377927", "title": "Henri Chatin-Hofmann", "text": " Heinrich Victor Agricola Hofmann was born on May 25, 1900, in Baltimore, 1732 North Calvert Street, one of four children and the only son of the German-American pastor of the Zion Lutheran Church Julius K. Hofmann (1865–1928) and his wife Adele Châtin (d. 1955). At his confirmation in 1915, he insisted on changing his first name and adopted the maiden name of his mother as middle name. He attended the Calvert School and St. John's College and gave his first recitals in the Vagabond Players Theater. In the 1920s he moved to Berlin. Here he became the third husband of the dancer Anita Berber in 1924. In Berlin, they caused a stir with a completely naked dance inserted in a ", "score": "1.7023339" }, { "id": "15847885", "title": "Richard Beer-Hofmann", "text": " Richard Beer-Hofmann (11 July 1866 in Vienna &ndash; 26 September 1945 in New York City) was an Austrian dramatist and poet. Beer-Hofmann was born to Jewish parents. His mother died within a week of his birth and after her death, he was adopted and reared by his uncle and his aunt, Bertha and Alois Hofmann. He spent his early childhood in Brünn (Brno, Czech Republic), where Alois Hofmann owned a textile factory. In 1880 the family moved to Vienna and Richard Beer-Hofmann finished his schooling at the Akademisches Gymnasium. In the 1880s he studied law in Vienna, receiving his doctorate in 1890. In the same year of his graduation, he became acquainted with the writers Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Hermann Bahr and Arthur Schnitzler, with whom he shared a long friendship and ", "score": "1.6785762" }, { "id": "11348001", "title": "Gert Hofmann", "text": " Hofmann was born and grew up in Limbach, Saxony (Germany) which, after World War II, became part of East Germany. In 1948, he moved with his family to Leipzig. There, he attended a school for translators and interpreters, studying English and Russian. In 1950, he enrolled to Leipzig University, where he studied Romance languages and Slavic languages. In 1951, he fled from the German Democratic Republic and settled in Freiburg im Breisgau, where he continued his studies. In 1957, he graduated with a thesis on Henry James. Hofmann began his writing career as a writer of radio plays. After one year as a research assistant at the University of Freiburg, he left Germany in 1961 for Bristol to teach German literature. Over the next ten years he taught at universities in Europe in Toulouse, Paris, Edinburgh, and in the United States at New Haven, Berkeley, California and Austin. From 1971 to 1980 he lived in the southern Austrian town of Klagenfurt, while teaching at the University of Ljubljana in Slovenia, former Yugoslavia. In 1980, aged 49, he returned to Germany, moving to Erding near Munich, becoming a novelist. He died of a stroke in 1993.", "score": "1.6650945" }, { "id": "9044920", "title": "Stefan Hofmann", "text": " Hofmann was born on December 15, 1964 in Bietigheim-Bissingen. He attended Ellental Gymnasien and studied clinical psychology at the University of Marburg where he received a terminal degree (Dipl.-Psych.) in 1990, as well as a doctorate (Dr. rer. nat) in 1993 under the mentorship of Anke Ehlers. After a doctoral fellowship funded by the German Academic Exchange Service at Stanford University and post-doctoral work with David H. Barlow, he joined Boston University as a faculty member in 1996.", "score": "1.628087" }, { "id": "3593179", "title": "Paul Hofmann", "text": " Hofmann was born in Vienna, Austria on 20 November 1912. He was raised for the most part by his uncle, who was an influential Socialist. He studied law at the University of Vienna after which he became a member of the Christian Socialist Party. In 1934 he became a travelling speaker for the Catholic Popular Federation, and after two years with the Federation, he became the chief editorial writer of one of their publications, Die Sonntagsglocke. In the late 1930s, as Austria came under increasing pressure to submit to a union with Germany, Hofmann wrote editorials urging his country to resist the Nazi initiative. In March 1938 as German troops occupied Vienna he fled to Rome, Italy, only hours before his apartment ", "score": "1.6195018" }, { "id": "29956679", "title": "Grégory Hofmann", "text": " Grégory Hofmann (born November 13, 1992) is a Swiss professional ice hockey forward who is currently playing for the Columbus Blue Jackets of the National Hockey League (NHL). Hofmann was drafted in the third round, 103rd overall, by the Carolina Hurricanes in the 2011 NHL Entry Draft. He won two National League (NL) titles, one with HC Davos in 2015 and one with EV Zug in 2021.", "score": "1.6149366" }, { "id": "12279692", "title": "Klaus Hofmann", "text": " Klaus Hofmann (born 20 March 1939) is a German musicologist who is an expert on the music of Johann Sebastian Bach. Born in Würzburg, Hofmann studied after graduation (1958) from 1958 to 1959 at the University of Erlangen. He then continued his studies at the Albert-Ludwigs-University Freiburg. In 1968 he received his doctorate with a dissertation \"Untersuchungen zur Kompositionstechnik der Motette im 13. Jahrhundert, durchgeführt an den Motetten mit dem Tenor IN SECULUM\" (Studies on the composition technique of the motet in the 13th century, performed on the motets with tenor IN SECULUM). From 1968 to 1978 he worked as an employee of the Hänssler Verlag. From 1978 he was a research assistant of the Johann Sebastian Bach Institute in Göttingen, one of the two institutions which prepared the Neue Bach-Ausgabe, the second complete edition of Bach's work. In 2004 he was appointed to the position of Executive Director, a position which he held until the Institute closed in 2006. He is a board member of the copyright collective. In 1994 he was appointed honorary professor at the Georg-August-Universität Göttingen.", "score": "1.6144575" }, { "id": "9562391", "title": "John Sebastian", "text": " Sebastian was born in New York City and grew up in Italy and Greenwich Village. His father, John Sebastian (né Pugliese), was a noted classical harmonica player, and his mother, Jane, was a radio script writer. His godmother was Vivian Vance (\"Ethel Mertz\" of I Love Lucy), who was a close friend of his mother's. His godfather and first babysitter was children's book illustrator Garth Williams, a friend of his father's. Eleanor Roosevelt was a neighbor who lived across the hall. Sebastian grew up surrounded by music and musicians, including Burl Ives and Woody Guthrie, and hearing such players as Lead Belly and Mississippi John Hurt in his own neighborhood. He graduated from Blair Academy, a private boarding school in Blairstown, New Jersey, in 1962. He next attended New York University for just over a year, but dropped out as he became more interested in musical pursuits.", "score": "1.6144083" }, { "id": "14040028", "title": "Sebastian Hofmann", "text": " Sebastian Hofmann (born 12 September 1983 in Sinsheim) is a professional football forward who plays for GSV Maichingen.", "score": "1.5952324" }, { "id": "31431454", "title": "Otto Hofmann", "text": " Hofmann was born in Innsbruck, Tyrol. Hofmann, the son of a merchant, in August 1914 volunteered for service in the First World War. In March 1917, he was promoted to lieutenant. In June 1917, he was taken prisoner by the Russians. However, Hofmann escaped from captivity and returned to Germany. Hofmann completed his pilot training before he was released in 1919 to civilian life. After short-term operation in a Freikorps, he trained as a wine salesman and was active from 1920 to 1925 in wine wholesale. He then started his own business as a wine representative. In April 1923, Hofmann joined the ", "score": "1.5879219" }, { "id": "8333251", "title": "Michael Hofmann (footballer, born 1972)", "text": " After his contract at TSV 1860 München was not renewed Hofmann joined 3. Liga club SSV Jahn Regensburg.", "score": "1.5839974" }, { "id": "10507440", "title": "Hugo von Hofmannsthal", "text": " Hofmannsthal was born in Landstraße, Vienna, the son of an upper-class Christian Austrian mother, Anna Maria Josefa Fohleutner (1852–1904), and a Christian Austrian–Italian bank manager, Hugo August Peter Hofmann, Edler von Hofmannsthal (1841–1915). His great-grandfather, Isaak Löw Hofmann, Edler von Hofmannsthal, from whom his family inherited the noble title \"Edler von Hofmannsthal\", was a Jewish tobacco farmer ennobled by the Austrian emperor. He was schooled in Vienna at Akademisches Gymnasium, where he studied the works of Ovid, later a major influence on his work. He began to write poems and plays from an early age. Some of his early works were written under pseudonyms, such as Loris Melikow and Theophil Morren, because he was not allowed to publish as a student. He met the German poet Stefan George at the age of seventeen and had several poems published in George's journal, Blätter für die Kunst. He studied law and later philology in Vienna but decided to devote himself to writing upon graduating in 1901. Along with Peter Altenberg and Arthur Schnitzler, he was a member of the avant garde group Young Vienna (Jung–Wien).", "score": "1.582442" }, { "id": "13844426", "title": "Charles Hofmann", "text": " Franz Karl Hofmann was born in Prague in 1763. Apart from the place and year of birth, virtually nothing is known about his Bohemian background. In Hofmann's youth, Bohemia was a part of the Habsburg Monarchy, where famous elegant musicians originated from. Examples include Johann Stamitz and the members of the musical Benda family.", "score": "1.5815303" }, { "id": "33047735", "title": "Otto Jürgen Hofmann", "text": " Hofmann was born in Kyle, Texas on a cotton farm. He was the youngest of 10 children of German immigrants, Wilhelm and Friede Hofmann. Otto attended Kyle High School and was valedictorian for his 1936 class. He received a bachelor's degree in Plan II and a master's degree in Choral Direction at the University of Texas. He was working on his doctorate when he was drafted. Being a conscientious objector, he was sent to Civilian Public Service Camp. After a brief marriage in the mid-1940s that resulted in two daughters, Helene and Pam, he returned to the family farm in Texas to resume his organ building career. In 1949, he traveled to Aspen, Colorado to hear Albert Schweitzer speak. There he met a young German woman, Margarete Schultze, ", "score": "1.5798519" }, { "id": "29463244", "title": "Hans Hofmann", "text": " Hans Hofmann was born in Weißenburg, Bavaria on March 21, 1880 to Theodor Friedrich Hofmann (1855–1903) and Franziska Manger Hofmann (1849–1921). In 1886, his family moved to Munich, where his father took a job with the government. From a young age, Hofmann gravitated towards science and mathematics. At age sixteen, he followed his father into public service, working for the Bavarian government as assistant to the director of Public Works. He increased his knowledge of mathematics there, eventually developing and patenting devices including an electromagnetic comptometer, a radar device for ships at sea, a sensitized light bulb, and a portable freezer unit for military use. During this time, Hofmann also became interested in creative studies, beginning art ", "score": "1.5789716" } ]
In what city was Emil Marschalk von Ostheim born?
[ "Bamberg", "Town of Bamberg" ]
place of birth
Emil Marschalk von Ostheim
15,917
57
[ { "id": "10936001", "title": "Ossip K. Flechtheim", "text": " Flechtheim was born in Nikolaev (then Russian Empire, now Mykolaiv, Ukraine), into a Jewish family, the son of bookseller Herrmann Flechtheim (1880–1960) and his wife Olga, née Farber (1884–1964). In 1910 the family moved back into the father's hometown of Westphalian Münster, where his relatives had a grain trade business, and later to Düsseldorf. The art dealer Alfred Flechtheim was his uncle. His family being secular, Flechtheim did not receive religious upbringing. In later life (after Second World War in West Berlin) he became a member (as a non-denominational humanist) of the German Freethinkers Association (later Humanist Association of Germany). ", "score": "1.6020141" }, { "id": "12834066", "title": "Carl von Ossietzky", "text": " Ossietzky was born in Hamburg, the son of Carl Ignatius von Ossietzky (1848–1891), a Protestant from Upper Silesia; and Rosalie (née Pratzka), a devout Catholic who wanted her son to enter Holy Orders and become a priest or monk. His father worked as a stenographer in the office of a lawyer and of Senator Max Predöhl, but died when Ossietzky was two years old. Ossietzky was baptized as a Roman Catholic in Hamburg on 10 November 1889 and confirmed in the Lutheran Hauptkirche St Michaelis on 23 March 1904. The von in Ossietzky's name, which would generally suggest noble ancestry, is of unknown origin. ", "score": "1.5710177" }, { "id": "13424914", "title": "Verner von Heidenstam", "text": " Verner von Heidenstam was born in Olshammar, Örebro County on 6 July 1859 to a noble family. Von Heidenstam was the son of Gustaf von Heidenstam, an engineer, and Magdalena Charlotta von Heidenstam (née Rütterskiöld). He was educated at Beskowska skolan in Stockholm. He studied painting in the Academy of Stockholm, but soon left because of ill health. He then traveled extensively in Europe, Africa and the orient.", "score": "1.5619066" }, { "id": "29392762", "title": "Heidelberg", "text": " driver born here ; Vasil Radoslavov (1854–1929), Bulgarian Prime Minister ; José Rizal (1861–1896), national hero of the Philippines ; Khalid Robinson (born 1998), American singer ; Christiane Schmidtmer (1939–2003), Hollywood actress and model ; Bernd Schmitt (born 1957), marketing professor at Columbia University ; Klaus Schütz (1926–2012), politician (SPD) ; Elisabeth Seitz (born 1993), Olympic gymnast ; Silvia Renate Sommerlath (born 1943), Queen of Sweden ; Albert Speer (1905–1981), German architect and Third Reich minister ; Ferdinand Thomas (1913–1944), resistance fighter ; Ashley Wagner (born 1991), American figure skater ; Karl Philipp von Wrede (1767–1838), Bavarian field marshal ; Jon Osterman (1929–2019), fictional character from the book Watchmen and its HBO sequel series ", "score": "1.5551264" }, { "id": "16302290", "title": "Alastair (artist)", "text": " Hans Henning Baron von Voight was born of German nobility in Karlsruhe. In his youth he joined a circus and learned mime Shortly after leaving school he studied philosophy at Marburg University where he met the writer Boris Pasternak. He was self-taught as an artist, and he was also a proficient dancer and pianist. He died in Munich in 1969.", "score": "1.5502863" }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:German numismatists", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Bamberg", "text": "Bamberg\n\nBamberg (, , ; East Franconian: \"Bambärch\") is a town in Upper Franconia, Germany, on the river Regnitz close to its confluence with the river Main. The town dates back to the 9th century, when its name was derived from the nearby \"\" castle. Cited as one of Germany's most beautiful towns, with medieval streets and Europe's largest intact old city wall, the old town of Bamberg has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1993.\n\nFrom the 10th century onwards, Bamberg became a key link with the Slav peoples, notably those of Poland and Pomerania. It experienced a period of great prosperity from the 12th century onwards, during which time it was briefly the centre of the Holy Roman Empire. Emperor Henry II was also buried in the old town, alongside his wife Kunigunde. The town's architecture from this period strongly influenced that in Northern Germany and Hungary. From the middle of the 13th century onwards, the bishops were princes of the Empire<ref name=\"EB1911\" /> and ruled Bamberg, overseeing the construction of monumental buildings. This growth was complemented by the obtaining of large portions of the estates of the Counts of Meran in 1248 and 1260 by the see, partly through purchase and partly through the appropriation of extinguished fiefs.\n\nBamberg lost its independence in 1802, following the secularization of church lands, becoming part of Bavaria in 1803. The town was first connected to the German rail system in 1844, which has been an important part of its infrastructure ever since. After a communist uprising took control over Bavaria in the years following World War I, the state government fled to Bamberg and stayed there for almost two years before the Bavarian capital of Munich was retaken by \"Freikorps\" units (see Bavarian Soviet Republic). The first republican constitution of Bavaria was passed in Bamberg, becoming known as the \"Bamberger Verfassung\" (Bamberg Constitution).\n\nFollowing the Second World War, Bamberg was an important base for the Bavarian, German, and then American military stationed at Warner Barracks, until closing in 2014.", "score": null }, { "id": "17829725", "title": "Heinrich von Angeli", "text": "Mérite for Sciences and Arts in 1915. Angeli was born in 1840 in Ödenburg, then part of the Austrian empire, now known as Sopron in Hungary. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, and in Munich, before moving back to Vienna in 1862. From 1870 he travelled between Berlin, London, and Vienna, producing portraits. His success at society portraiture was partly due to his facility at depicting uniforms, pearls, and other jewels. As well as royalty and politicians, he painted other notable people, such as the German chemist August Wilhelm von Hofmann. In 1877 Buckingham", "score": "1.5492792" }, { "id": "11047758", "title": "Robert von Ostertag", "text": "Robert von Ostertag Robert von Ostertag (March 24, 1864 – October 7, 1940) was a German veterinarian who was a native of Schwäbisch Gmünd. He studied medicine in Berlin and veterinary medicine in Stuttgart, afterwards becoming a professor of hygiene at Tierärztliche Hochschule Stuttgart (1891–1892) and at the College of Veterinary Medicine in Berlin (1892–1907). In 1907 he became head of the veterinary department in the Reich Health Office in Berlin. In 1910 he traveled to German Southwest Africa in order to study diseases of sheep, and in 1913 he investigated rinderpest in German East Africa. In 1920 he became", "score": "1.5481706" }, { "id": "11047760", "title": "Robert von Ostertag", "text": "on the wall of the abomasum of cattle and other ruminants. The disease associated with the organism is called \"ostertagiosis\". Robert von Ostertag Robert von Ostertag (March 24, 1864 – October 7, 1940) was a German veterinarian who was a native of Schwäbisch Gmünd. He studied medicine in Berlin and veterinary medicine in Stuttgart, afterwards becoming a professor of hygiene at Tierärztliche Hochschule Stuttgart (1891–1892) and at the College of Veterinary Medicine in Berlin (1892–1907). In 1907 he became head of the veterinary department in the Reich Health Office in Berlin. In 1910 he traveled to German Southwest Africa in", "score": "1.5463912" }, { "id": "15563230", "title": "Hans-Hasso von Veltheim", "text": " Hans-Hasso Ludolf Martin Freiherr von Veltheim-Ostrau (born Cologne 1885-10-15, died Utersum 1956-08-13) was a German Indologist, Anthroposophist, Far East traveler, occultist and author.", "score": "1.5474219" }, { "id": "13801261", "title": "Marschall", "text": " and illustrator notable for his paintings of famous ocean liners ; Matern von Marschall (born 1962), German politician ; Nicola Marschall (1829–1917), German-American artist who supported the Confederate cause during the American Civil War ; Olaf Marschall (born 1966), German retired footballer and a football sports manager ; Philipp Marschall (born 1988), German cross country skier who has competed since 2005 ; Rick Marschall (born 1949), writer/editor and comic strip historian, described as \"America's foremost authority on pop culture\" ; Rudolf Marschall (1873–1967), Austrian sculptor and medalist, born in Vienna ; Wilhelm Marschall (1886–1976), German admiral during World War II ; Albrecht Marschall von Rapperswil, one of the Minnesingers featured in the Codex Manesse Marschall may refer to: ", "score": "1.5409526" }, { "id": "13230715", "title": "Robert von Ostertag", "text": " Robert von Ostertag (March 24, 1864 &ndash; October 7, 1940) was a German veterinarian who was a native of Schwäbisch Gmünd. He studied medicine in Berlin and veterinary medicine in Stuttgart, afterwards becoming a professor of hygiene at Tierärztliche Hochschule Stuttgart (1891–1892) and at the College of Veterinary Medicine in Berlin (1892–1907). In 1907 he became head of the veterinary department in the Reich Health Office in Berlin. In 1910 he traveled to German Southwest Africa in order to study diseases of sheep, and in 1913 he investigated rinderpest in German East Africa. In 1920 he became head of veterinary services in Germany. In the 1890s, Ostertag started ", "score": "1.5335304" }, { "id": "27903269", "title": "Emil von Dungern", "text": " Baron Emil von Dungern (26 November 1867 &ndash; 4 September 1961) was a German internist. Von Dungern was born in Würzburg and died in Ludwigshafen am Bodensee. In 1910–11, E. von Dungern and Ludwik Hirszfeld discovered the heritability of ABO blood groups.", "score": "1.5303495" }, { "id": "29365958", "title": "Laupheim", "text": "Carl Laemmle (17 January 1867 – 24 September 1939), German-American film producer (All Quiet on the Western Front), founder of Universal Studios. ; Anton Schmid (24 June 1864 – 25 August 1964), headmaster. ; Georg Schenk (14 December 1894 – 25 December 1971), teacher and local historian. ; Father Ivo Schaible SDS (8 July 1912 – 13 September 1990), artist. ; Dean Philipp Ruf (8 November 1900 – ?), dean of Catholic church in Laupheim. ; Josef Braun (6 September 1910 – 2003), deputy headmaster, historian. ; Otmar Schick (8 September 1935 – 23 November 2016), mayor from 1966 – 2002. ; Ernst Schäll (18 March 1927 – 28 October 2010), restorer of physical Jewish heritage in Laupheim. ; Brigitte Angele (born 1946), former member of the city council. ; Franz Romer (born 1942) in Untersulmetingen, politician (CDU), former member of the Bundestag. ", "score": "1.5274366" }, { "id": "5520203", "title": "Anton Graf von Arco auf Valley", "text": " Anton Arco-Valley was born in Sankt Martin im Innkreis in Upper Austria. His father Maximilian (1849–1911) was a businessman and estate owner, whose elder sister had married John Dalberg-Acton, 1st Baron Acton. Anton's mother, Emily Freiin von Oppenheim (1869–1957), was from a wealthy Jewish banking family. The ancestral home of the old noble family of Arco was the Arco Castle north of Lake Garda in Trentino. His family had lived in Germany for centuries. His noble title was no longer officially recognised after Germany became a republic. After serving with a Bavarian regiment, the Royal Bavarian Infantry Lifeguards Regiment, in the last year of World War I, ", "score": "1.5264095" }, { "id": "7558674", "title": "Emil Kraepelin", "text": " Kraepelin, whose father, Karl Wilhelm, was a former opera singer, music teacher, and later successful story teller, was born in 1856 in Neustrelitz, in the Duchy of Mecklenburg-Strelitz in Germany. He was first introduced to biology by his brother Karl, 10 years older and, later, the director of the Zoological Museum of Hamburg.", "score": "1.5250845" }, { "id": "1028502", "title": "Hugo von Heidenstam", "text": " von Heidenstam was born in Karlskrona, Sweden, the son of major Adolf von Heidenstam and his wife countess Hedda (née Cronstedt). He passed mogenhetsexamen in 1901 and after graduating from the Royal Institute of Technology in 1905, he became a reserve officer at the Fortification (Fortifikationen) the same year. von Heidenstam worked as an engineer at the Swedish Hydraulic Engineering Company (AB Vattenbyggnadsbyrån) in Stockholm from 1905 to 1908 and was an engineer in the United States from 1908 to 1909 and in Shanghai, China from 1909 to 1910. He was chief engineer at the China International Commission for the Shanghai Port and ", "score": "1.5245029" }, { "id": "8827576", "title": "Eugen von Zimmerer", "text": " Eugen Ritter von Zimmerer was born on 24 November 1843 in Germersheim, the son of a Bavarian officer and his wife. He attended high school in Bayreuth. From 1861 he studied law at the universities of Würzburg and Heidelberg. While in Würzburg, he was a member of the Corps Bavaria Würzburg, the oldest of German student associations. Zimmerer began his legal career as an assistant in the District Court in Bayreuth. He held the positions of public prosecutor at the District Court of Straubing (1874), District Court Judge in Starnberg (1876), State Prosecutor at the district court in Bayreuth (1878), State Prosecutor at the Regional Court of Munich (1879), and Judge of the Regional Court of Munich (1886).", "score": "1.5234737" }, { "id": "7657505", "title": "Kempten", "text": "Carl von Linde (1842–1934), scientist and inventor in cooling technology ; Claude Dornier (1884–1969), aircraft designer ; Ernst Mayr (1904–2005), German-American biologist ; Søren Kam (1921–2015), Danish SS-Obersturmführer, war criminal ; Ignaz Kiechle (1930–2003), politician (CSU), member of Bundestag 1969–1994, Minister for Food, Agriculture and Forestry 1983–1993 ; Heide Schmidt (born 1948), Austrian politician ; Günther Dollinger (born 1960), physicist and professor ; Dieter Lohr (born 1965), writer and audiobook publishers ; İlhan Mansız (born 1975), Turkish footballer ; Lisa Brennauer (born 1988), world champion cyclist ; Daniel Abt (born 1992), racing driver ; Friedrich Ferdinand Schnitzer, prominent United States architect who built a number of structures on the National Register of Historic Places. ", "score": "1.522814" }, { "id": "12054265", "title": "Carl Laemmle", "text": " Laemmle was born in 1867 to a Jewish family in Laupheim, in the German Kingdom of Württemberg. As a youth, he was an apprentice in Ichenhausen. He followed his older brother and immigrated to the United States in 1884, settling in Chicago, where he married Recha Stern, with whom he had a son, Carl Laemmle, Jr. and a daughter, Rosabelle Laemmle Bergerman (later married to Stanley Bergerman). Laemmle became a naturalized American citizen in 1889. He worked a variety of jobs, but by 1894 he was the bookkeeper of the Continental Clothing Company in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, where he introduced a bolder advertising style. In 1906, Laemmle ", "score": "1.5186524" }, { "id": "1086042", "title": "1934 in Germany", "text": " Erich Mühsam, German poet and playwright (born 1878) ; 2 August — Paul von Hindenburg, German general and politician (born 1847) ; 15 October - Samuel von Fischer, German publisher (born 1859) ; 19 October – Alexander von Kluck, German general (born 1846) ; 20 October — Hans Böhning, World War I German flying ace (born 1893) ; 12 November - Walther Bensemann, German pioneer of football and founder of the country's major sports publication, Kicker.(born 1873) ; 16 November - Carl von Linde, German engineer and scientist (born 1842) ; 17 November - Joachim Ringelnatz, German writer (born 1883) ; 5 December – Oskar von Hutier, German general (born 1857) ", "score": "1.5153601" }, { "id": "31933180", "title": "Adolf Marschall von Bieberstein", "text": " Marschall von Bieberstein's father, Augustus Marschall von Bieberstein, was chamberlain to the Grand Duke of Baden, and his mother, before her marriage, was Baroness von Falkenstein. He was educated at the Gymnasium of Frankfurt am Main, and studied jurisprudence at the Universities of Freiburg and Heidelberg. He was a member of the Corps Suevia, a Studentenverbindung. After finishing his studies, he started on a career in government, working as a prosecutor in Mosbach und Mannheim. His career as a politician began in 1875, as a representative in the First Chamber of Baden; from 1878 to 1881 he was also a member of the Reichstag for the German Conservative Party and ", "score": "1.5134135" }, { "id": "28253480", "title": "1878 in Germany", "text": "4 January – Gerdt von Bassewitz, German playwright and actor (died 1923) ; 16 March – Clemens August Graf von Galen, German bishop of Roman-Catholic Church (died 1946) ; 1 April – Carl Sternheim, German playwright and short story writer (died 1942) ; 6 April – Erich Mühsam, German poet and playwright (died 1934) ; 21 April – Albert Weisgerber, German painter (died 1915) ; 10 May – Gustav Stresemann, Chancellor 1923, Foreign Minister 1923–29, Nobel laureate (died 1929) ; 30 May – Hermine Körner, German actress (died 1960) ; 4 June – Ludwig Dürr, German airship designer (died 1956) ; 16 July – Andreas Hermes, German politician (died 1964) ; 26 July – Ernst Hoppenberg, German swimmer (died 1937) ; 10 August – Alfred Döblin, ", "score": "1.510052" }, { "id": "29958490", "title": "Alfred von Doussa", "text": " Von Doussa was born in Adelaide the son of (Emil Louis) Alfred von Doussa (c. 1809 – 17 December 1882), an officer of the Prussian army, who emigrated to South Australia in 1846, aboard Heloise, arriving in March 1847 after a five-month voyage. His wife-to-be, Anna Dorothea Schach was a fellow passenger; they married that same year. Alfred was educated at T. W. Boehm's German School in Hahndorf and St. Peter's College. He and his father travelled to Otago, New Zealand at the time of the gold rush. On returning to South Australia he studied chemistry, and in 1868 was partner (with Carl Friedrich Gunther) in the Rundle Street pharmacy of Gunther and von Doussa. The partnership was dissolved in October 1869.", "score": "1.50964" } ]
In what city was Esau Tjiuoro born?
[ "Okakarara" ]
place of birth
Esau Tjiuoro
500,004
60
[ { "id": "5627928", "title": "Esau Tjiuoro", "text": " Esau Tjiuoro (born 26 May 1982 in Okakarara, Otjozondjupa Region) is a Namibian football (soccer) goalkeeper with F.C. Civics Windhoek and the Namibia national football team.", "score": "2.0217826" }, { "id": "5627929", "title": "Esau Tjiuoro", "text": " Tjiuoro has played in the Namibia Premier League since 2000. Prior to joining Civics, he played with Ramblers F.C..", "score": "1.8914988" }, { "id": "5762846", "title": "Tjama Tjivikua", "text": " Tjivikua was born on 27 July 1958 in Otjomupanda, Otjozondjupa Region. His mother was a nurse and his father a school teacher. He grew up in Oruuua in the then Ovitoto Reserve, and started primary school in 1967 at St Barnabas Anglican Church School in Windhoek's Old Location. His family soon moved to Katutura as a result of the forced removal of blacks from Old Location and he continued his schooling there. After completing high school at Windhoek's Augustineum (1976–1978), Tjivikua worked at the main branch of Barclays Bank (now First National Bank) in Windhoek. Tjivikua left Namibia in June 1979 to study chemistry in the United States at Rockland Community College (1979–1980) and then Lincoln University (1980–1983), from which he graduated cum laude. He then completed a MSc at University of Lowell and a PhD at University of Pittsburgh and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His thesis was on molecular recognition in organic chemistry. He was a well recognized researcher at that time, and he worked as Assistant Professor of Chemistry at Lincoln University from 1990 to 1995.", "score": "1.7277747" }, { "id": "26869126", "title": "Blasio Vincent Ndale Esau Oriedo", "text": " Oriedo was born to Esau Khamati Oriedo (d. 1 December 1992) and Evangeline Olukhanya Ohana Analo-Oriedo (d. 11 July 1982), both from the western Kenya's Luhya ethnic group of the Bantu lineage. His father was a Kenyan politician (freedom fighter and colonial-era political detainee, district representative and once chairman of the North Nyanza Local Native Council ), an entrepreneur, philanthropist, and a veteran of World Wars I and II. He was a Christian who challenged early white Christian missionaries in East Africa to embrace the African cultures as congruent with the Christian credo. His mother was an advocate of women's rights and literacy in ", "score": "1.679705" }, { "id": "460222", "title": "Joseph Tsatsu Agbenu", "text": " Agbenu was born on November 20, 1936, in the Eastern Region, in a town called Afram Plains.", "score": "1.6728561" }, { "id": null, "title": "Esau Tjiuoro", "text": "Esau Tjiuoro\n\nEsau Tjiuoro (born 26 May 1982 in Okakarara, Otjozondjupa Region) is a Namibian football (soccer) goalkeeper with F.C. Civics Windhoek and the Namibia national football team.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Ramblers F.C. players", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "19811491", "title": "Blasio Vincent Ndale Esau Oriedo", "text": "to the venerable Esau Khamati Oriedo (d. 1 December 1992) and Evangeline Olukhanya Ohana Analo-Oriedo (d. 11 July 1982), both from the western Kenya's Luhya ethnic group of the Bantu lineage. His father was a renowned \"Kenyan statesman\" (\"freedom fighter and colonial era political detainee, district representative and once chairman of the North Nyanza Local Native Council\"), \"an entrepreneur, philanthropist\", and a veteran of two world wars—\"WW I and II\", and \"a Christian who doggedly challenged the early white Christian missionaries in East Africa to embrace the African cultures as congruent with the Christian credo\". His mother was a staunch", "score": "1.6081413" }, { "id": "10605545", "title": "Len Esau", "text": "season in Japan, playing for Seibu-Tetsudo Tokyo. Len Esau Leonard Esau (born March 16, 1968) is a Canadian former ice hockey defenceman who played a total of 27 games in the National Hockey League for the Toronto Maple Leafs, Quebec Nordiques, Calgary Flames and the Edmonton Oilers. The Leafs drafted him in the fifth round 86th overall in the 1988 NHL Entry Draft from the St. Cloud State Huskies. Esau never scored a goal in the NHL, but notched up 10 assists and collected 24 penalty minutes. He spent much of his tenure in the American Hockey League and the", "score": "1.5998487" }, { "id": "14999356", "title": "Tjama Tjivikua", "text": "moved to Katutura as a result of the forced removal of blacks from Old Location and he continued his schooling there. After completing High School at Windhoek's Augustineum (1976–1978), Tjivikua worked at the main branch of Barclays Bank (now First National Bank) in Windhoek. Tjivikua left Namibia in June 1979 to study Chemistry in the United States at Rockland Community College (1979–1980) and then Lincoln University (1980–1983), from which he graduated \"cum laude\". He then completed a MSc at University of Lowell and a PhD at University of Pittsburgh and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The thesis was on molecular recognition", "score": "1.5833957" }, { "id": "29039387", "title": "Len Esau", "text": " Leonard Esau (born March 16, 1968) is a Canadian former ice hockey defenceman who played a total of 27 games in the National Hockey League for the Toronto Maple Leafs, Quebec Nordiques, Calgary Flames and the Edmonton Oilers. The Leafs drafted him in the fifth round 86th overall in the 1988 NHL Entry Draft from the St. Cloud State Huskies. Esau never scored a goal in the NHL, but notched up 10 assists and collected 24 penalty minutes. He spent much of his tenure in the American Hockey League and the International Hockey League, but also spent one season in Japan, playing for Seibu-Tetsudo Tokyo.", "score": "1.6314417" }, { "id": "26869139", "title": "Blasio Vincent Ndale Esau Oriedo", "text": " Dr. BV Oriedo was born to Esau Khamati Oriedo (d. 1 December 1992) and Evangeline Olukhanya Ohana Analo-Oriedo (d. 11 July 1982), both from western Kenya's Luhya tribe of Africa's Bantu lineage. His mother was a homemaker, a domestic economics educator, and an ardent advocate of women rights. Whereas his father was a consummate Kenyan statesman, politician (1910s – 1960s), and an anti-colonialism activist and freedom fighter who had been detained, 1952–1956, alongside Paramount Chief Koinange and Jomo Kenyatta (the first President of the Republic of Kenya), and a cadre of other anti-colonialists during the campaign for Kenya's independence from the British rule. Esau Oriedo was also an entrepreneur and trade ", "score": "1.6251891" }, { "id": "12962385", "title": "Abraham Esau", "text": " Esau was born in Tiegenhagen (Tujec) in Landkreis Marienburg, West Prussia. He was the son of Prussian Mennonites, Osar Abraham Esau (1861-1945) and Maria Agnes (Regier) Esau (1861-1892). From 1902 to 1907, Esau studied at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität (today, the Humboldt University of Berlin) and the Königliche Technische Hochschule zu Danzig (today, Gdańsk University of Technology). From 1906 to 1909, he was a teaching assistant to Max Wien at Danzig. He received his doctorate at the University of Berlin in 1908.", "score": "1.6226544" }, { "id": "8508622", "title": "Jesu Oyingbo", "text": " Odumosu was born in 1915 to Jacob Odumosu, his grandfather was Joseph Odumosu, a famous traditional healer in Ijebu Ode. Trained as a carpenter, he served with the Post and Telegraph Department during World War II. An active member in the postal workers union, a general strike in 1945 led to his disengagement from the department. He took on carpentry work and opened a shop on Lagos Island close to Oil Mill Street. However, he struggled as a carpenter and was constantly in debt, he was jailed for six months on charges brought by his creditors. During this period, Odumosu attended various Protestant churches in Lagos, but soon claimed he received visions and dreams from God. He interpreted some of the visions as messianic visions and that he was chosen as a messiah that has come to redeem the world. He began his rebirth by holding evening meetings close to his shop.", "score": "1.6221714" }, { "id": "26869137", "title": "Blasio Vincent Ndale Esau Oriedo", "text": " bureaucrats and political elites; nevertheless, he stood his ground and refused to be intimidated into rescinding the edicts. His view was that these public servants worked solely to enrich and empower themselves. He was a fluent speaker and writer of English, Dutch, Kiswahili, Luganda, Luhya, Dholuo, Kamba, and Kikuyu languages. A cadre of multidisciplinary and racially diverse (Africans, Indo-Asiatics, Caucasians, Arabs, etc.) contemporaries from across East Africa flocked to his residence to indulge in social intercourse—interchange of ideals and ideas, entertainment, debate local and international affairs and geopolitics du jour. He was known to his contemporaries as \"Jaraha\"—a hybrid Kiswahili-Dhuluo idiom for \"en ", "score": "1.6149082" }, { "id": "31707622", "title": "Paulos Tzadua", "text": " Paulos Tzadua was born on 25 August 1921 in Addifini of Tsenadegle, Akeleguzay, Eritrea. He studied in the Italian High School of Asmara and later he earned a degree in law at the Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore of Milan. Paulos Tzadua was ordained priest on 12 March 1944 and served for five years in missions in Ethiopia. He continued his studies in Asmara and later in Milan and in 1960 he became the secretary to the archbishop of Addis Abeba. From 1961 to 1973 he taught at the Addis Ababa University. On 1 March 1973 he was chosen as ", "score": "1.6048324" }, { "id": "28413981", "title": "Oscar Kightley", "text": " Kightley was born in 1969 in Apia, Samoa, the youngest of eight children, and was raised in his father's village of Faleatiu. He came to New Zealand after the death of his father, when he was 4 years old and was adopted by his aunt and uncle, who lived in West Auckland. He attended Rutherford College, where writing was his favourite subject. After leaving school, Kightley was a cadet at the Auckland Star, and worked as a journalist for four years. \"I thought that was going to be me until I retired.\" He moved to Christchurch in 1991 to be a presenter for the children's television show Life in the Fridge Exists (L.I.F.E), where he met Tanya and Mishelle Muagututi'a, Erolia Ifopo, and Simon Small.", "score": "1.5921755" }, { "id": "3101908", "title": "September 1921", "text": "Japan published its note to the Republic of China on terms for the restoration of Japanese control of the Shandong Peninsula. While China would retain nominal jurisdiction, the Japanese would be given economic control of the ports of Qingdao and Jiaozhou Bay. ; Born: ; Joseph Iléo, twice Prime Minister of the Republic of the Congo (Leopoldville); in Léopoldville (now Kinshasa) Iléo was born in the same week as his successor, Cyrille Adoula (d. 1994) ; Daji Bhatawadekar (stage name for Krishnachandra Moreshwar), popular Indian stage and film actor, winner of the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award; in Bombay (now Mumbai, British India (d. 2006) ; Moshe Shamir, Israeli playwright and member of the Knesset; in Safed, Mandatory Palestine (d. 2004) ; Norma MacMillan, Canadian television voice actress known for the voices of the title characters in Casper the Friendly Ghost and Gumby, and \"Davey\" in Davey and Goliath; in Vancouver (d. 2001) ; Died: Roman von Ungern-Sternberg, 35, Austrian-born mercenary who took control of the government of Mongolia before being captured by the Soviet Army on August 20, was executed by a firing squad. ", "score": "1.5879464" }, { "id": "6518109", "title": "Nana Yaw Edward Ofori-Kuragu", "text": " Ofori-Kaguru was born on December 19, 1963. He hails from Tepaso, a town in the Ashanti Region of Ghana. He is a product of the University of East London, UK. He holds a Masters in Business Administration degree in Finance from the university. He acquired the degree in 1994.", "score": "1.5846598" }, { "id": "9604520", "title": "Mulatu Teshome", "text": " Mulatu was born in the town of Arjo in Welega Province. He was educated in China, receiving his bachelor's degree in philosophy of political economy and doctorate in international law at Peking University. He received his Master of Arts in Law and Diplomacy from The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University in 1990. He taught at some \"foreign universities and institutions\", according to Speaker Abadula Gemeda. In the mid-1990s he was Deputy Minister of Economic Development and Cooperation under Minister Girma Birru, and he was appointed as Minister of Agriculture in 2001. He was also Speaker of the House of Federation from 2002 to 2005. He served as Ethiopia's Ambassador to China, Japan, Turkey, and Azerbaijan. While serving as Ambassador to Turkey, he was elected as President of Ethiopia by a unanimous parliamentary vote on 7 October 2013. Girma Seifu of the Unity for Democracy and Justice, the sole opposition member of parliament, welcomed his election. Like his predecessors Girma Wolde-Giorgis and Negasso Gidada, he is Oromo. Mulatu has one son.", "score": "1.583148" }, { "id": "5311942", "title": "Josephat Obi Oguejiofor", "text": " Born in Nigeria, Oguejiofor graduated from Bigard Memorial Seminary with a First Class Honours in Philosophy. He studied at the University of London, and has a PhD in Philosophy from Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium. He started his lecturing career in 1987 at the Seat of Wisdom Major Seminary, Nigeria. Oguejiofor has been invited to lecture at the Catholic University of Louvain (1992–1994), and at the Institute of African Studies, University of Cologne, Germany (2001–2002). He was ordained a Catholic priest on August 15, 1986 at the Archdiocese of Onitsha, Nigeria. Oguejiofor is a past president of the Nigerian Philosophical Association, the Catholic Theological Association of Nigeria, and the International Society for African Philosophy and Studies. He was the editor-in-chief of UJAH: Unizik Journal of Arts and Humanities and OGIRISI: a New Journal of African Studies.", "score": "1.5795681" }, { "id": "30448138", "title": "Laban Ayiro", "text": " He was born in the Kibera slum in Nairobi. His parents were of modest means. His father, a driver, had friends whose economic means were better. One of those friends took in the young Ayiro because (a) Ayiro was a smart student and (b) that friend has a son and Ayiro would keep the son company. His first degree, a Bachelor of Education, was awarded by McGill University, in Canada, in 1984. His second degree, a Master of Science in Entrepreneurship, was awarded by Kenyatta University, one of Kenya's public universities. His third degree, a Master of Arts in International Relations, was awarded in 2004 by the United States International University Africa, based in Nairobi. His fourth degree, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entrepreneurship Development was awarded by Kenyatta University in 2008. In 2013, the University of the Witwatersrand, in South Africa, awarded him his fifth degree, a Master of Education, in Education Finance, Economics and Planning.", "score": "1.5683525" }, { "id": "32936836", "title": "T. M. Aluko", "text": " A Yoruba, Aluko was born in Ilesha in Nigeria and studied at Government College, Ibadan, and Higher College, Yaba in Lagos. He then studied civil engineering and town planning at the University of London. He held a number of administrative posts in his home country, including Director of Public Works in Western Nigeria. He departed from civil service in 1966 and from then until his retirement in 1978 he pursued a career as an academic, earning a doctorate in municipal engineering in 1976. He received several awards and honours including Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1963 and Officer Order of the Niger (OON) in ", "score": "1.5660402" }, { "id": "3007997", "title": "Nii Okwei Kinka Dowuona VI", "text": " Nii Okwei Kinka Dowuona VI was born at Adabraka, Accra, into the Dowuona royal family of Osu in 1963. He was born to Osu natives George Nii Noi Dowuona-Owoo and Grace Koshie Odarley Wellington. After completing his formal education at Swedru Secondary School in the Central Region of Ghana, he was recruited as a Banker and Computer Analyst by Société Générale - Social Security Bank (SG-SSB), later becoming a senior software programmer at the bank. He was also a commercial farmer, with extensive cocoa plantation holdings in the Enchi District of the Western Region of Ghana.", "score": "1.5639969" }, { "id": "7374497", "title": "Utut Adianto", "text": " Utut Adianto Wahyuwidayat was born in Jakarta on March 16, 1965. He is the fourth child of five children. He spent his childhood in Damai alley, near Cipete Market, South Jakarta. Utut studied at Padjadjaran University. He finished his studies in 1989, and worked in a in development company.", "score": "1.5629768" } ]
In what city was Gerard Thomas born?
[ "Antwerp", "Antwerpen", "City of Antwerp", "Anvers" ]
place of birth
Gerard Thomas
2,167,964
97
[ { "id": "8366339", "title": "Gérard Besson", "text": " Gérard was born on 20 January 1942 in Port of Spain as the only child of Joseph and Margaret Besson. His father was a white plantation overseer, his coloured mother worked in the oil industry. After the early separation of his parents, he grew up in the Catholic, Patois-speaking household of his maternal grandmother. After elementary school, he attended St. Thomas High School in Belmont until the age of 15 when he started working in insurance and in manufacturing companies. After he received an inheritance on the death of his grandmother he travelled to Europe and Great Britain where he unavailingly tried to gain ground as a painter and writer. After his return to Trinidad, he worked as ", "score": "1.6828208" }, { "id": "27406266", "title": "Thomas Gerard (historian)", "text": " He was born at Trent, in Somerset, in 1593 and was educated at Gloucester Hall, Oxford.", "score": "1.6480589" }, { "id": "16397780", "title": "Don Gerard", "text": " Gerard was born October 31, 1965 in Chicago, Illinois. He moved to Champaign, Illinois in 1968, where he attained the rank of Eagle Scout in local Boy Scout Troop 7. He attended the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign but did not complete his studies. Prior to serving as mayor, he began a job as a facilities manager at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign where he continues to work.", "score": "1.6122988" }, { "id": "15360267", "title": "Bumi Thomas", "text": " Thomas was born in Glasgow in June 1983.", "score": "1.6063199" }, { "id": "27527397", "title": "Gerard Thomas", "text": " Gerard Thomas (1663–1721) was a late Flemish Baroque painter who specialized in studio and picture gallery interiors. He became a master in Antwerp's Guild of St. Luke in 1688–89, and was dean twice. Many of his paintings reflect a trend in Antwerp painting around 1700 that shows artists—often historical masters from earlier in the century like Peter Paul Rubens, Anthony van Dyck or Jacob Jordaens—in their studios, surrounded by paintings and sculptures, and teaching the craft to a young apprentice. The masters are often only hinted by the works of art pictured in the painting itself, however.", "score": "1.6024529" }, { "id": null, "title": "Gerald Thomas (theatre director)", "text": "Gerald Thomas (theatre director)\n\nGerald Thomas Sievers, best known as simply Gerald Thomas (born July 1, 1954, Rio de Janeiro) is a theatre and opera director and playwright who has spent his life in the United States, England, Brazil and Germany. After graduating as a reader of philosophy at the British Museum Reading Room, Thomas began his life in the theater at Ellen Stewart's La MaMa E.T.C. in New York City. During this period Thomas became an illustrator for the Op-Ed page of the \"New York Times\" while conducting workshops at La MaMa E.T.C. where he adapted and directed world premieres of Samuel Beckett's prose and dramatic pieces.\n\nIn the early 80s, Thomas began working with Beckett himself in Paris (after a lot of correspondence had been exchanged between them for almost two years), adapting new fiction by the author. Of these, the more notorious were \"All Strange Away\" and \"That Time\" starring the Living Theatre founder, Julian Beck in his only stage acting role outside of his own company.\n\nIn the mid-80s, Thomas became involved with German author Heiner Müller, directing his works in the US and Brazil, and began a long-term partnership with American composer Philip Glass.\n\nIn 1985 Thomas formed and established his Dry Opera Company, in São Paulo. It has performed in 15 countries up until 2008 (see list of works below).\n\nIn 2009 he wrote a manifesto declaring his \"goodbye-to-theater\" yet, in 2010, Thomas announced to Stage News that he was to set up his Dry Opera Company in London. Its first production, \"Throats,\" written and directed by Thomas, began performances at the Pleasance Theater in Islington on Feb. 18, 2011.\n\nIn 2016, Thomas’s autobiography \"Between Two Lines\" or \"Entre Duas Fileiras\", is released by Grupo Editorial Record. The blurb on the back cover is by Oscar Nominee and Golden Globe winner Fernanda Montenegro (and protagonist of Thomas’s \"The Flash and Crash Days\") writes : \"Gerald Thomas exists by virtue of his devastating quality, his inconstancy, his nonconformity, his aggressiveness, his faith laden disbelief, his life affirming death cult; through his clear and powerful incongruence; by laughing and crying like an innocent and somehow ominous child, by loving the neighbor he hates; by being an unexpectedly good, adorable boy and friend; by accepting and forswearing you in seconds; by loving you madly, by cursing you while blessing you; for his devilish, eternal and nonconformist Art is monstrously creative. His Art is unique upon our stages and in our lives. If you have seen or experienced it, it will remain unforgotten.\"\n\nOn November 11, 2017, Gerald Thomas opened his new production “Diluvio” at SESC Anchieta- Consolação, in São Paulo, Brazil, after a three-year absence from the theater. Cast: Maria de Lima, Lisa Giobbi, Julia Wilkins, Ana Gabi, Beatrice Sayd, Isabella Lemos, André Bortolanza, Ronaldo Zero, Wagner Pinto and Dora Leão.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Momo Thomas", "text": "Momo Thomas\n\nGerard \"Momo\" Santwan Thomas (born April 14, 1990) is an American football cornerback who is currently a free agent. After playing college football for Colorado State University, he was signed by the Falcons as an undrafted free agent in 2013.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Geraint Thomas", "text": "Geraint Thomas\n\nGeraint Howell Thomas, (; born 25 May 1986) is a Welsh professional racing cyclist who currently rides for UCI WorldTeam , Wales and Great Britain. He is one of the few riders in the modern era to achieve significant elite success as both a track and road rider, with notable victories in the velodrome, in one-day racing and in stage racing. On the track, he has won three World Championships (2007, 2008, and 2012), and two Olympic gold medals (2008 and 2012), while on the road he won the 2018 Tour de France becoming the first Welshman and British-born rider to win it.\n\nHis early successes were in track cycling, in which he was a specialist in the team pursuit. He won three World Championships and was Olympic gold medallist twice, in 2008 and 2012. Thomas had an early win on the road at the 2004 Paris–Roubaix Juniors and later had a senior victory at the 2010 British National Road Race Championships. Leaving track cycling to focus solely on the road, he subsequently found success in both one-day/classic races such as the 2014 Commonwealth Games road race and the 2015 E3 Harelbeke, and in one week stage races, most notably at the 2016 Paris–Nice, the 2017 Tour of the Alps, the 2018 Critérium du Dauphiné, the 2020 Tour de Romandie and the 2022 Tour de Suisse.\n\nIn cycling's grand tours, Thomas was initially a lead domestique to Chris Froome in his victories. He won the first stage of the 2017 Tour de France, an individual time trial, to become the first Welshman to wear the Tour's yellow jersey. He later crashed in that race, as well as in the 2017 Giro d'Italia. Thomas became the first Welsh person ever to win the Tour de France when he won the tournament in 2018. He gained the yellow jersey by winning stage 11, extended his lead by winning stage 12, and retained the lead for the remainder of the event. In the same year he won the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award, becoming the first Welshman to win the ward since Ryan Giggs in 2009. In 2019, he confirmed his Grand Tour pedigree when he reached the podium again, having finished runner-up in the Tour de France behind Team Ineos teammate Egan Bernal. In 2022, Thomas became the first ever Welshman to win the Tour de Suisse and later that year won another podium finish at the 2022 Tour de France, placing third.\n\nNotable for his all-round ability and adaptability rather than mastery of one specialism, Thomas has been competitive in individual time-trials, on the cobbles, in the Spring classics and in the mountains of Grand Tours, where he was the first rider in the history of the Tour de France to win at Alpe d'Huez while in yellow.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Gerard Thomas Noel", "text": "Gerard Thomas Noel\n\nGerard Thomas Noel (1782–1851) was a Church of England cleric, known as a hymn writer.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Gerard McMahon", "text": "Gerard McMahon\n\nGerard Thomas McMahon, also known as Gerard McMann and G Tom Mac, is an English singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and producer who specialises in creating music for films and TV. His gothic rock anthem \"Cry Little Sister\" was recorded in 1987 for the soundtrack album of the cult horror film \"The Lost Boys\".", "score": null }, { "id": "9144862", "title": "Alma Thomas House", "text": " Built in 1875, by Thomas G. Allen, the Italianate row house was the residence and studio of noted African-American artist Alma Thomas (1892–1978). Rosa Douglass Sprague, daughter to Frederick Douglass, lived at 1530 15th Street, before Alma Thomas's parents moved in, in 1907. Noted African American artist Alma Thomas lived in the home until her death in 1978 along with a sister, J. Maurice Thomas. John Maurice Thomas, who was named for their father, lived at the home until her death in 2004, and the home passed to a nephew, who later sold the home. The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and is a contributing property to the Greater Fourteenth Street Historic District.", "score": "1.592786" }, { "id": "526472", "title": "Jack N. Gerard", "text": " Gerard was raised in Mud Lake, Idaho. His father was a salesman of John Deere tractors. For a year out of high school Gerard was a student at the University of Idaho. He then served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Sydney, Australia. He later graduated from George Washington University (GWU).", "score": "1.5831301" }, { "id": "32512823", "title": "Gerald Thomas (theatre director)", "text": " Gerald Thomas Sievers, best known as simply Gerald Thomas (born July 1, 1954, Rio de Janeiro ) is a theatre and opera director and playwright who has spent his life in the United States, England, Brazil and Germany. After graduating as a reader of philosophy at the British Museum Reading Room, Thomas began his life in the theater at Ellen Stewart's La MaMa E.T.C. in New York City. During this period Thomas became an illustrator for the Op-Ed page of the New York Times while conducting workshops at La MaMa E.T.C. where he adapted and directed world premieres of Samuel Beckett's prose and dramatic pieces. In the early 80s, Thomas began working with Beckett himself in Paris ", "score": "1.5819395" }, { "id": "3463656", "title": "Christopher Gérard", "text": " Christopher Gérard was born to an Irish mother and a Belgian father. At age twelve, he was the youngest member of a team of archeologists who searched a Merovingian necropolis in the Ardennes. He studied classical philology at the Université libre de Bruxelles. He became a language teacher by profession.", "score": "1.5778158" }, { "id": "1116591", "title": "Robin Thomas", "text": " Born in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, Thomas attended the Mercersburg Academy and graduated in 1967. Thomas earned a BFA from Carnegie-Mellon University where he was accepted into the drama department as an actor. Transitioning in his junior year to the Sociology department, he graduated from the Art department with a major in sculpture. Upon graduation he moved to New York. Thomas spent his early years in New York as a carpenter, specializing in renovations of restaurants and apartments. He also worked as a sculptor, creating kinetic works employing plexiglas, stainless steel, teflon, water, oil, air, pumps, motors, and lights. His works were exhibited at the Huntsville Museum of Art, The Three Rivers Arts Festival, and at various galleries in SoHo. He was invited to create works for Tiffany's windows for two consecutive years. While in New York, he also started a construction company renovating lofts and apartments to augment his income as an artist.", "score": "1.5766864" }, { "id": "12815959", "title": "Gerard", "text": "Gerard Joling (born 1960), Dutch pop singer ; Gerard Mortier (1943–2014), Belgian opera director and administrator ; Gerard Nolan (1946–1992), American rock drummer ; Gerard Schwarz (born 1947), American conductor ; Gerard Way (born 1977), American singer-songwriter and comic book writer ", "score": "1.5482645" }, { "id": "15098937", "title": "Sir Thomas Gerard, 1st Baronet", "text": " Sir Thomas Gerard, 1st Baronet (1560 – 16 February 1621) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1597 and 1621. Gerard was the son of Sir Thomas Gerard, of Bryn Hall and his wife Elizabeth Port, daughter of Sir John Port, of Etwall, Derbyshire. His brother Fr. John Gerard, was later ordained a Roman Catholic priest of the Society of Jesus and operated an underground ministry in Elizabethan England. Thomas Gerard matriculated at Brasenose College, Oxford on 20 July 1578, aged 18. In 1579 he was a student of the Inner Temple. His parents and brother John were Catholics and ", "score": "1.5471964" }, { "id": "2691039", "title": "Thomas Gerard, 1st Baron Gerard", "text": " Thomas Gerard, 1st Baron Gerard (c. 1564 – 15 January 1618) was a Staffordshire and Lancashire landowner and politician, a member of six English parliaments for three different constituencies. Although a prominent member of the Essex faction in the reign of Elizabeth I, he avoided involvement in the Essex Rebellion and received greater honours, including a peerage, in the reign of James I.", "score": "1.5460274" }, { "id": "27406270", "title": "Thomas Gerard (historian)", "text": "Thomas Gerard of Trent, 2011 article, Dorset Ancestors website ", "score": "1.5392942" }, { "id": "2691040", "title": "Thomas Gerard, 1st Baron Gerard", "text": "Sir Gilbert Gerard of Ince, Lancashire, and Gerrard's Bromley, Staffordshire. Gilbert was a distinguished barrister who was appointed Attorney General at the beginning of Elizabeth's reign and held the post for more than 22 years, until he was appointed Master of the Rolls in 1581. He was an important figure in the imposition of the Elizabethan Religious Settlement. ; Anne Ratcliffe, daughter of Thomas Ratcliffe of Winmarleigh, Lancashire. An heiress who brought considerable wealth to the marriage, her wardship was held by Sir John Holcroft, Gilbert Gerard's uncle, who arranged the marriage. Like many of the Lancashire gentry, she remained a Catholic to the end of her life. Thomas Gerard's parents were: Thomas Gerard was educated privately by a Thomas Taylor. It is thought his childhood was spent in the south of England, as he was described as coming from Harrow on the Hill at his admission to Caius College, Cambridge, in 1580, aged 16. He was first returned to the House of Commons of England aged only 20, as member for Lancaster.", "score": "1.5382009" }, { "id": "27433299", "title": "Michel Thomas", "text": " Thomas was born in Łódź, Poland, to a wealthy Jewish family who owned textile factories. When he was seven years old, his parents sent him to Breslau, Germany (now Wrocław, Poland), where he fitted in comfortably. The rise of the Nazis drove him to leave for the University of Bordeaux in France in 1933, and subsequently the Sorbonne and the University of Vienna.", "score": "1.5381305" }, { "id": "29272925", "title": "Regis Deon Thomas", "text": " Thomas was born on June 16, 1970. He was the oldest of four children and grew up in South-Central Los Angeles. He was a member of the Bounty Hunter Bloods street gang, a Bloods subset based out of Watts, Los Angeles, California. Thomas was convicted of perjury in 1990. He had once worked at a liquor store as a security guard, but the building was burned down during the 1992 Los Angeles riots, resulting in Thomas being out of work for a year.", "score": "1.5377901" }, { "id": "24953795", "title": "Jay Thomas", "text": " Thomas was born in Kermit, Texas, to Katharine (née Guzzino) and Timothy Harry Terrell. He was raised in his Italian American mother's Catholic religion; his father was Protestant. Thomas was raised in New Orleans, where he attended and graduated from Jesuit High School. He went on to attend and graduate from Jacksonville University. Thomas was the quarterback on his high-school football team and also quarterbacked in college, a skill he later used on The Late Show with David Letterman.", "score": "1.5367613" }, { "id": "27269379", "title": "Leo Gerard", "text": " Gerard was born in 1947 in Creighton Mine, Ontario, at the time an unincorporated suburb of Sudbury. His father, Wilfred Gerard, was a miner at the Creighton Mine and a key organizer with the International Mine Mill and Smelter Workers' Union (which merged with the United Steelworkers in 1967). He grew up in Sudbury. Taught that unions were supposed to be engaged on social issues and not just collective bargaining, Gerard often listened in on union meetings conducted in the family home. He handed out leaflets on the eve of a strike at the age of 11, and accompanied his father on a union organizing drive at the age ", "score": "1.5350221" }, { "id": "26241635", "title": "Olivier Thomas", "text": " Thomas was born in Saint-Denis, Paris. He counts Le Mans UC 72, AS Nancy, Troyes AC, FC Nantes Atlantique and AC Ajaccio as his former clubs.", "score": "1.5325191" } ]
In what city was Ricardo Sánchez born?
[ "Guadalajara", "Guadalajara, Jalisco", "Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico", "Guadalajara, Mexico", "Guadalajara, México" ]
place of birth
Ricardo Sánchez (footballer)
6,450,718
81
[ { "id": "2266323", "title": "Ricardo Sánchez (journalist)", "text": " Sánchez was born in Guanabacoa, Cuba, a township of Havana, and emigrated to the United States with his parents at the age of two. He grew up in Hialeah, Florida, a suburb of Miami, and attended Mae M. Walters Elementary School, Henry H. Filer Middle School, and Hialeah High School, graduating in 1977. Sánchez accepted a football scholarship to Minnesota State University Moorhead and transferred to the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis on a CBS/WCCO Journalism Scholarship in 1979. Of his childhood Sánchez has said: \"I grew up not speaking English, dealing with real prejudice every day as a kid; watching my dad work in a factory, wash dishes, drive a truck, get spit on. I've been told that I can't do certain things in life simply because I was a Hispanic.\" He prefers to be called Rick Sánchez rather than use his birth name. He said in a newscast in 2009: \"I want to be respectful of this wonderful country that allowed us as Hispanics to come here, and I think it's easier if someone's able to understand me by Anglicizing my name.\"", "score": "1.8059478" }, { "id": "1991041", "title": "Ricardo Sanchez (musician)", "text": " Sánchez was born, Ricardo Ángel Sánchez, on October 2, 1967, in Scottsdale, Arizona, Arizona, to parents Vicente and Fransica Sanchez, the youngest of six siblings, four brothers and a sister. He grew up in the Catholic Church, where he went to services alone, and was in a mariachi group with his father, when he was five years-old. Sánchez eventually became a non-denominational Protestant, at The Free Chapel in Gainesville, Georgia, just outside Atlanta, Georgia, before relocating to San Antonio, Texas, to join John Hagee's Cornerstone Church.", "score": "1.7206106" }, { "id": "15695629", "title": "Luis Rafael Sánchez", "text": " Sánchez was born and raised by his parents in the city of Humacao, Puerto Rico, in the eastern part of Puerto Rico. There he received his primary education. His family moved to San Juan, where Sánchez continued to receive his secondary and higher education. He enrolled in the University of Puerto Rico in 1955 after graduating from high school, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree. It was during his days as a student at the university that he became interested in acting. Sánchez's interest in literature led him to enroll at the City University of New York where in 1959 he earned his master's degree in dramatic arts. He eventually went to Madrid, Spain and earned his Doctorate in Literature in 1976 from the Complutense University of Madrid.", "score": "1.6945064" }, { "id": "16309472", "title": "Abel Sanchez", "text": " Sanchez was born in Tijuana, Mexico in 1955 and immigrated to San Marin, California with his family at the age of six.", "score": "1.6578336" }, { "id": "26656491", "title": "Cuco Sánchez", "text": " Sánchez was born in Altamira, a port city on the Gulf of Mexico, to José Refugio Sánchez and Felipa Saldaña Cabello. He began writing verses in his early years and later learned how to play the guitar. In 1937, at age 15, he wrote his first hit song, \"Mi chata\", which was recorded by the duet Las Serranitas. In the same year he began singing on the XEW radio station, where he eventually had his own program. Because of his young age and overnight success as a songwriter, he came to be known as El Benjamín de los Compositores (literally \"The Benjamin of Songwriters\", or \"The Youngest of Songwriters\"). \"Mr. Emilio Azcárraga Vidaurreta [the owner of ", "score": "1.6486611" }, { "id": null, "title": "Ricardo Sanchez", "text": "Ricardo Sanchez\n\nRicardo Sanchez (born September 9, 1953) is a former lieutenant general in the United States Army. His career was most notable for his service as commander of Multi-National Force – Iraq and V Corps.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ricardo Sanchez (musician)", "text": "Ricardo Sanchez (musician)\n\nRicardo Ángel Sánchez (born October 2, 1967) is an American Christian musician, guitarist, and worship leader, who is a Grammy-nominated GMA Dove Award-winning songwriter. He has released four albums, \"Unmerited\", \"Oh What a God\", \"It's Not Over\", and \"Grand Symphony\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ricardo Sánchez (footballer)", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ricardo Sánchez (poet)", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ricardo Sánchez Gálvez", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "11128328", "title": "Joe Sánchez", "text": " Sánchez is a native of Santurce, Puerto Rico, and one of five siblings born to Jose Sánchez and Clotilde Picon. In the early 1950s his parents moved to New York City in search of a better life, and settled in Manhattan. When his parents divorced, his mother remarried and moved the family to the South Bronx. There Sánchez received his primary and secondary education. Upon graduation from Theodore Roosevelt High School, he joined the United States Armed Forces.", "score": "1.6331446" }, { "id": "5785763", "title": "José María Sánchez Borbón", "text": " He was born on Solarte Island, in the Bocas del Toro Archipielago, on July 25, 1918. Sánchez Borbón attended primary school in San Jose, Costa Rica. In 1938 he graduated from the Instituto Nacional de Panama as Bachelor in Literature and then as lawyer at the University of Panama.", "score": "1.613466" }, { "id": "27959585", "title": "José María Sánchez Martínez", "text": " Sánchez was born in Lorca, Murcia. He is an economist and works as a bank employee.", "score": "1.6108227" }, { "id": "1991040", "title": "Ricardo Sanchez (musician)", "text": " Ricardo Ángel Sánchez (born October 2, 1967) is an American Christian musician, guitarist, and worship leader, who is a Grammy-nominated GMA Dove Award-winning songwriter. He has released four albums, Unmerited, Oh What a God, It's Not Over, and Grand Symphony.", "score": "1.6101552" }, { "id": "2266322", "title": "Ricardo Sánchez (journalist)", "text": " Ricardo \"Rick\" León Sánchez de Reinaldo (born July 3, 1958) is a Cuban-American journalist, radio host, and author. He is an RT America contributor, and was previously a columnist for Fox News and Fox News Latino, and a former correspondent for Spanish language network Mundo Fox. After some years as the lead local anchor on Miami's WSVN, Sánchez moved to cable news, first as a daytime anchor at MSNBC, later at CNN, where he began as a correspondent and ultimately rose to become an anchor. On CNN, he hosted his own show Rick's List and served as a contributor to Anderson Cooper 360° and CNN International, where he frequently reported and translated between English and Spanish. Sánchez was fired from CNN on October 1, 2010, following controversial remarks he made on a radio program. In July 2011, Sánchez was hired by Florida International University, to serve as a color commentator for radio broadcasts of the school's football team. Since October 2018, he has hosted News with Rick Sanchez on RT America.", "score": "1.6008375" }, { "id": "33108040", "title": "José María Sánchez-Silva", "text": " Sanchez-Silva was born in Madrid. His father, also José María Sánchez Silva, was a journalist close to anarchism, writing in the journal Earth, who went into exile in 1939. The family had been unstructured and the son (Sánchez-Silva) at times was practically a vagrant child. He joined institutions for orphans and children at risk such as the Brown School of Madrid (Madrid City Hall dependent). In these institutions he learned typing and shorthand, which earned him a stenographer's position in Madrid.", "score": "1.6004983" }, { "id": "2600523", "title": "Serafín Sánchez", "text": " Sánchez was born on 2 of July of 1846, three in the city of Sancti Spiritus, Cuba. He was one of the 22 children of Don Joaquín Sánchez Marín and Doña Isabel María de Valdivia y Salas, who came from families from Spiritus with a well-off economic position. His youth passed between the city and the country. He completed primary studies at a Jesuit college in his hometown. He managed to graduate as a surveyor, but he always longed to be a teacher, a job he would do in the heat of war. His ideals, ingrained since childhood, allowed him to shed a life dependent on his parents.", "score": "1.60014" }, { "id": "14623703", "title": "Antonio José Sánchez Mazuecos", "text": " Antonio José was born on 2 January 1995 in the town of Palma del Río, Córdoba, Spain. His father, Antonio Sánchez, is an AVE maintenance technician, and his mother, María Mazuecos, is a housewife and fond of music. Since childhood he is a football fan, and his father, who was the local football coach, tried to make him a professional football player. In fact, Antonio José was successful, becoming runner-up in national futsal competitions. However, his mother tried to bring him closer to the world of music, taking her son regularly to castings. He also assisted to singing and guitar lessons from a young age. In August 2005, when he was 10, he participated in the television show Veo, Veo, directed by Canal Sur, getting second place. Afterwards, he appeared at the casting of the show organized by Televisión ", "score": "1.5995579" }, { "id": "3294362", "title": "Eleuterio Sánchez", "text": " Eleuterio Sánchez Rodríguez was born in 1942 in Salamanca, in western Spain. He was born into a desperately poor merchero peasant family while his father was in prison. He never received any formal education as a child and was illiterate.", "score": "1.5969912" }, { "id": "3875299", "title": "Rafael Sánchez Navarro", "text": " Rafael Sánchez Navarro (born 1958) is a Spanish-Mexican actor. He is the son of Manolo Fábregas, an actor from Spain who established himself in Mexico, who also acted in Puerto Rico and whose birth name is Ricardo Sánchez Navarro. Sanchez Navarro is also the cousin of Manuel Sánchez Navarro, who in turn is the son of Fábregas' sister, famous actress Viviana Fábregas, his aunt.", "score": "1.5792224" }, { "id": "8838484", "title": "Marcelino Sánchez", "text": " Sánchez began acting in the late 1970s. His first major role was in the film, The Warriors (1979), playing the character of Rembrandt, a young, gang member with a flair for spray painting. He played Ricardo on The Bloodhound Gang mystery vignettes featured on the 1980s children's educational television show 3-2-1 Contact. He appeared in roles on CHiPs and Hill Street Blues as well as the feature film 48 Hrs.", "score": "1.5787585" }, { "id": "964497", "title": "Carlos Sánchez (Uruguayan footballer)", "text": " Born in Montevideo, Sánchez was abandoned by his father at the age of eight, and lived with his mother and four brothers in his uncle's house; around that time, he also adopted his shaved hairstyle, after \"not standing his loaded hair\". With his mother working as a domestic employee and his uncle as a bricklayer, Sánchez worked part-time on a bakery to help on providing food to the family.", "score": "1.5768316" }, { "id": "2970595", "title": "Narciso Rodriguez", "text": " Rodriguez was born in Newark, New Jersey, the eldest child and only son of Cuban parents. His parents, Narciso Rodríguez Sanchez II, a longshoreman, and Rawedia María Rodríguez. His paternal grandfather was born on the Canary Islands. His parents were against Narciso entering fashion. He was educated at the New School in New York, studying at their art and design college, Parsons The New School for Design. He graduated St Cecilias High School in 1979, a small Catholic school in Kearny NJ.", "score": "1.5734513" }, { "id": "14410166", "title": "Billy Sánchez", "text": " Sánchez was born in 1966 in Bayamón, Puerto Rico. He received a Bachelor's degree in Educational Technology from the Bayamón Central University. He also received another degree in Security and Protection from the University of Puerto Rico.", "score": "1.5733885" }, { "id": "7352255", "title": "Luis Sánchez Morales", "text": " Sanchez was born on November 27, 1867 in San Juan, to Manuel Sánchez Apellaniz (1847-1884) and his mother Ana Morales Seijo (1853-1915). He had two younger brothers, Manuel (1872-1924) and Francisco (1879-1948). He studied in Ciales and in San Juan, Puerto Rico. In 1884, with his father, he founded a commercial enterprise. In addition to running the family business, he delved into literature, writing for newspapers and magazines during the latter part of the 19th century, before becoming involved in politics. He represented the Puerto Rican Republican Party, founded by Dr. José Celso Barbosa in 1899, in Washington during the discussions leading to the approval of Puerto Rico's first Organic Act, known as the Foraker Act of 1900. ", "score": "1.5725485" } ]
In what city was Bruno Nöckler born?
[ "Prettau", "Predoi" ]
place of birth
Bruno Nöckler
617,409
59
[ { "id": "2079655", "title": "Bruno Nöckler", "text": " Bruno Nöckler (6 October 1956 – 17 August 1982) was an Italian alpine skier who competed in the 1980 Winter Olympics at Lake Placid, where he finished in sixth place overall in the giant slalom.", "score": "1.808995" }, { "id": "12071735", "title": "Bruno Cassirer", "text": " He was born on 12 December 1872 in Breslau, the second child of Jewish parents, Julius and Julcher Cassirer. Julius was a partner, with two of Bruno's cousins, in a cable factory. Julius completed his final school examination in 1890 at the Leibniz-Gymnasium. In 1898, together with his cousin Paul Cassirer, he opened a gallery and bookshop at 35 Viktoriastraße near Kemperplatz, Berlin. On 2 May 1898 the artists' association Berlin Secession was established with Paul and Bruno as secretaries. For three years they acquainted the art and literature scenes of Berlin with the newest waves from Belgian, English, French and Russian culture. In 1901, Bruno and Paul divided the business into separate parts, with Paul running the gallery and art dealership, whilst Bruno owned the publishing side which relocated to 15 Derfflingerstraße. In 1902 he founded the ", "score": "1.6025486" }, { "id": "867695", "title": "Erwin Noack", "text": " Erwin Noack (born 4 August 1940 in Uetersen, Hamburg - died 11 November 2006 in Bremen) was a German artist and musician. He was known for his murals of various buildings in Bremen and as the percussionist of Thirsty Moon, a German progressive-rock-jazz band.", "score": "1.5923297" }, { "id": "32494457", "title": "Bruno Steinhoff", "text": " Bruno Steinhoff was born in November 1937.", "score": "1.5716095" }, { "id": "14632030", "title": "Bruno Bettelheim", "text": " Bruno Bettelheim was born in Vienna, Austria-Hungary, on August 28, 1903. When his father died, Bettelheim left his studies at the University of Vienna to look after his family's sawmill. Having discharged his obligations to his family's business, Bettelheim returned as a mature student in his thirties to the University of Vienna. Sources disagree about his education (see section Misrepresented credentials). Bettelheim's first wife, Gina, took care of a troubled American child, Patsy, who lived in their home in Vienna for seven years, and who may or may not have been on the autism spectrum. In the Austrian academic culture of Bettelheim's time, one could not study the history of art without mastering aspects of psychology. Candidates for the doctoral dissertation in the History of Art in 1938 at Vienna University had to fulfill prerequisites in the formal study of the role of Jungian archetypes ", "score": "1.5581378" }, { "id": null, "title": "Bruno Nöckler", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "October 1956", "text": "October 1956\n\nThe following events occurred in October 1956:\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Trichinella spiralis", "text": "Trichinella spiralis\n\nTrichinella spiralis is a viviparous nematode parasite, occurring in rodents, pigs, bears, hyenas and humans, and is responsible for the disease trichinosis. It is sometimes referred to as the \"pork worm\" due to it being typically encountered in undercooked pork products. It should not be confused with the distantly related pork tapeworm.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Trichinosis", "text": "Trichinosis\n\nTrichinosis, also known as trichinellosis, is a parasitic disease caused by roundworms of the \"Trichinella\" type.\nTrichinosis is mainly spread when undercooked meat containing \"Trichinella\" cysts is eaten. Several species of \"Trichinella\" can cause disease, with \"T. spiralis\" being the most common.<ref name=CDC2013DP/> After the infected meat has been eaten, the larvae are released from their cysts in the stomach.<ref name=CDC2013DP/> They then invade the wall of the small intestine, where they develop into adult worms.<ref name=CDC2013DP/> After one week, the females release new larvae that migrate to voluntarily controlled muscles, where they form cysts.<ref name=CDC2013DP/> The diagnosis is usually based on symptoms and confirmed by finding specific antibodies in the blood, or larvae on tissue biopsy.<ref name=CDC2013DP/>\nThe best way to prevent trichinosis is to fully cook meat. Infection is typically treated with antiparasitic medication such as albendazole or mebendazole. Without treatment, symptoms typically resolve within three months.<ref name=Mason2014/>\nWorldwide, about 10,000 infections occur a year.<ref name=CDC2012Epi/> At least 55 countries including the United States, China, Argentina, and Russia have had recently documented cases.<ref name=Mason2014/> While the disease occurs in the tropics, it is less common there.<ref name=Mason2014/> Rates of trichinosis in the United States have decreased from about 400 cases per year in the 1940s to 20 or fewer per year in the 2000s.<ref name=CDC2012Epi>\n</ref> The risk of death from infection is low.\nSection::::Signs and symptoms.\nThe great majority of trichinosis infections have either minor or no symptoms and no complications. The two main phases for the infection are enteral (affecting the intestines) and parenteral (outside the intestines). The symptoms vary depending on the phase, species of \"Trichinella\", quantity of encysted larvae ingested, age, sex, and host immunity.<ref name=\"five\"/>", "score": null }, { "id": "4589393", "title": "Gustav Winckler", "text": "Gustav Winckler Gustav Frands Wilzeck Winckler (13 October 1925 – 20 January 1979) was a popular Danish singer, composer and music publisher. He grew up in the Nørrebro district of Copenhagen and started his career as a decorator. In 1948 as a young man he won a talent competition at National Scala Theatre in Copenhagen, as well as many others in Copenhagen. He was often compared to Bing Crosby. He finally broke through in 1950 with engagements, regular appearances on Danmarks Radio and his first professional recording. Through the 1950s he recorded and toured in Denmark, Germany (under the name", "score": "1.5532227" }, { "id": "29863810", "title": "Bruno Fischer", "text": " The son of a grocer, Fischer was born in Berlin, Germany, on 29 June 1908. Bruno emigrated to the United States with his family in 1913, attending high school in Long Island. He later attended the Rand School of Social Science and married Ruth Miller, a secretary, in 1934. Fischer became a sports reporter and then police reporter for the Long Island Daily Press (1929–31), following this with stints writing and editing at the Labor Voice (1931–32), Socialist Call (1934–36), and Modern Monthly. In the 1936 election he ran as a candidate for New York's 14th district, and in 1938 he ran for the New York ", "score": "1.553746" }, { "id": "32777685", "title": "Bruno Héroux", "text": " \"On 14 February, Prof. Bruno Héroux, the widely known Leipzig graphic artist who celebrated his 75th birthday only on 20 December last year, died in a Leipzig hospital, where he was seeking healing from a serious internal illness. Since his birth, Bruno Héroux has been closely associated with the imperial trade fair city, where he developed his pencil art and thus significantly promoted Leipzig's fame as one of the focal points of graphic work. His main significance was as an etcher. His plates, which he produced with the utmost technical subtlety, are unforgotten. On some of them he pondered the deepest secrets of life, on others he gave intoxicating expression to ", "score": "1.5516741" }, { "id": "29848096", "title": "Bruno Nettl", "text": " Bruno Nettl was born in Prague, Czechoslovakia in 1930, and he was the son of Paul and Gertrude Nettl, who both had musical backgrounds. In 1939, Nettl and his family moved to the US to escape the Holocaust, which caused several deaths within his family. He studied at Indiana University with George Herzog and the University of Michigan and taught from 1964 at the University of Illinois, where he eventually was named Professor Emeritus of Music and Anthropology. Nettl met his wife, Wanda Maria White, while he was a student at Indiana University and the couple married in 1952. Bruno and Wanda had two children, Rebecca and Gloria. The Nettl’s were a connected family, as his daughters continued living in Champaign even in their adult lives, and Bruno ", "score": "1.5516038" }, { "id": "28140598", "title": "Bruno Ngotty", "text": " Ngotty was born in Lyon.", "score": "1.5512109" }, { "id": "31880844", "title": "Bruno Vogel", "text": " Bruno Vogel was born on 29 September 1898 in Leipzig. He spent his childhood in Bohemia. In 1916, he fought in the First World War, first on the border of the Austro-Hungarian empire, then in the Baltic, and in Flanders by 1917. In 1922, he founded the gay group Gemeinschaft Wir (\"We the Community\") under the aegis of Magnus Hirschfeld. It was the local chapter in Leipzig of the Scientific-Humanitarian Committee, one of the largest gay groups in Germany from 1896 to 1933. In the mid-20s, after his parents put him out on the streets for being gay, he moved to Berlin, and he founded the Revolutionary Pacifists Group with Kurt Hiller. In 1928, ", "score": "1.546567" }, { "id": "10952195", "title": "Bruno Ahrends", "text": " Bruno Arons was born in Berlin, Germany on 9 April 1878 as the eldest son of Berlin banker Barthold Arons (1850–1933) and his wife Bertha (1855–1932). He was raised in wealthy conditions in Villa Arons close to Großer Wannsee southwest of Germany’s capital. He had two younger siblings, Katharine (1879–1969) and Edmund (1883–1965). His uncle was the entrepreneur, philanthropist and patron of the arts, Henri James Simon. Due to cultural assimilation, in 1904 he changed his biblical family name Arons to the German sounding Ahrends, possibly at the same time that he and his siblings converted to Christianity. That same year he married Johanna Springer (1882–1970), the granddaughter of German publisher Julius Springer. They became three sons and one daughter, Hans Peter Bruno Ahrends (1905–2001), Steffen Ahrends (1907–1992), who also became an architect, Marianne (1910–1994) and Gottfried Bruno (born 1917).", "score": "1.54421" }, { "id": "8465647", "title": "Gustav Winckler", "text": " Gustav Frands Wilzeck Winckler (13 October 1925 &ndash; 20 January 1979) was a popular Danish singer, composer and music publisher. He grew up in the Nørrebro district of Copenhagen and started his career as a decorator. In 1948 as a young man he won a talent competition at National Scala Theatre in Copenhagen, as well as many others in Copenhagen. He was often compared to Bing Crosby. He finally broke through in 1950 with engagements, regular appearances on Danmarks Radio and his first professional recording. Through the 1950s he recorded and toured in Denmark, Germany (under the name Gunnar Winkler) and England (under the ", "score": "1.5412364" }, { "id": "26653174", "title": "Mirco Nontschew", "text": " Nontschew was born in East Berlin, on 29 October 1969. His father Vasko Nontschew was a musician who had emigrated to East Germany from Bulgaria and his mother was a journalist. Following his parents' wishes, he learned to be a mechanic in the VEB Medizinische Geräte Berlin. On 28 July 1989, he first appeared on stage as a beatboxer and breakdancer with his group \"Downtown Lyrics\" in Radebeul near Dresden. He also played piano and drums. Shortly afterwards, he emigrated to West Germany.", "score": "1.5406016" }, { "id": "24918132", "title": "Bruno Sammartino", "text": " Bruno Leopoldo Francesco Sammartino was born in Pizzoferrato, Abruzzo, Italy, to Alfonso and Emilia Sammartino on October 6, 1935. He was the youngest of seven children, four of whom died during his early childhood. When he was four, his father emigrated to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. During World War II, his mother hid him and his siblings from German soldiers in a mountain called Valla Rocca. During this time, his mother would sneak into their German-occupied town for food and supplies. In 1950, she and the children joined her husband in Pittsburgh. When the Sammartinos arrived in the U.S., Bruno spoke no English and was sickly from the privations of the war years. This made him an easy target for bullies at Schenley High School. He turned to weightlifting and wrestling to build ", "score": "1.5392574" }, { "id": "8116248", "title": "Bruno Bernard", "text": " Bernard was born into poverty on February 2, 1912, in Berlin, Germany. He was put in an orphanage by parents who could not afford to support him. In 1923, his parents gave him a Rolleiflex camera, which led to a lifelong interest in photography. He attended Kiel University, where, in 1934, he earned a doctorate in criminal psychology. He became the general secretary of a Jewish youth organization, which led to his name appearing on a Gestapo hit list. In 1937, he fled to America from Nazi Germany, claiming to German authorities that he was leaving the country to continue his graduate studies. He attended the University of California, Berkeley, where he planned to continue his education but soon became interested in the arts. In 1940, he became a directorial apprentice at the Reinhardt School of the Theatre, opened by Max Reinhardt on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles.", "score": "1.5380371" }, { "id": "15625408", "title": "Chur", "text": "Robert Platow (1900–1982 in Chur), German journalist, founder and publisher of the Platow Brief ; Heinrich Willi (1900–1971), pediatrician who co-discovered Prader–Willi syndrome ; Andreas Walser (1908–1930), a Swiss painter in Paris ; Gustav Guanella (1909–1982), a Swiss inventor, developed high-frequency electronics ; Meinrad Schütter (1910–2006), a Swiss composer ; Rudolf Olgiati (1910–1995), local architect, of the New Objectivity movement ; H. R. Giger (1940–2014), visual artist, painter and Oscar winner ; Peter Zumthor (born 1943), an uncompromising and minimalist Swiss architect, works in Chur ; Alex P. Schmid (born 1943), a Swiss-born Dutch scholar in terrorism studies and former Officer-in-Charge of the Terrorism Prevention Branch of the United Nations ; Mario Illien (born 1946), engineer, specialising in motorsport engine design ; Robert Indermaur (born 1947), a Swiss painter and sculptor ; Hans Danuser (born 1953), a Swiss artist and photographer ; Corin Curschellas (born 1956), a Swiss singer-songwriter, vocalist, free improvisation, actress and voice actress ; Valerio Olgiati (born 1958), renowned architect of Grisonian buildings ; Raphael Zuber (born 1973), architect ; Adrian J. Meier (born 1976), politician of local council and explorer ; Rebecca Indermaur (born c. 1977), a Swiss film and television actress ", "score": "1.5336249" }, { "id": "26171961", "title": "Hubert Blaine Wolfeschlegelsteinhausenbergerdorff Sr.", "text": " was born in Bergedorf (now part of Hamburg), Germany, and later emigrated to the United States, settling in Philadelphia. His birthdate has been given as February 29, 1904, but he was also reported to be age 47 in a 1964 wire story, and Philadelphia County death records list a birthdate of August 4, 1914. He became a typesetter according to Bennett Cerf. His name first attracted attention when it appeared in the 1938 Philadelphia telephone directory on page 1292, column 3, line 17, and in a court order of judge John Boyle of May 25, 1938: \", Jr., etc., vs. Yellow Cab Co., petition for compromise settlement granted\"—with speculation that the case was ", "score": "1.5300152" }, { "id": "3691878", "title": "Bruno Streckenbach", "text": " Bruno Streckenbach was born in Hamburg, Germany on 7 February 1902. His highest education was Gymnasium, which he left in April 1918 to voluntarily report to the German Army during World War I. Just like his close colleagues Erwin Schulz and Heinrich Himmler, he never served on the front lines of the battlefield due to the ceasefire that took place in November 1918. After the end of the First World War, he was an active member of the Freikorps Bahrenfeld, which took part in the 1920 Kapp-Putsch. He was employed as a wholesale merchant, tried his hand at advertising, being a radio editor and also trying to establish himself as the director of a local office.", "score": "1.5296354" }, { "id": "5777443", "title": "Thomas Nölle", "text": " Thomas Nölle (Soest, Germany, December 2, 1948 – Badalona (Barcelona), Spain, June 3, 2020) was a visual artist. He was born in the German city of Soest, in Westphalia. Nölle’s experimental drive facilitated his work in various disciplines and with a diversity of techniques, including photography, painting, collage, sculpture, assemblage, environment art, mixed media, video, installation art, action art and interventions in public space.", "score": "1.5293955" }, { "id": "2079656", "title": "Bruno Nöckler", "text": " In World Cup racing, he finished on the podium twice – in third place in the slalom on 27 February 1977 in Furano, Japan and in the giant slalom on 11 February 1981 in Voss, Norway. At World Championships Schladming 1982, Nöckler finished 5th in Giant Slalom. His best results in Alpine World Cup: 3rd - Slalom Furano 27 February 1977, 4th – Giant Slalom Aare 21 March 1977, 5th – Slalom Kitzbuehel 13 January 1980, 4th Giant Slalom Adelboden 21 January 1980, 5th - Giant Slalom Morzine 6 January 1981, 4th Giant Slalom Schladming 3 February 1981, 3rd Giant Slalom Voss 11 February 1981. In Italian Championships 1980/81 he was victorious in Slalom und finished second in Giant Slalom.", "score": "1.5291839" } ]
In what city was Gloria Porras Valles born?
[ "Baja California Sur", "South Lower California", "Free and Sovereign State of Baja California Sur", "South Territory of Baja California", "MX-BCS", "BCS", "MX03", "Estado de Baja California Sur" ]
place of birth
Gloria Porras Valles
1,514,591
61
[ { "id": "9412213", "title": "Gloria Porras Valles", "text": " Gloria Porras Valles (born 16 April 1960) is a Mexican politician from the Institutional Revolutionary Party. In 2012 she served as Deputy of the LXI Legislature of the Mexican Congress representing Baja California Sur.", "score": "1.912779" }, { "id": "32974060", "title": "Gloria Ortiz Delgado", "text": " Ortiz was born in Suan Juan de Pasto, Narino on 7 January 1969. She has a degree in law from the Universidad Externado de Colombia, postgraduate specialisation in Constitutional Law from the University of the Andes and a Master's in Law with an emphasis in Public Law from the Universidad Externado.", "score": "1.652924" }, { "id": "3912785", "title": "Gloria Giner de los Ríos García", "text": " Gloria Giner de los Ríos García was born in Madrid on 28 March 1886. The daughter of Laura García Hoppe and Hermenegildo Giner de los Ríos, she spent her childhood and adolescence in Madrid, Alicante, and Barcelona, cities where her father held the Chair of Philosophy. After finishing high school in 1906 and teaching in 1908, she completed her training by attending classes at the Institución Libre de Enseñanza and taking courses in art, pedagogy, and philosophy. In 1909, she was promoted to the Escuela de Estudios Superiores de Magisterio.", "score": "1.6236787" }, { "id": "28634990", "title": "Agripina Montes del Valle", "text": " Agripina Montes del Valle (1844–1912) also known as \"Azucena del Valle\", \"Porcia\" and \"La Musa del Tequendama\", was a Colombian poet, writer, and intellectual, She was recognized for her works dedicated to the beauty of her country and region, and to the women of Colombia and Latin America at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century.", "score": "1.6233786" }, { "id": "15372687", "title": "Gloria Guzmán", "text": " Gloria Guzmán was born on 15 April 1902 (or possibly 1894) in Vitoria, Alava, Spain. She arrived in Argentina in 1924 with a zarzuela company and had her debut in the play Las camisas negras. By 1926, she was dubbed as one of the three great \"Bataclanas\" (showgirls)of the Maipo Theater along with Carmen Lamas and Iris Marga. In 1931, she began making films debuting in Luces de Buenos Aires with Sofía Bozán and Pedro Quartucci. That same year, she starred in Un caballero de frac directed by Roger Capellani and Carlos San Martín with Roberto Rey and Rosita Díaz Gimeno. In 1936, she filmed Radio Bar directed by Manuel Romero with starring alongside ", "score": "1.6002007" }, { "id": null, "title": "Gloria Porras Valles", "text": "Gloria Porras Valles\n\nGloria Porras Valles (born 16 April 1960) is a Mexican politician from the Institutional Revolutionary Party. In 2012 she served as Deputy of the LXI Legislature of the Mexican Congress representing Baja California Sur.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Corazón valiente", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Institutional Revolutionary deputy, 1960s birth stubs ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of El Señor de los Cielos cast members", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "National Assembly (Nicaragua)", "text": "National Assembly (Nicaragua)\n\nThe National Assembly () is the legislative branch of the government of Nicaragua founded in 1986 to replace the bicameral National Congress of Nicaragua, which consisted of two chambers.", "score": null }, { "id": "16073388", "title": "Gloria Fuertes", "text": " Gloria Fuertes was born in a modest family in Madrid in 1917. Her mother was a seamstress and maid; her father, a beadle. She attended the Institute of Vocational Education of Women, where she studied Shorthand, Typing and Childcare. Her interest in writing started at the early age of five, when she started writing and illustrating stories. However, she also declared that her family did not support her in the slightest and that her mother would reprimand her if she saw her with a book. Nevertheless she published her first poem at age fourteen: Childhood, Youth, Old Age (Niñez, Juventud, Vejez) and at seventeen shaped her first book of ", "score": "1.5996103" }, { "id": "26559310", "title": "Gloria Izaguirre", "text": " Gloria Izaguirre (born August 15, 1966 in Mexico City, Mexico) is a Mexican actress.", "score": "1.5907004" }, { "id": "13809342", "title": "Glòria Muñoz", "text": " Glòria Muñoz Pfister was born on 12 August 1949 in Barcelona, Spain. Her family was artistically inclined. She studied in Barcelona at l'Escola Superior de Belles Arts Sant Jordi, completing her art coursework in 1972. In the same year, she married Josep, whose father, painter and professor Josep Puigdengolas i Barella, helped her meet important members of Barcelona's exclusive art community. This opportunity, combined with her desire to explore new methods of artistic expression, influenced her to create paintings which can trace their origins to early twentieth-century art. In 1975, the year of her first solo exhibition, she founded an art education center, Taller de Dibuix i Pintura, in Barcelona. She has been a professor of painting in the University of Barcelona's Department of Fine Arts since 1985, and in 1990 she received a doctorate degree in fine arts from the same institution. In 2000, she was a member of the Madrid Ministry of Education's \"Contemporary Realism\" project.", "score": "1.5900836" }, { "id": "10729265", "title": "Gloria Porcella", "text": " Gloria was born and raised in Rome, and then attended San Diego State University and University of California San Diego. Following university, Gloria interned for Sotheby's on New Bond street in London from 1995 to 1997 in the Impressionist and Modern Art Department. In 1997, she returned to Rome to stage her first exhibition at Galleria Ca’ d’Oro. She quickly became a prominent figure in the Italian art world, serving as a Councilor of Cultural Commission, Head of the Cultural Center in Rome, and as an advisor to the Ministry of the Environment in Italy. Gloria has staged exhibitions at the European Parliament of Brussels for Italian artist Giorgio de Chirico and is the European curator for American artist Seward Johnson. Gloria expanded Galleria Ca’ d’Oro to Miami in 2010, where she began curating exhibitions linking Italian art with the United States. She recently opened her newest gallery in New York City in Chelsea in 2014. She works in public art projects around the world and has staged shows in Berlin, Gstaad, Hannover, Milan, Monte Carlo, Palermo, Rome, Sardinia, Siracusa, and Turin.", "score": "1.588926" }, { "id": "3548898", "title": "Gloria Dünkler", "text": " Gloria Dünkler was born into a large family of artisans, musicians, and fishermen. She studied Pedagogy in Language and Communication at the University of La Frontera in Temuco, and graduated as a Spanish teacher and a licentiate in education in 2003. Later, in 2009, she qualified as a librarian at the Metropolitan University of Technology in Santiago. The same year of her graduation as a teacher, she self-published her first book of poems, Quilaco seducido. With the second, Füchse von Llafenko (Zorros de Llafenko), which was released by Ediciones Tácitas in 2009, she won her first major award, the Academy, given by ", "score": "1.5805978" }, { "id": "1656171", "title": "Gloria Marín", "text": " Gloria Méndez Ramos was a daughter of dancer María Laura Ramos Luna and businessman Pedro Méndez Armendáriz, and a cousin of actor Pedro Armendáriz. She began her career at age six, alongside her mother who ran a theater company in Mexico City. She also worked later in the Mayab and in the carpa of Santa María la Ribera where the comedian Joaquín Pardavé offers her first opportunity in the cinema. She debuted in the film Los millones de Chaflán (1939). At age 15, she married the official Arturo Vargas (forwarding agent). She made 19 films between 1938 and 1941. She performed with Cantinflas in El gendarme desconocido and met Jorge Negrete in the filming of ¡Ay, Jalisco, no te rajes!. Marín was nominated for a Silver Ariel Award for her ", "score": "1.5773084" }, { "id": "11641578", "title": "Gloria Trevi", "text": " Born in Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico, Gloria Trevi left Monterrey for Mexico City to pursue her music career.", "score": "1.5756297" }, { "id": "8741180", "title": "Gloria González", "text": " In 2004, she moved to Central Florida where she currently lives. In 2007, she was honored at the \"Asociación Borinqueña\" of Central Florida, in Orlando, Florida for her career as a composer.", "score": "1.5749788" }, { "id": "275751", "title": "Claudia Fernández Valdivia", "text": " Claudia Fernández Valdivia was born in La Paz on 30 January 1988, the daughter of Óscar Fernández (from Chuquisaca) and Gloria Valdivia (from Santa Cruz). Both emigrated to the city for work reasons and stayed to start a family. During her childhood and adolescence she lived in La Paz, completing baccalaureate studies at the Loreto y Humboldt school in 2005. She graduated from Loyola University (Bolivia) with a degree in commercial engineering.", "score": "1.5738506" }, { "id": "5311994", "title": "Stella Sierra", "text": " Born in Aguadulce on 5 July 1917, she was placed in the care of her mother after her parents, Alejandro Tapia Escobar and Antonia Sierra Jaén de Tapia, divorced in 1922; she then became known as Stella Sierra. After attending primary school in her home town, she completed her secondary education in Panama City. She graduated from the Colegio Internacional de María Inmaculada in 1934. She then studied Spanish language and literature at Panama University, gaining the teaching qualification of Profesora de Segunda Enseñanza (secondary school teacher) in 1954. By this time she had already published her first book title Sinfonía jubilosa en doce sonetos (Joyful Symphony in Twelve ", "score": "1.5699716" }, { "id": "12336778", "title": "Gloria Arellanes", "text": " Arellanes was born in East Los Angeles, and a few years later her family moved to El Monte, California. Gloria's father, César Barron Arellanes, was a Mexican immigrant. Her mother, Aurora Arellanes, was of indigenous Mexican descent from present-day Azusa. Gloria as a child was never taught about her indigenous roots. Her mother found it easier for Gloria and her sibling, William (Bill) Cesar, to identify as Mexicans. Gloria attended El Monte High School from 1960 to 1964, which is where her political consciousness began to develop. Her high school had a large mix of white and Chicano population. The Chicanos, although from different barrios, often stuck together and supported each other. Fights would break out in her high school constantly until a counselor named John Bartan held a Human Relations Club where white ", "score": "1.5670738" }, { "id": "8741176", "title": "Gloria González", "text": " Gloria González, born on April 6, at Antonsanti Street, Stop 22 in Santurce, Puerto Rico. She is the only daughter of Jorge González and Blanca Pérez, both from the town of Arecibo, Puerto Rico. She studied her elementary grades at Manuel Padre Rufo School, located in Del Parque Street, Stop 23 in Santurce, Puerto Rico. Her secondary studies were done at República Del Perú Jr. High in Loiza Street, also in Santurce. In 1958, she moved with her father to New York City, where she attended P.S. 71 on Avenue B in Manhattan. Gloria returned to Puerto Rico and got married. She gave birth ", "score": "1.5656985" }, { "id": "16073387", "title": "Gloria Fuertes", "text": " Gloria Fuertes García (28 July 1917 – 27 November 1998) was a Spanish poet and author of children's literature, linked to the first Spanish literary movement after the Civil War, 50’s Generation or postism. She became particularly well-known in Spain in the 70’s, after her collaborations on children’s television shows. In her work, she defended equality between men and women, pacifism and the fight for the environment. With the centenary of her birth in 2017, the recognition of her role in Spanish poetry as a whole during the 20th century has increased greatly. She was born and died in Madrid, Spain.", "score": "1.5639675" }, { "id": "6304823", "title": "Gloria Alexandra", "text": " Gloria Alexandra was born and raised in Lima, Peru and relocated to the US, at 21. As a young child, she started taking ballet and piano. At age eight, she joined San Antonio Children's Theater and Choir. She loves all forms of art, loves performing, and also sings, dances and plays piano. She has appeared in various independent films, including action thriller Desert Saints (opposite Kiefer Sutherland) and the drama A Beautiful Life She starred in the made-for-TV movies Dog the Bounty Hunter. Her television work includes guest starring roles on Angel, Ally McBeal, The X Show, Jose Luis Sin Censura, Sin Tapujos, La Corte Familiar, as well as a series regular role on Secretos. Gloria Alexandra has also appeared in Divorcio USA as the character of Lina Gallegos. She recently completed the indy comedy Tweaksville released in 2010.", "score": "1.5615299" }, { "id": "15044642", "title": "Gloria Lasso", "text": " Rosa Vicenta Montserrat Coscolín Figueras (25 October 1922 – 4 December 2005) known professionally as Gloria Lasso was a Spanish-born canción melódica singer, long based in France. In the 1950s, she was one of the major competitors to Dalida. Born in Vilafranca del Penedès (Barcelona) in Catalonia, Spain, she achieved a degree of fame and success in the 1950s and 1960s, with songs such as Amour, castagnettes et tango (1955), Etranger au paradis (1956, a French version of Stranger in paradise by Tony Bennett), Buenas noches mi amor (1957) and Bon voyage (1958). Eventually superseded by Dalida, she moved to Mexico, but attempted a comeback to France in 1985 performing at the Paris Olympia. She was reportedly married six times. She died from a myocardial infarction, aged 83, at her Cuernavaca, Mexico home.", "score": "1.5614281" } ]
In what city was Klaus-Degenhard Schmidt born?
[ "Kiel" ]
place of birth
Klaus-Degenhard Schmidt
4,870,620
25
[ { "id": "25453815", "title": "Beate Schmidt", "text": " Schmidt was born Wolfgang Schmidt on October 5, 1966 in Lehnin, Brandenburg, Germany.", "score": "1.7608128" }, { "id": "13137384", "title": "Harald Schmidt", "text": " A son of refugees who fled from Sudetenland (now Czech Republic) in 1945, Schmidt spent his youth in Swabian Nürtingen. Due to his strict Catholic upbringing he devoted time to the Roman Catholic church, serving as choirmaster and playing the organ. At the age of 21, Schmidt went to Stuttgart to attend drama school for three years. After that, he gained on-stage experience at Städtische Bühne (Municipal Stage) in Augsburg. His first role was that of the 2nd Mamaluke in Lessing's Nathan the Wise. In 1984, Schmidt became a lyricist for the cabaret Kom(m)ödchen in Düsseldorf and in 1986, was honoured as \"Best Newcomer cabaret artist\" and toured through Germany with his own show. In October 2005, his daughter Amelie was born. Schmidt resides in Cologne with his partner Ellen Hantsch, a school teacher, and their five children, the eldest being from a previous relationship. Little is known about the children and their two mothers as Schmidt shields them from the public. In interviews he hardly talks about them.", "score": "1.7558817" }, { "id": "16571639", "title": "Arno Schmidt", "text": " Born in Hamburg, the son of a police constable, Schmidt moved in 1928, after the death of his father (1883–1928), with his mother (1894–1973), to her hometown of Lauban (in Lusatia, then Lower Silesia, now Poland) and attended secondary school in Görlitz as well as a trade school there. After finishing school, he was unemployed for some months and then, in 1934, began a commercial apprenticeship at a textile company in Greiffenberg. After finishing his apprenticeship he was hired by the same company as a stock accountant. Around this time, at his company, he met his future wife, Alice Murawski. The couple married on 21 August 1937; they had no children. At ", "score": "1.7433681" }, { "id": "27336379", "title": "Klaus Schmidt (mathematician)", "text": " Klaus D. Schmidt (born 25 September 1943) is an Austrian mathematician and retired professor at the Faculty of Mathematics, University of Vienna. After studying mathematics at the University of Vienna he received his doctorate in 1968 under Edmund Hlawka. He held visiting professorships in Technical University of Vienna, University of Manchester in 1969, Bedford College (1969–1974) and the University of Warwick from 1974 to 1994 after which he came back to the University of Vienna. He retired in 2009. In 1975/76 K. R. Parthasarathy invited Klaus Schmidt to spend 7 months at the new Delhi Centre of Indian Statistical Institute (Parthasarathy was then working at the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi). In 1994 he was awarded the Ferran Sunyer i Balaguer Prize. He is member of the Austrian Academy of Sciences. He has researched among other things, ergodic theory and its connections with arithmetic, commutative algebra, harmonic analysis, operator algebras and probability theory.", "score": "1.7427609" }, { "id": "31819445", "title": "Otto Schmidt (CDU)", "text": " Otto Schmidt was born on 1 August 1902 as the oldest of four children. After studying law and economics at the universities of Rostock, Leipzig, Munich and Cologne, he became a court clerk in 1924 court clerk. In 1925 he earned his doctorate of law, and became an assistant judge in 1928. From 1938 he worked as an attorney in his father's practice, Dr. Otto Schmidt Verlag, and became partner in 1940. From 1930 he also worked as a lawyer in Cologne. In 1944 he was called for military service. Schmidt ended the war as a prisoner.", "score": "1.7254417" }, { "id": null, "title": "Gertrude Degenhardt", "text": "Gertrude Degenhardt\n\nGertrude Degenhardt (born 1 October 1940) is a German artist, especially a lithographer and illustrator, based in Mainz. She is known for illustrating the texts and albums of Franz Josef Degenhardt and of other political writers and singers including François Villon, Liam O'Flaherty, Bertolt Brecht, and Wolf Biermann. In the 1990s, she turned to topics around women, portraying them in art books such \"Women in Music\", \"Vagabondage in Blue\", and \"Vagabondage en Rouge\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "1926 in Germany", "text": "1926 in Germany\n\nEvents in the year 1926 in Germany.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of singer-songwriters", "text": "List of singer-songwriters\n\nThis is a list of singer-songwriters who write, compose, and perform their own musical material. The list is divided into two sections to differentiate between artists categorized as singer-songwriters and others who do not fall under the definition associated with the genre:", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of German-language authors", "text": "List of German-language authors\n\nThis list contains the names of persons (of any ethnicity or nationality) who wrote fiction, essays, or plays in the German language. It includes both living and deceased writers.\n\nMost of the medieval authors are alphabetized by their first name, not by their sobriquet.\n\nAbbreviations: children's (ch), drama (d), fiction (f), non-fiction (nf), poetry (p)\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Continental AG", "text": "Continental AG\n\nContinental AG, commonly known as Continental or colloquially as Conti, is a German multinational automotive parts manufacturing company specializing in tires, brake systems, interior electronics, automotive safety, powertrain and chassis components, tachographs, and other parts for the automotive and transportation industries. Continental is structured into six divisions: Chassis and Safety, Powertrain, Interior, Tires, ContiTech, ADAS (Advanced Driver Assistance Systems). It is headquartered in Hanover, Lower Saxony. Continental is the world's fourth-largest tire manufacturer.\n\nContinental sells tires for automobiles, motorcycles, and bicycles worldwide under the Continental brand. It also produces and sells other brands with more select distribution such as Viking (limited global presence), General (US/Canada), Gislaved (Canada, Spain, Nordic Markets), Semperit Tyres, Barum to serve EU & Russia. Other brands are \"Uniroyal\" (Europe), Sportiva, Mabor and Matador and formerly Sime/Simex tyres (now Dunlop Tyres Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei). Continental's customers include all major automobile, truck and bus producers, such as Volkswagen, Daimler AG, BharatBenz, Ford, Volvo, Iveco, Schmitz, Koegel, Freightliner Trucks, BMW, General Motors, Toyota, Honda, Renault, PSA and Porsche.<ref name=\"costarica\"/>", "score": null }, { "id": "2712488", "title": "Andreas Schmidt (actor)", "text": " Born in Heggen, Finnentrop, Schmidt grew up in the Märkisches Viertel in West Berlin. He was a singer and guitarist in the rock band Lillies große Liebe in the 1980s. His first acting role was in the 1987 film . Schmidt received three nominations at the Deutscher Filmpreis, winning once in 2009. Notable film appearances by Schmidt include Sommer vorm Balkon (2005), The Counterfeiters (2007), The Moon and Other Lovers (2008) and Henri 4 (2010). He also had roles in television programs such as Tatort, Der Kriminalist and Polizeiruf 110. In addition, he directed theatre. Schmidt lived in Kreuzberg, Berlin with his family. He died of cancer on 28 September 2017, at the age of 53. He was survived by his American wife, Jennifer, and their son (born 2008).", "score": "1.7103199" }, { "id": "30563512", "title": "Volker Schmidt", "text": " Schmidt who was born in Hamburg grew up in Wilhelmsburg and Neu Wiedental, he marked his Abitur at Gymnasium Süderelbe in Hamburg-Harburg.", "score": "1.708951" }, { "id": "6566107", "title": "Nicolaus Schmidt", "text": " Nicolaus Schmidt (born 1 January 1953) is a German artist, photographer and historian. He studied at the Hamburg Art Academy (HfBK) in the 1970s. In 1975, he founded ROSA, one of Germany’s first gay magazines. During the 1980s, he was a volunteer with the German branch of the children’s rights organization Terre des Hommes, serving for a time as its chairman. Since 1991, he has been living and making art in the Berlin neighborhood of Prenzlauer Berg.", "score": "1.7083938" }, { "id": "471531", "title": "Klaus Schmidt (archaeologist)", "text": " Klaus Schmidt (11 December 1953 – 20 July 2014) was a German archaeologist and pre-historian who led the excavations at Göbekli Tepe from 1996 to 2014. Klaus Schmidt studied pre- and protohistory, as well as classical archaeology and geology at the universities of Erlangen and Heidelberg. He completed his doctorate in 1983 at the Heidelberg university under the direction of Harald Hauptmann. He received a travel stipend from the German Archaeological Institute from 1984 to 1986. From 1986 to 1995, he received a research stipend from the German Research Foundation and was employed at the Institute of pre- and proto-history of the Heidelberg university, working on various projects with the German Archaeological Institute and the Heidelberg university. In 1995, he became the leader of the excavations at Gürcütepe and Göbekli Tepe in Southeast Turkey. He received his habilitation in 1999 from the University of Erlangen and ", "score": "1.7063514" }, { "id": "31139147", "title": "Paul Gerhard Schmidt", "text": " Schmidt was born on 25 March 1937 in Pieske near Frankfurt (Oder). He took his abitur in 1956 at the Evangelischen Gymnasium in Berlin-Grunewald, and studied classical and medieval Latin philology in Berlin and Göttingen. He received his Ph.D. in July 1962 from the University of Göttingen, with the dissertation Supplemente lateinischer Prosa in der Neuzeit: Ein Überblick über Rekonstruktionsversuche zu lateinischen Autoren von der Renaissance bis zur Aufklärung, and then went to Rome where after a two-year study of Auxiliary sciences of history he received the diploma Palaeographus et Archivarius Vaticanus. His 1970 habilitation in Göttingen was based on a critical edition of ", "score": "1.6978052" }, { "id": "12020482", "title": "Rainer Schmidt (landscape architect)", "text": " Rainer Schmidt was born in Gelsenkirchen, Germany, and had practiced in gardening and landscaping from 1972 to 1975. This inspired him to pursue an education in landscape architecture from 1975 to 1980 at the Hochschule Weihenstephan in Freising, Germany. After graduating in 1980, Rainer Schmidt began his career as a landscape architect in the office of Gottfried Hansjakob where he progressed towards Senior Landscape Architect and line manager. Since 1986, he has been registered as a Landscape Architect by the Bavarian Chamber of Architects. In 1991, Schmidt started his own office \"Rainer Schmidt Landscape Architects and Urban Planners\" and followed the call for professorship in \"Landscape Architecture\" at the Beuth University of Applied Sciences, Berlin, Germany. Schmidt has also taught under Guest Professorship at the University of California Berkeley, USA, in 2007 and the University of Beijing, China, in 2004. Since 2005, Rainer Schmidt is a member of the Advisory Board of the German Society of Garden Architecture and Landscape Culture, Berlin, Germany (DGGL). Since 2008, Schmidt has been registered by the Bavarian Chamber of Architects as an urban planner.", "score": "1.6975834" }, { "id": "27410549", "title": "Wolfgang Schmidt (politician)", "text": " Schmidt was born 23 September 1970, in Hamburg. He began studying Jurisprudence at the University of Hamburg in 1991, and graduated in 1995 finishing his first Staatsexam. In 1995, he then studied Jurisprudence at the University of the Basque Country for 2 years. In 1997, he became a Research associate at the University of Hamburg until 2000. Schmidt then, in 2002, served a two year legal clerkship term at the Hanseatisches Oberlandesgericht finishing his second Staatsexam.", "score": "1.6883438" }, { "id": "9923909", "title": "Klaus Biesenbach", "text": " Biesenbach was born in Bergisch Gladbach, West Germany. From 1987, he began studying medicine in Munich before moving to Berlin, where he shared an apartment with artist Andrea Zittel at one point.", "score": "1.6863432" }, { "id": "5010789", "title": "Heinrich Schmidtgal", "text": " Born in Esik, Kazakh SSR, Schmidtgal emigrated with his parents at the age of two from the former Soviet Union and settled in Schloss Holte-Stukenbrock in East Westphalia in North Rhine-Westphalia.", "score": "1.6707952" }, { "id": "13186537", "title": "Stefan Schmidt (politician)", "text": " Stefan Schmidt (born 19 May 1981) is a German politician. Born in Freystadt, Bavaria, he represents the Alliance 90/The Greens. Stefan Schmidt has served as a member of the Bundestag from the state of Bavaria since 2017.", "score": "1.6658295" }, { "id": "11116218", "title": "Jörg Schmidt-Reitwein", "text": " The son of painter Karl Schmidt-Reitwein, Jörg Schmidt-Reitwein was raised in Lübeck. His mother Barbara was the niece of Edvard Munchs patron Max Linde and painters Hermann Linde and Heinrich Linde-Walther.", "score": "1.665447" }, { "id": "15194322", "title": "Stan Schmidt", "text": " Schmidt was born on 6 October 1936 in Kokstad, Transkei, South Africa. He was educated at King Edward VII High School and then studied at the University of South Africa where he obtained a master's degree in Communications. His route into martial arts was initially through judo in which he competed nationally and later karate.", "score": "1.6624019" }, { "id": "13063248", "title": "Richard E. Schmidt", "text": " Schmidt was born in Ebern, Bavaria and brought to America by his parents at the age of one. In 1883 he enrolled in the architecture school at MIT, but left to begin practicing before completing the program, working for such architects as Adolph Cudell and Charles Sumner Frost before eventually settling in Chicago in 1887. Eight years later, he asked Hugh Mackie Gorden Garden to join him as chief designer, who was also an extremely skilled structural engineer. A native of Canada, Garden had moved to Chicago in the late-1880s, apprenticing with several architectural firms, including Flanders & Zimmerman, Henry Ives Cobb, and Shepley, Rutan & Coolidge, then becoming a freelance renderer, which brought him jobs with Howard Van Doren Shaw, Louis Sullivan, and Frank Lloyd Wright. Although known primarily for their commercial and industrial designs, the firm also designed more than 300 hospitals as well as many other public structures, all in a progressive style, similar to Sullivan and Wright.", "score": "1.6530252" }, { "id": "7984447", "title": "Dortmund", "text": "Klaus Niedzwiedz (born 1951), racing driver and television presenter ; Ulla Burchardt (born 1954), politician (SPD) ; Klaus Segbers (born 1954), political scientist and professor ; Antony Theodore (born 1954), poet, educator and social worker ; Susanne Kippenberger (born 1957), journalist and writer ; Achim Peters (born 1957), obesity specialist ; Barbara Havliza (born 1958), politician (CDU) and judge ; Dietmar Bär (born 1961), actor ; Stefan Heinig (born 1962), director and shareholder ; Martin Zawieja (born 1963), weightlifter ; Ralf Husmann (born 1964), writer, producer and author ; Vincent Mennie (born 1964), Scottish footballer ; Matthias Kohring (born 1965), media and communications scientist ; André Erkau (born 1968), director and screenwriter ; Florian Schwarthoff (born 1968), hurdler, bronze medallist in 110m hurdles at the 1996 Olympic Games ; Yasemin Şamdereli (born 1973), film director and screenwriter ; Kevin Grosskreutz (born 1988), football player ; Marco Reus (born 1989), football player ", "score": "1.6525601" }, { "id": "12228564", "title": "Klaus Weber", "text": " Weber was born in Łódź, Poland in 1936. After earning an undergraduate degree in 1962 and a graduate degree in 1964 from the University of Freiburg, Weber came to the United States to work as a postdoctoral fellow with James D. Watson at Harvard University.", "score": "1.6464376" } ]
In what city was Robert B. Scarborough born?
[ "Chesterfield", "Chesterfield, South Carolina", "Chesterfield, SC" ]
place of birth
Robert B. Scarborough
645,909
89
[ { "id": "13096849", "title": "William Sanders Scarborough", "text": " Scarborough was born in Macon, Georgia, in 1852 to Jesse and Frances Scarborough, a free railway employee, and an enslaved mother. Laws prescribed that he inherit his mother's status. His father had been freed in about 1846 but remained in Georgia to be with his mother. Despite prohibitions against educating slaves, he was educated surreptitiously and had mastered the three R's, geography, and grammar by the age of 10. He became an apprentice shoemaker and served as the secretary of a prominent black association at an early age due to his level of education. After the end of the American Civil War, he was able to complete his education at Lewis High School in Macon before attending Atlanta University in 1869 for two years before enrolling at Oberlin College. Scarborough completed his degree at Oberlin in 1875. He also completied his degree at Atlanta University - now Clark Atlanta University - in June 1876.", "score": "1.6908929" }, { "id": "1520776", "title": "Robert C. Barber", "text": " Barber was born in Columbus, Georgia in 1950 and raised in Charleston, South Carolina. After attending Phillips Academy, he earned an A.B. in social studies from Harvard College in 1972, a Juris Doctor from the Boston University School of Law in 1977, and a Master's in City and Regional Planning from the Harvard Graduate School of Design in 1977.", "score": "1.6312382" }, { "id": "13250387", "title": "Robert W. White (mayor)", "text": " Robert W. White (1922 — 1985) was mayor of Scarborough, Ontario from 1969 until 1972; the second person to hold the office. White was a businessman who operated a florist business, James White & Sons, founded by his grandfather in 1920 and still operated by the White family as of 2022. He was elected a school trustee in 1956 before being elected to Scarborough Township Council in 1959. When Scarborough mayor Ab Campbell was appointed Metro Chairman in 1969, Scarbrough council acclaimed White to succeed him as mayor and he went on to be elected outright in the 1969 municipal election. During his tenure in office, the Scarborough Civic Centre and ", "score": "1.6270244" }, { "id": "704983", "title": "Joe Scarborough", "text": " Scarborough was born in Atlanta, the son of Mary Joanna (née Clark) and George Francis Scarborough, a businessman. He has two siblings. In 1969, his family moved to Meridian, Mississippi, and then to Elmira, New York, in 1973 and Pensacola, Florida, in 1978. Scarborough attended Pensacola Catholic High School in Pensacola. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in history from the University of Alabama in 1985 and a Juris Doctor from the University of Florida College of Law in 1990. During this time, he wrote music and produced CDs with his band, Dixon Mills, including the album Calling on Robert E. Lee, and he also coached football and taught high school.", "score": "1.6197137" }, { "id": "28567011", "title": "George Scarborough (writer)", "text": " George Moore Scarborough (1875 – 1951) was an American lawyer, playwright, and author whose works appeared on stage and screen. He was born in Mount Carmel, Texas and studied at Baylor University and University of Texas. He became a lawyer at his father's firm before deciding to write for the theater and moving to New York after his father's death in 1905. While seeking out a producer for his work, he served as a newspaperman and Secret Service agent. He later used those experiences in his stories. His Broadway plays include such successes as The Lure (1913), At Bay (1913), The ", "score": "1.618876" }, { "id": null, "title": "Robert B. Scarborough", "text": "Robert B. Scarborough\n\nRobert Bethea Scarborough (October 29, 1861November 23, 1927) was a U.S. Representative from South Carolina.\n\nBorn in Chesterfield, South Carolina, about a year after the state had declared its secession to join the Confederate States, Scarborough attended the common schools and Mullins (South Carolina) Academy.\nHe taught school and studied law.\nScarborough was admitted to the bar in 1884 and commenced practice in Conway, South Carolina.\nHe was a county attorney of Horry County 1885-1893 and served as clerk of the county board 1885-1890.\nHe served as member of the South Carolina State senate in 1897 and 1898 and was elected president pro tempore in 1898. He served as the 63rd Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina in 1899.\n\nScarborough was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth Congresses (March 4, 1901 – March 3, 1905).\nHe declined to be a candidate for renomination in 1904 to the Fifty-ninth Congress.\nHe resumed the practice of law in Conway, South Carolina, and was also interested in banking.\nHe served as chairman of the board of regents of the South Carolina State Hospital.\n\nHe died in Conway, South Carolina, on November 23, 1927 and was interred in Lake Side Cemetery.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Robert Palmer (singer)", "text": "Robert Palmer (singer)\n\nRobert Allen Palmer (19 January 1949 – 26 September 2003) was an English singer-songwriter, musician and record producer. He was known for his powerful, soulful voice and sartorial elegance, and for his stylistic explorations, combining soul, funk, jazz, rock, pop, reggae, and blues. While his \"four-decade career incorporated every genre of music\", Palmer is best known \"for the pounding rock-soul classic, \"Addicted to Love\", and its accompanying video, which came to epitomise the glamour and excesses of the 1980s.\"<ref name=\"TelegraphObit\" />\n\nHaving started in the music industry in the 1960s, including a spell with Vinegar Joe, he found success in the 1980s, both in his solo career and with the Power Station, scoring Top 10 hits in the United Kingdom and the United States. Three of his hit singles, including \"Addicted to Love\", featured music videos directed by British fashion photographer Terence Donovan.\n\nPalmer received a number of awards throughout his career, including two Grammy Awards for Best Male Rock Vocal Performance and an MTV Video Music Award. He was also nominated by the Brit Award for Best British Male Solo Artist. He died at age 54, following a heart attack.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "J. Edwin Ellerbe", "text": "J. Edwin Ellerbe\n\nJames Edwin Ellerbe (January 12, 1867October 24, 1916) was a U.S. Representative from South Carolina.\n\nBorn in Sellers, South Carolina, Ellerbe attended Pine Hill Academy and the University of South Carolina at Columbia.\nHe graduated from Wofford College, Spartanburg, South Carolina, in 1887, where he was a member of the Chi Phi Fraternity.\nHe engaged in agricultural pursuits.\nHe served as member of the State house of representatives 1894-1896.\nHe served as delegate to the State constitutional convention in 1895.\n\nEllerbe was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-ninth and to the three succeeding Congresses (March 4, 1905 – March 3, 1913).\nHe was an unsuccessful candidate for renomination in 1912.\nHe resumed his agricultural pursuits.\nHe died in Asheville, North Carolina, October 24, 1916.\nHe was interred in the family burial ground near Sellers, South Carolina.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:People born in the Confederate States", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Paul Bernardo", "text": "Paul Bernardo\n\nPaul Kenneth Bernardo (born August 27, 1964), also known as The Scarborough Rapist and The Schoolgirl Killer, is a Canadian serial killer and serial rapist. He is known for initially committing a series of rapes in Scarborough, Ontario, a suburb of Toronto, between 1987 and 1990, before subsequently committing three murders with his then-wife Karla Homolka; among these victims was her young sister Tammy Homolka. After his capture and conviction, Bernardo was sentenced to life imprisonment and was later declared a dangerous offender, thus making it unlikely that he will ever be released from prison.", "score": null }, { "id": "25422448", "title": "William K. Scarborough", "text": " Scarborough earned his B.A at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill in 1954. He served in the Navy 1954-56 as a gunnery officer on the USS New Jersey (BB-62). He earned his M.A. at Cornell and his doctorate at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill in 1962. He taught for a year at Northeast Louisiana University before taking employment at Southern Miss, where he remained. The records of his work, 27 feet and 8500 documents, including materials associated with the Citizens' Councils, are archived at the University of North Carolina libraries. Scarborough died in May 2020.", "score": "1.6169908" }, { "id": "27856870", "title": "Robert A. Campbell (mayor)", "text": " Campbell was born to parents William and Caroline E. Campbell on July 2, 1865 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.", "score": "1.6137059" }, { "id": "29309937", "title": "William Scarborough (politician)", "text": " William Scarborough (born c. undefined1945) is a Democrat who represented District 29 in the New York State Assembly, which includes large portions of Queens County, including Jamaica. He chaired the Assembly Committee on Children and Families and served as a member of several other standing committees. Scarborough grew up in Jamaica, Queens, and has also lived in St. Albans and Rosedale, graduated Public School 140 June, 1957, Shimer J.H.S. 142, and Andrew Jackson High School. He received an associate's degree from Queensborough Community College in 1970 and B.A. degree in psychology and political science from Queens College (City University of New York) in 1975. ", "score": "1.6021745" }, { "id": "28536382", "title": "Robert L. Moran", "text": " Moran was born on October 3, 1884, in Manhattan on East Twentieth Street. He was the second of six children born to Eugene (b. 1856) and Delia Moran (formerly Fitzpatrick, b. 1860 in Brooklyn). His father, a native of Greenwich Village, was a member of the New York Parks Police Department, 21st Precinct, where he began as a gatekeeper in 1879, and was subsequently promoted to park-keeper on June 9, 1886, and to roundsman the following year. He retired as a sergeant on pension in March 1912, dying not long afterward during the typhoid epidemic of 1912. Robert Moran was raised in the Gashouse District and educated in ", "score": "1.5485001" }, { "id": "28297289", "title": "John Scarborough", "text": " Scarborough was born on April 21, 1831, in Castlewellan County Down in Ireland. He and his family emigrated to the United States when he was a child and received his early education at Queensbury, New York. he graduated from Trinity College in Hartford in 1854 after which he attended the General Theological Seminary in New York. He was ordained deacon in Trinity Church on June 28, 1857, by Bishop Horatio Potter. He became assistant in St Paul Church in Troy, New York where he was ordained priest on August 14, 1858. In 1861 he became rector of the Church of the Holy Comforter in Poughkeepsie, New York and in 1867 was made rector of Trinity Church in Pittsburgh. He was consecrated as Bishop of New Jersey at St. Mary's Church, Burlington, on February 2, 1875. He died of pleuro-pneumonia on March 14, 1914.", "score": "1.5385426" }, { "id": "32464570", "title": "Dean A. Scarborough", "text": " He was born in Lakewood, Ohio, and raised in Cleveland, Ohio. Scarborough studied Marketing and Finance and gained a Bachelor of Arts from Hiram College (1977), and an MBA from the Booth School of Business, University of Chicago (1979). In addition, he received the Executive Leadership Award at the UCLA John E Anderson Graduate School of Management. Scarborough serves on the Board of Directors of Mattel, Inc., the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce and the Los Angeles World Affairs Council. He is also a Trustee of Hiram College, the Pasadena Art Center of Design and the California Science Center Foundation. He was also a Director of the SD Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce (LACC).", "score": "1.5347002" }, { "id": "7285403", "title": "Robert H. Scarborough", "text": " Robert Henry Scarborough Jr. (March 12, 1923 – March 20, 2020) was a vice admiral in the United States Coast Guard who served as the 13th Vice Commandant from 1978 to 1982. A 1944 graduate of the United States Merchant Marine Academy, Vice Admiral Scarborough entered the Coast Guard in 1949 following service as an officer in the Navy and Merchant Marine. He maintained a license as Master of ocean steam and motor vessels of unlimited tonnage. Serving in various geographical areas both ashore and afloat, his numerous earlier Coast Guard assignments were in the fields of general operations, personnel, and public information including both command afloat and command ashore as Group ", "score": "1.5344644" }, { "id": "29240643", "title": "Robert D. Atkinson", "text": " Atkinson was born in Calgary, Alberta, on November 22, 1954. He moved to the United States in 1962. He received a B.A. from New College of Florida in 1977, a master's degree in Urban and Regional Planning from the University of Oregon in 1985, and a Ph.D. in City and Regional Planning from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1989, where he was awarded the Joseph E. Pogue Fellowship.", "score": "1.5251579" }, { "id": "25639185", "title": "Skip Scarborough", "text": " Scarborough was born in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. He lived in Los Angeles most of his life. He died of cancer July 3, 2003 in Los Angeles. A prolific songwriter, Scarborough wrote songs performed by L.T.D., Anita Baker and Earth, Wind & Fire. He co-wrote \"Giving You the Best That I Got\", which won a Grammy Award in 1988 for Best R&B Song. Scarborough was a cousin of fellow songwriter and producer Gary Taylor.", "score": "1.5182717" }, { "id": "31988910", "title": "Robert A. Barber Jr.", "text": " Robert Barber was born in Charleston, South Carolina on July 29, 1949. Having spent his earliest years on Folly Beach and nearby Bowen's Island, Barber moved to Columbia with his parents at the age of 10. After graduating from Columbia High School in 1967, he attended Wofford College and graduated in 1971. Barber later received a Masters of Divinity from Duke University in 1976. He then returned to his native state and served as a minister in two Laurens County churches before entering law school. Receiving his J.D. degree in 1982 from the South Texas College of Law, Barber engaged in a general practice of law in Charleston before being elected to the Charleston County School Board in 1984.", "score": "1.509834" }, { "id": "29580419", "title": "Robert Knox Sneden", "text": " Robert Knox Sneden was born in Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia, Canada and moved to New York City in 1851 at age 19. He received some architectural education.", "score": "1.5048186" }, { "id": "7285404", "title": "Robert H. Scarborough", "text": " and Captain of the Port. Previous assignments as a flag officer have been as Commander, Ninth Coast Guard District; Chief, Office of Operations; and Chief of Staff of the U.S. Coast Guard. His military awards include the Legion of Merit with gold star, Meritorious Service Medal, Coast Guard Commendation Medal, all World War II theater medals, and the Coast Guard Distinguished Service Medal in August 1980. He was born in Hawkinsville, Georgia. He is survived by his wife, Walterene Brant Scarborough and his two sons, Robert Henry Scarborough III and James Burton Scarborough. He died at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland. on March 20, 2020 from esophageal cancer.", "score": "1.5037963" }, { "id": "112779", "title": "Robert David Lion Gardiner", "text": " Gardiner was born in New York City on February 25, 1911. Gardiner was raised by a single mother, and continued to live with her, in Manhattan. He attended St. George's School in Newport, Rhode Island. He attended Columbia University and graduated in 1934. He then attended New York University School of Law.", "score": "1.4928551" }, { "id": "27815428", "title": "Briarcliff Manor Fire Department", "text": "Novelist John Cheever lived in Scarborough, and served in the fire department. ; Children's author C. B. Colby lived on Pine Road and served as chief of the hook and ladder company, as the village's fire commissioner, and as village trustee. ; Ely Jacques Kahn, Jr., a writer for The New Yorker, lived in Scarborough for more than 20 years, and was a member of the department. ; Architect Michael Molinelli is a member of the department. ; Architect Don Reiman was also a member of the department. ", "score": "1.4899311" }, { "id": "9239696", "title": "Robert Brannan", "text": " Born in Bradford, Brannan played for Bradford City and Scarborough. For Bradford City, he made 11 appearances in the Football League, scoring 2 goals; he also made 1 appearance in the FA Cup. Brannon died in 1986.", "score": "1.4887445" } ]
In what city was Dilson Torres born?
[ "Maracay" ]
place of birth
Dilson Torres
3,917,655
60
[ { "id": "28251988", "title": "Rigoberto Torres", "text": " Torres was born in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico, in 1960. At age four, he moved to New York, first in upper Manhattan and then to the Bronx. In 1990 he returned to Puerto Rico where he produced twenty-two works over the course of a year, including ''Ruth Fernandez in 1991.", "score": "1.7262565" }, { "id": "29846237", "title": "Andrés Torres", "text": " Torres was born in Paterson, New Jersey, and moved to Aguada, Puerto Rico, with his family when he was one year old. He played very little baseball as a child in Puerto Rico, and did not become serious about becoming a professional baseball player until he was 18. He attended Dr. Carlos Gonzalez High School and Miami-Dade Community College. At Miami-Dade, he was a track and field star, running the 100 meters in 10.37 seconds. In 1997, the Florida Marlins drafted him in the 23rd round of the Major League Baseball Draft, but he chose not to sign. He was then drafted by the Detroit Tigers in the fourth round of the 1998 Major League Baseball draft, and that time he signed.", "score": "1.7220867" }, { "id": "12556819", "title": "Dilson", "text": "Dilson (footballer), São Toméan footballer who plays as a left back ; Dilson Funaro (1933–1989) Brazilian businessman and politician ; Dilson Herrera (1994) Colombian professional baseballer ; Dilson Torres (1970) former Venezuelan pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for the Kansas City Royals in their 1995 season ; Dilson Díaz, leader of La Pestilencia band ", "score": "1.7179617" }, { "id": "4835611", "title": "José Antonio Torres Martinó", "text": " Torres was born in Ponce, Puerto Rico, in 1916. The teenaged Torres moved to New York City in 1934, to study at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. Financial problems forced him to leave Pratt before completing his degree, and he returned to Puerto Rico.", "score": "1.7163339" }, { "id": "3729654", "title": "Tico Torres", "text": " Hector Juan Samuel Torres was born on October 7, 1953, in New York, and brought up in the Colonia section of Woodbridge Township, New Jersey. His parents, Emma and Héctor, emigrated from Cuba in 1948. Torres attended John F. Kennedy Memorial High School in Iselin.", "score": "1.6928498" }, { "id": null, "title": "Dilson Torres", "text": "Dilson Torres\n\nDilson Darío Torres (born May 31, 1970) is a former Venezuelan pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for the Kansas City Royals in their 1995 season. Listed at 6' 3\", 200 lb., Torres batted and threw right-handed. He was born in Maracay, Aragua.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Torres (surname)", "text": "Torres (surname)\n\nTorres (sometimes spelled Torrez) is a surname in the Portuguese and Spanish languages, meaning \"Towers\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Epy Guerrero", "text": "Epy Guerrero\n\nEpifanio Obdulio \"Epy\" Guerrero (January 3, 1942 - May 23, 2013) was a Dominican baseball scout who signed more than 50 Major League Baseball (MLB) players for the Houston Astros, New York Yankees, Toronto Blue Jays and Milwaukee Brewers. Epy was the brother of former shortstop Mario Guerrero, and had two sons, Epy Jr. (Sandy) and Mike, who played and Coached minor league ball.\n\nGuerrero was a Toronto Blue Jays coach in . As a Blue Jays scout, Guerrero signed Tony Fernández and Carlos Delgado, and urged upper management to draft George Bell away from the Philadelphia Phillies.\n\nHe is considered to have signed more major leaguers than any other scout, including All Stars Cesar Cedeño, Carlos Delgado, Tony Fernández, Dámaso García, Alfredo Griffin, and José Mesa.\n\nGuerrero was inducted into the Dominican Sports Hall of Fame in October , and on January 15, , Guerrero received a \"Legends in Scouting Award\" from the Professional Baseball Scouts Foundation.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Major League Baseball players from Venezuela", "text": "List of Major League Baseball players from Venezuela\n\nFrom 1939 to 2019, 397 Venezuelan baseball players born in Venezuela have played in Major League Baseball. This list shows players who appeared in at least one game in MLB, including number indicating order of arrival, name of player, position, starting team, and dates of debut and final game.\n\nAbbreviations for position\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "File:Baseball (crop).jpg", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "9039261", "title": "Ralph Torres", "text": " Torres was born on August 6, 1979 to a Chamorro family in Garapan, then part of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands. Torres' father was a government field officer and Commonwealth Utilities Corporation (CUC) dispatcher, while his mother was a teacher at William S. Reyes Elementary School. Growing up, Torres lived with his parents and five siblings in a one-story house in Koblerville built by the family. Torres' family would later move to Boise, Idaho, where he would attend Boise High School, graduating in 1996. He received a B.S. in political science from Boise State University in 2001. In 2004, he began to work with his brother at Torres Brothers, Attorneys at Law.", "score": "1.6831458" }, { "id": "3153504", "title": "Florentino Torres", "text": " Torres was born on October 16, 1844 from a poor family in Santa Cruz, Manila. His father died in a ship mishap when he was still young; his mother, Luciana Santos–Torres, died during the cholera epidemic of 1882.", "score": "1.6821508" }, { "id": "3535724", "title": "Elsten Torres", "text": " Elsten Torres (originally Listoriel Leyva Torres) was born in Havana, Cuba during the height of the Cuban Revolution.", "score": "1.6775341" }, { "id": "30674360", "title": "Félix González-Torres", "text": " González-Torres was born in Guáimaro, Cuba. In 1971, he and his sister Gloria were sent to Madrid where they stayed in an orphanage until settling in Puerto Rico with relatives the same year. González-Torres graduated from Colegio San Jorge in 1976 and began his art studies at the University of Puerto Rico in San Juan while actively participating in the local art scene. He moved to New York City in 1979 with a study fellowship. The following year he participated in the Whitney Independent Study Program where his development as an artist was profoundly influenced by his introduction to critical theory. He attended the program ", "score": "1.6534667" }, { "id": "11433761", "title": "Roberto Torres (musician)", "text": " Roberto Torres (born 10 February 1940) is a Cuban singer, percussionist, bandleader and producer. Born in Güines, Cuba, he moved to the United States in 1959, where he became involved in the Latin music scenes of New York and Miami. In 1979, he founded two record labels, Guajiro Records and its subsidiary, SAR, both devoted to Cuban music. As a singer and musician, he is famous for his combination of Cuban and Colombian music, which he termed \"charanga vallenata\". His biggest hit was a cover version of Simón Díaz's \"Caballo Viejo\". He was a member of the Sonora Matancera for three years. He has also appeared in music documentaries such as Son sabrosón: antesala de la salsa. On 2 June 2011, the Cuban-American community of Union City, New Jersey honored Torres with a star on the Walk of Fame at Celia Cruz Plaza.", "score": "1.6456747" }, { "id": "2147650", "title": "Ritchie Torres", "text": " Ritchie Torres was born on March 12, 1988, in the Bronx. Torres is Afro-Latino; his father is from Puerto Rico and his mother is African-American. He was raised by his mother in Throggs Neck Houses, a public housing project in the Throggs Neck neighborhood of the East Bronx, where he was frequently hospitalized for asthma as a result of the mold growing in their apartment. He said, of growing up economically disadvantaged in \"slum conditions\", \"I was raised by a single mother who had to raise three children on minimum wage and I lived in conditions of mold and vermin, lead and leaks.\" His mother raised him, his twin brother, and their sister. He was upset by the $269 million city-subsidized Trump Golf Links built \"across the street\" in Ferry Point Park, rather than housing for struggling New Yorkers; the course was built on a landfill, took 14 ", "score": "1.6415266" }, { "id": "10446434", "title": "Daniel Torres Samaniego", "text": " Torres was born in Chihuahua, Mexico in 1991, the son of Gerardo Torres and Cristy Samaniego. He is a 2010 graduate of COBACH 3 high school and 2015 graduate of the University of the Incarnate Word, where he majored in international business. Swimming for the Incarnate Word Cardinals, he earned seven individual and four relay CSCAA All-American honors over two years at the NCAA Division-II level. At the 2015 Pan American Games, Torres was a finalist in the 100-meter backstroke and as a member of the 4x100-meter medley relay.", "score": "1.6254426" }, { "id": "27478895", "title": "Curro Torres", "text": " Torres was born in Ahlen, North Rhine-Westphalia, West Germany. His parents hailed from Granada, and emigrated to Germany for employment. When their son was still an infant they moved back to Spain, settling in Catalonia.", "score": "1.6241264" }, { "id": "28264443", "title": "Jonathan Torres (footballer, born 1983)", "text": " .", "score": "1.6158972" }, { "id": "7681160", "title": "Salomón Torres", "text": " Salomón Torres Ramirez (born March 11, 1972) is a Dominican former professional baseball player. He began his career in with the San Francisco Giants, and also played for the Seattle Mariners, Montreal Expos, Pittsburgh Pirates, and Milwaukee Brewers.", "score": "1.6149995" }, { "id": "29848571", "title": "Edwin Torres (judge)", "text": " Both of Torres's parents emigrated from Jayuya, Puerto Rico, and settled in the barrio in Manhattan's Spanish Harlem, where Torres was born. Growing up in poverty, Torres graduated from Stuyvesant High School. From there he attended City College of the City University of New York, followed by the Brooklyn Law School.", "score": "1.6131237" }, { "id": "3194401", "title": "Teófilo Torres", "text": " Teófilo Torres was born in Ponce, Puerto Rico, on 6 March 1954. He started into his acting career while he was still in high school in the town of Jayuya, Puerto Rico.", "score": "1.6108434" }, { "id": "28264446", "title": "Jonathan Torres (footballer, born 1989)", "text": " .", "score": "1.6082329" }, { "id": "3535723", "title": "Elsten Torres", "text": " Elsten Creole Torres, (born February 10, 1965) in Havana, Cuba as Listoriel Leyva Torres, is a singer songwriter and producer. He has been nominated for two Grammy Awards for his first solo independent album, Individual. ", "score": "1.6053638" }, { "id": "32957817", "title": "Wichie Torres", "text": " Luis Noel Torres Cubillé, alias Wichie Torres, was born in barrio San Antón, Ponce, Puerto Rico, on 29 March 1952. From a tender age he showed an inclination for art and Puerto Rican customs and traditions which he started to capture in his adolescence via drawings and paintings. In his early years he studied painting under Carola Colón Coavas.", "score": "1.6050555" } ]
In what city was Ray Strauss born?
[ "Perth", "Perth, Western Australia", "Perth, Australia", "Perth, W.A." ]
place of birth
Ray Strauss
823,276
50
[ { "id": "33059926", "title": "Lewis Strauss", "text": " Strauss was born in Charleston, West Virginia, the son of Rosa (Lichtenstein) and Lewis Strauss, a successful shoe wholesaler. Their parents were Jewish emigrants from Germany and Austria who came to the United States in the 1830s and 1840s and settled in Virginia. His family moved to Richmond, Virginia, and he grew up and attended public schools there. At the age of 10, he lost much of the vision in his right eye in a rock fight, which later disqualified him from normal military service. He was valedictorian of his high school class, but typhoid fever in his senior year ", "score": "1.641449" }, { "id": "33060014", "title": "Robert S. Strauss", "text": " Strauss was born in Lockhart, Texas, south of Austin. He was the son of Edith Violet (née Schwarz) and Charles H. Strauss. His parents were Jewish immigrants from Germany. When he was one year old, his family moved to the small town of Hamlin, north of Abilene, and later to the slightly larger nearby town of Stamford. Strauss's father opened a small general store in Stamford. In his sophomore year at the University of Texas at Austin, he campaigned for a state assembly candidate and was given a part-time job as a Committee Clerk in the Texas State Legislature. In 1937, while still an undergraduate, he volunteered for Johnson's first congressional campaign. Strauss was also a member of ", "score": "1.6123769" }, { "id": "5246791", "title": "David Levi Strauss", "text": " David Levi Strauss was born in Junction City, Kansas in 1953, and grew up just down the road in Chapman, where his grandfather was a blacksmith and his father a mechanic. His mother, Viola Lee, worked as a secretary for the local school district. After writing and distributing a political tract critical of his high school’s administration, he was threatened with expulsion, but enrolled in Kansas State University anyway, where he spent two years studying political science and philosophy before being asked to leave after organizing a march on the ROTC building to protest Nixon’s Cambodian bombings in 1973 and a student strike to protest the firing of a radical history professor. At age 21, he traveled around the world on a floating university, collecting children’s art in Japan, China, Indonesia, India, ", "score": "1.5927122" }, { "id": "16176044", "title": "Peter Strauss", "text": " Strauss was born in Croton-on-Hudson, New York, the son of Warren B. Strauss, a German-born wine importer. His family was Jewish. Strauss graduated from the Hackley School in 1965 and Northwestern University in 1969.", "score": "1.5856296" }, { "id": "25785701", "title": "Arthur Strauss", "text": " Arthur Strauss was born Issidor Arthur Strauss on 29 April 1847 in Mayence (Mainz), Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. He was the son of Samuel Strauss (born 8 November 1811, Kriegsheim, Germany), a merchant, and Rosalia Drucker (b. 4 January 1820, Frankfurt, Germany).", "score": "1.5772038" }, { "id": null, "title": "Ray Strauss", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Strauss", "text": "Strauss\n\nStrauss, Strauß or Straus is a common Germanic surname. Outside Germany and Austria \"Strauß\" is always spelled \"Strauss\" (the letter \"ß\" is not used in the German-speaking part of Switzerland). In classical music, \"Strauss\" usually refers to Richard Strauss or Johann Strauss II.\n\nThe name has been used by families in the Germanic area for at least a thousand years. The overlord of Gröna, for example, went by the name of Struz and used the image of an ostrich as his symbol. Examples of it could still be seen on the thousand-year-old church bell of that town. \"Struz\" or \"Strutz\" is the North-German form of the word \"Strauss\", which is the modern German word for ostrich.\n\nSome of the earliest Jewish bearers of the name hailed from the Judengasse in medieval Frankfurt, where families have been known by the name of the houses they inhabited. All the houses had names and these included Haus Strauss, complete with an image of an ostrich on the façade.\n\nWhen, for tax purposes, Napoleon made surnames obligatory in 1808, some more Jewish families decided to adopt the Straus(s) name.\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Man Ray", "text": "Man Ray\n\nMan Ray (born Emmanuel Radnitzky; August 27, 1890 – November 18, 1976) was an American visual artist who spent most of his career in Paris. He was a significant contributor to the Dada and Surrealist movements, although his ties to each were informal. He produced major works in a variety of media but considered himself a painter above all. He was best known for his pioneering photography, and was a renowned fashion and portrait photographer. He is also noted for his work with photograms, which he called \"rayographs\" in reference to himself.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Richard Feynman", "text": "Richard Feynman\n\nRichard Phillips Feynman (; May 11, 1918 – February 15, 1988) was an American theoretical physicist, known for his work in the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics, the theory of quantum electrodynamics, the physics of the superfluidity of supercooled liquid helium, as well as his work in particle physics for which he proposed the parton model. For contributions to the development of quantum electrodynamics, Feynman received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1965 jointly with Julian Schwinger and Shin'ichirō Tomonaga.\n\nFeynman developed a widely used pictorial representation scheme for the mathematical expressions describing the behavior of subatomic particles, which later became known as Feynman diagrams. During his lifetime, Feynman became one of the best-known scientists in the world. In a 1999 poll of 130 leading physicists worldwide by the British journal \"Physics World\", he was ranked the seventh-greatest physicist of all time.\n\nHe assisted in the development of the atomic bomb during World War II and became known to a wide public in the 1980s as a member of the Rogers Commission, the panel that investigated the Space Shuttle \"Challenger\" disaster. Along with his work in theoretical physics, Feynman has been credited with pioneering the field of quantum computing and introducing the concept of nanotechnology. He held the Richard C. Tolman professorship in theoretical physics at the California Institute of Technology.\n\nFeynman was a keen popularizer of physics through both books and lectures, including a 1959 talk on top-down nanotechnology called \"There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom\" and the three-volume publication of his undergraduate lectures, \"The Feynman Lectures on Physics\". Feynman also became known through his autobiographical books \"Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!\" and \"What Do You Care What Other People Think?\", and books written about him such as \"Tuva or Bust!\" by Ralph Leighton and the biography \"Genius: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman\" by James Gleick.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Charlotte Rae", "text": "Charlotte Rae\n\nCharlotte Rae Lubotsky (April 22, 1926 – August 5, 2018) was an American character actress and singer whose career spanned six decades.\n\nRae was known for her portrayal of Edna Garrett in the sitcoms \"Diff'rent Strokes\" and its spin-off, \"The Facts of Life\" (in which she had the starring role from 1979 to 1986). She received a Primetime Emmy Award nomination for Best Actress in a Comedy in 1982. She also appeared in two \"Facts of Life\" television films: \"The Facts of Life Goes to Paris\" in 1982 and \"The Facts of Life Reunion\" in 2001. She voiced the character of \"Nanny\" in \"\" and Aunt Pristine Figg in \"\". She also appeared as Gammy Hart in \"Girl Meets World\".\n\nIn 2015, she returned to film in the feature film \"Ricki and the Flash\", with Meryl Streep, Kevin Kline, and Rick Springfield. In November 2015, Rae released her autobiography, \"The Facts of My Life\", which was co-written with her son, Larry Strauss.", "score": null }, { "id": "5120345", "title": "William Strauss", "text": " Strauss was born in Chicago and grew up in Burlingame, California. He graduated from Harvard University in 1969. In 1973, he received a JD from Harvard Law School and a master's in public policy from Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government, where he was a member of the program's first graduating class. After receiving his degrees, Strauss worked in Washington, DC as a policy aid to the Presidential Clemency Board, directing a research team writing a report on the impact of the Vietnam War on the generation that was drafted. In 1978, Strauss and Lawrence Baskir co-authored two books on the Vietnam War, Chance and ", "score": "1.5741348" }, { "id": "29551324", "title": "Paul Strauss", "text": " Strauss was born to a Jewish family, in Brooklyn, raised in the Upper East Side of Manhattan, and graduated from Dwight School. His father was a painting contractor for Yankee Stadium. As a youth, Strauss was active in politics, volunteering for the election campaigns of Mario Biaggi, Hugh Carey, and Jimmy Carter. At 17, he interned for New York City mayor Ed Koch with his own desk and phone in the Tweed Courthouse. He moved to Washington, D.C., in 1982 at the age of 18, later earning his bachelor's degree (1986) and Juris Doctor (1993) at American University.", "score": "1.5738753" }, { "id": "27267981", "title": "Zoe Strauss", "text": " Strauss was born in 1970 in Philadelphia. Her father died when she was 5. She was the first member of her immediate family to graduate from high school. For her 30th birthday she was given a camera and started photographing in the city's marginal neighborhoods. She is a photo-based installation artist who uses Philadelphia as a primary setting and subject for her work. Strauss typically photographs overlooked (or purposefully avoided) details with a humanist perspective and eye for composure. In 1995, Strauss started the Philadelphia Public Art Project, a one-woman organization whose mission is to give the citizens of Philadelphia access to art in ", "score": "1.5734565" }, { "id": "4279842", "title": "Darin Strauss", "text": " Strauss was born in the Long Island town of Roslyn Harbor. He attended Tufts University, where he studied with Jay Cantor. After attending graduate school at New York University, he played guitar in a band with Jonathan Coulton", "score": "1.5637119" }, { "id": "26426564", "title": "Ray Strauss", "text": " Raymond Bernard Strauss (4 November 1927 &ndash; 28 July 2013) was an Australian sportsman who played both cricket and field hockey at high levels. From Perth, Western Australia, Strauss attended Perth Modern School and later the University of Western Australia, playing for the university's hockey club. Twice named captain of the all-Australian universities side, he was captain of the side on several occasions, including when the team shared the 1952 Syme Cup with the University of Adelaide. Strauss represented Western Australia on various occasions from 1949 to 1955, and made his Test debut for the Australian national team in August 1954, against New Zealand (with cricket teammate Ian Dick captaining the side), though it is unclear if he played further matches for the national ", "score": "1.562211" }, { "id": "13598034", "title": "Charles M. Strauss", "text": " Strauss was born on April 15, 1840 to Nathan and Rachel (Adler) Strauss in New York City. His family moved to Boston, Massachusetts when he was little, and the younger Strauss was educated in public schools supplemented by self study and Hebrew school. He graduated from the Brimmer Grammar School in 1856 and became a store clerk. Moving to Memphis, Tennessee during the 1860s, Strauss worked for a dry goods store. He eventually developed business interests in both Tennessee and Ohio. His opposition to Ulysses S. Grant's candidacy during the 1868 United States Presidential Election was the result of an order ", "score": "1.5588799" }, { "id": "27471956", "title": "Ray Stark", "text": " Raymond Otto Stark was born on October 3, 1915, in Manhattan, the second child of Sadie (née Gotlieb) and Maximilian Stark. Ray grew up on East 58th street near Central Park. It was Ray's mother who took a dutiful approach to his education, grooming him to be well-read and precocious. Ray attended grade school in Manhattan, skipping two grades, before attending The Kohut School, a boarding school for boys in Harrison, New York. There, Stark's major scholastic interest was writing; he wrote articles for the school's newspaper, The Kohut Klipper, in which his first article was an interview with actress Ginger Rogers whom he brazenly approached after seeing her in a play. In 1931, at ", "score": "1.557847" }, { "id": "16376122", "title": "Ram Strauss", "text": " Strauss was born in moshav Yokneam Moshava, Israel, to a family of Ashkenazi Jewish decscent. His brother Sagi Strauss is a former association footballer as well. His sister Alvit Strauss married Argentine association footballer Roberto Colautti in 2005, and on account of their marriage Colautti became an Israeli citizen in 2007 and played for the Israel national football team, as well as four daughters toghether.", "score": "1.5486574" }, { "id": "8982522", "title": "James D. Strauss", "text": " He was born on July 3, 1929 to Earnest and Cleo Strauss in the small town of Herrin, Illinois. His father was a World War I veteran who worked as a coal miner and bookkeeper for Peabody Coal Company. His mother worked as a nurse and decorations designer for a department store. His father was a heavy gambler, but a very intelligent man. Dr. Strauss seems to have inherited his father's intelligence and his mother's creativity, combining them into a mind to be reckoned with. His family moved to Catlin, Illinois when James was in the second grade, where he spent the rest of his childhood and youth. He lived ", "score": "1.5454586" }, { "id": "31558467", "title": "Herbert L. Strauss", "text": " Herbert Leopold Strauss, who went by \"Herb\", was born on March 26, 1936 in Aachen, Germany to parents Joan and Charles Strauss. He had a younger brother, Walter. The Strauss family escaped Germany in 1939, arriving in England. While in London, Herbert Strauss was temporarily placed in an orphanage, where he became seriously ill from bronchitis and nearly died. The family eventually immigrated to Kew Gardens, Queens in New York City. There, his father worked as a real estate agent and his mother worked in a clothing store. Strauss received both a bachelor's degree (1957) and a PhD (1960) in chemistry from Columbia University.", "score": "1.5269768" }, { "id": "7863284", "title": "Zohar Strauss", "text": " Strauss was born in Haifa, Israel, to a secular Jewish family of Ashkenazi Jewish descent. He won the Award for Best Actor in the 2009 Jerusalem Film Festival for his appearance in Eyes Wide Open, and the 2009 Ophir Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in the film Lebanon. He was nominated for the same prize in 2006 and 2012, in recognition of his roles in Things Behind the Sun and Magic Men. He also won the ASSITEJ-Israel Award for Best Actor for the 2009/10 theater season. Strauss earned a law degree from the University of Leicester but chose to become an actor, graduating from the Yoram Levinstein Studio in Tel Aviv in 2001. He debuted on ", "score": "1.5176082" }, { "id": "31445646", "title": "Gene Anthony Ray", "text": " Born in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City on May 24, 1962, Ray grew up in the area of West 153rd Street. He began performing early in life, street dancing at block parties. He performed in a dance class at the Julia Richman High School; he skipped school one day to audition for Fame choreographer Louis Falco. Ray attended the New York High School of the Performing Arts, the inspiration for the film Fame, but was kicked out after one year. \"It was too disciplined for this wild child of mine,\" Ray's mother, Jean E. Ray, said.", "score": "1.5144564" }, { "id": "31558466", "title": "Herbert L. Strauss", "text": " Herbert Leopold Strauss (March 26, 1936&ndash;December 2, 2014) was an American chemist who specialized in spectroscopy. His family fled Nazi Germany and eventually immigrated to New York, where he graduated from Columbia University. He spent the entirety of his career at the University of California, Berkeley.", "score": "1.513711" }, { "id": "5137169", "title": "Audrey Strauss", "text": " Strauss was born and raised in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the daughter of Russian immigrants. She has one brother, a retired NASA doctor. Her parents died when she was young, after which she and her brother were raised by family friends. She moved to New York City to attend Barnard College of Columbia University at the age of 16, receiving a Bachelor of Arts degree and graduating cum laude. She then earned a Juris Doctor from Columbia Law School, where she was a Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar and Kent Scholar.", "score": "1.5114694" }, { "id": "252890", "title": "Alvin M. Strauss", "text": " Alvin M. Strauss (1895 – 1958) was an Indiana architect and designer of many landmark buildings in Indiana and Ohio during the early twentieth century. He was born in Kendallville, Indiana, to German immigrants and later apprenticed under prominent architects in Chicago and Fort Wayne, Indiana. Strauss founded his own practice in Fort Wayne in 1918. Among his commissioned works are the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum, the Clyde Theatre, the Lincoln Bank Tower, and the Embassy Theatre and Indiana Hotel in Fort Wayne as well as the Brokaw Theatre in Angola, Indiana. His works also include the 1930 Art Deco-style showroom and administrative buildings of the Auburn Cord Duesenberg Automobile Facility. His collection is housed in the Drawings and Documents Archive at Ball State University.", "score": "1.5111003" } ]
In what city was Robert Zawada born?
[ "Jedlnia-Letnisko" ]
place of birth
Robert Zawada
5,245,724
44
[ { "id": "26651650", "title": "Robert Zakanitch", "text": " Robert Zakanitch was born in 1935 in Elizabeth, New Jersey and grew up in Rahway. He lived and worked in New York City. At the time of his June 3 through September 17, 2017 exhibition in the Hudson River Museum, he had recently moved his residence and studio to Yonkers, New York (as stated in the exhibition's literature). ", "score": "1.7429903" }, { "id": "15920314", "title": "Robert Zawada", "text": " Robert Paweł Zawada (born 7 June 1944 in Jedlnia-Letnisko, Radom County) is a former Polish handball player who competed in the 1972 Summer Olympics. In 1972 he was part of the Polish team which finished tenth in the Olympic tournament. He played two matches and scored three goals.", "score": "1.642879" }, { "id": "9528011", "title": "Robert Zajonc", "text": " Zajonc, born in Łódź, Poland on November 23, 1923, was the only child of the family. In 1939, before the Nazi invasion of Poland reached Łódź, his family fled to Warsaw. During their short stay, the building they were living in was hit by an air raid. Both of Zajonc's parents were killed, and he was seriously injured. The rest of his time in Warsaw was dedicated to studying at an underground university in Warsaw until he was sent to a German labor camp. He escaped from the work camp, got recaptured, and then sent to a political prison in France. After escaping for the second time, he joined the French Resistance, continuing his studies at the University of Paris. In 1944, he moved to England where he became a translator for the American forces during their European Campaign.", "score": "1.6326149" }, { "id": "32665904", "title": "Andrzej Zawada", "text": " Andrzej Zawada (born Maria Andrzej Zawada; 16 July 1928 – 21 August 2000) was a Polish mountaineer, pioneer of winter Himalayism. Zawada was an organiser and leader in numerous high-mountains expeditions. Author of movies and photographs from expeditions, co-author of Alpinist books. Honorary member of the British Alpine Club, French Groupe de Haute Montagne and American The Explorers Club. Grandson of Tomasz Rawicz-Zawada young participant of January Uprising in 1863. Son of Filip Rawicz Zawada, Polish legionnaire and consul. Zawada studied physics and geophysics in Wrocław and Warsaw. Received an engineer's degree in seismology. In 1955–1993 he worked at the Institute of Geophysics of the Polish Academy of Sciences. Amongst climbers he is known for his phrase: \"Tell me, what you did in the winter in the Tatras, and I'll tell you what climber you are\".", "score": "1.6082966" }, { "id": "7051790", "title": "David Zawada", "text": " David Zawada (born August 1, 1990) is a German mixed martial artist currently competing in the Welterweight division of the Ultimate Fighting Championship. A professional since 2010, he has formerly competed for Konfrontacja Sztuk Walki (KSW), and Respect FC where he is the former Welterweight Champion.", "score": "1.5821996" }, { "id": null, "title": "Robert Zawada", "text": "Robert Zawada\n\nRobert Paweł Zawada (born 7 June 1944 in Jedlnia-Letnisko, Radom County) is a former Polish handball player who competed in the 1972 Summer Olympics.\n\nIn 1972 he was part of the Polish team which finished tenth in the Olympic tournament. He played two matches and scored three goals.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Zawada (surname)", "text": "Zawada (surname)\n\nZawada is a Polish-language surname. Historically, due to the instability of the orthography, as well as in the periods of the partitions of Poland by foreign powers the same person or persons of the same family could use different spelling of the surname. Variant spellings include Zavada (Russified) and Sawada/Sowada (Germanized). The Czech/Slovak cognate is Závada.\n\nNotable people with this surname include:\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "David Zawada", "text": "David Zawada\n\nDavid Zawada (born ) is a German mixed martial artist currently competing in the Welterweight division. A professional since 2010, he has formerly competed for the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), Konfrontacja Sztuk Walki (KSW), and Respect FC where he is the former Welterweight Champion.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Meanings of minor planet names: 157001–158000", "text": "Meanings of minor planet names: 157001–158000\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Bloody Benders", "text": "Bloody Benders\n\nThe Bender family, more well known as the Bloody Benders, were a family of serial killers who lived and operated in Labette County, Kansas, United States, from May 1871 to December 1872.<ref name=\"leatherock\"/> The family consisted of John Bender, his wife Elvira and their son John Jr. and daughter Kate. While popular retelling of the story holds that John Jr. and Kate were siblings, contemporary newspapers reported that several of the Benders' neighbors had stated that they claimed to be married, possibly in a common law marriage.\n\nWhile there is no definitive number, estimates report that the Benders killed at least a dozen travelers before their crimes were discovered. The fate of the family remains unknown, with theories ranging from a lynching of the family to a successful escape. Much folklore and legend surrounds the Benders, making it difficult to separate fact from fiction.", "score": null }, { "id": "26651649", "title": "Robert Zakanitch", "text": " Robert Rahway Zakanitch (born 1935) is an American painter and was one of the founders of the Pattern and Decoration movement. His work is held in the collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, among others.", "score": "1.5797215" }, { "id": "32666371", "title": "Wacław Zawadowski", "text": " Jan-Waclaw Zawadowksi, also known as ZAWADO, was born on 14 April 1891 in Volhynie (Russian Poland), he is very close of the post-impressionism style. When he was 13, the young Waclaw Zawadowski discovered French paintings. In 1910 he began to study at the Fine Art School of Cracovie in professor Józef Pankiewicz's studio. In 1912 Józef encouraged Zawadowski to go to Paris. After a brief stay in « La Ruche » (an artist's residence) he moved in Montmartre. Then, he became one of the actors of the artistic community of Montparnasse. He signs his first and last contract of exclusivity with a German art dealer : Paul ", "score": "1.5744654" }, { "id": "8941901", "title": "Robert Sowers", "text": " Robert Sowers was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin in 1923. His family moved to Florida in 1932 because his father Ray Sowers, a respected educator, was offered a position in the state. His high school art teacher, Max Bernd-Cohen, encouraged his creativity, was a profound influence, and became a lifelong friend. While serving in the Army at the end of World War II, Sowers was able to study art at Biarritz American University, Biarritz, France. On returning to the US he enrolled at the New School for Social Research, studied with the painter Stuart Davis, encountered the theories of Rudolf Arnheim, and ", "score": "1.5540264" }, { "id": "5196546", "title": "Robert Z'Dar", "text": " Born in Chicago, Illinois, Z'Dar was of Lithuanian descent. He first started acting while attending Proviso West High School in Hillside, Illinois. After high school, Z'Dar attended Arizona State University where he received a BFA and played on the university football team. After graduation, Z'Dar returned to Chicago where he was employed as a Chicago police officer, member of the band Nova Express, commercial jingle writer and Chippendales dancer.", "score": "1.5507312" }, { "id": "984576", "title": "Robert J. Modrzejewski", "text": " Robert Modrzejewski was born on July 3, 1934 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He graduated from Milwaukee's Casimir Pulaski High School in 1953. He attended Wisconsin State Teachers College prior to entering the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, where he earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Education in 1957.", "score": "1.5417954" }, { "id": "6737582", "title": "Robert Zarate", "text": " Robert Alexander Zárate Ladera (born February 1, 1987) is a Venezuelan professional baseball pitcher who is a free agent. From 2012 through 2013, he pitched for the Hanshin Tigers of Nippon Professional Baseball (spending most of both seasons with Hanshin's Western League ni-gun team).", "score": "1.5287528" }, { "id": "30359980", "title": "Robert Zambito", "text": " Zambito was born in Italy. He was a land surveyor in the 1980s and was described as president of Ciment National Inc. and Entreprises de construction Stertalco Inc. in 1986. He later worked as a travel-agency operator and real-estate broker.", "score": "1.5282342" }, { "id": "29880956", "title": "Jerry Zawadzkas", "text": " Jerry Zawadzkas was born on January 3, 1946, in Torrington, Connecticut and attended Torrington High School. He went to college at Columbia.", "score": "1.5213861" }, { "id": "30546611", "title": "Michał Zadara", "text": " Born in Warsaw, Zadara left Poland with his parents when he was three years old and moved to Austria, and then to West Germany. He attended English-language schools. In 1994 he began studying Political Science at Swarthmore College, near Philadelphia. After two years of study, he took a leave of absence from Swarthmore, and studied directing at the Theatre Academy in Warsaw, and then oceanography at Sea Education Association in Massachusetts. Upon returning to Swarthmore he changed his major to Theatre Studies, and earned his B.A. with honors with a minor in Political Science in 1999. After his studies, he moved to New York, where he worked as a publicity assistant, theatrical carpenter and computerized-banking assistant. He also directed one show at the no longer existing off-off-broadway stage Collective Unconscious. In the year 2000 he returned to Poland. After being rejected from the Kraków Theatre School, he worked as an assistant and collaborator of set designer Małgorzata Szczęśniak at Warsaw's Rozmaitości Theatre. In 2001 he was accepted and began studying at the Directing Department of the Kraków Theatre School.", "score": "1.5168595" }, { "id": "9684904", "title": "Robert Kuśmirowski", "text": " Kuśmirowski was born in 1973 in Łódź. He studied sculpture at the Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin including a year's scholarship at the University of Rennes 2. He graduated in 2003.", "score": "1.506199" }, { "id": "11269051", "title": "Robert Vano", "text": " Vano was born in Nové Zámky, Czechoslovakia, to parents of Hungarian descent. After his exams in 1967, instead of joining the armed forces for duty, he emigrated via Yugoslavia and Italy to the United States where he made a living as a hairdresser and makeup artist. Later on, he worked as an assistant for photographers (Horst P. Horst, Marco Glaviano or Leo Castelli). Since 1984 he has worked as an independent photographer. He worked in New York City, Paris, Milan and Prague, where he photographed for fashion magazines such as Cosmopolitan, Harper's Bazaar and Vogue. Since 1995 he lives in Prague, ", "score": "1.501378" }, { "id": "28536382", "title": "Robert L. Moran", "text": " Moran was born on October 3, 1884, in Manhattan on East Twentieth Street. He was the second of six children born to Eugene (b. 1856) and Delia Moran (formerly Fitzpatrick, b. 1860 in Brooklyn). His father, a native of Greenwich Village, was a member of the New York Parks Police Department, 21st Precinct, where he began as a gatekeeper in 1879, and was subsequently promoted to park-keeper on June 9, 1886, and to roundsman the following year. He retired as a sergeant on pension in March 1912, dying not long afterward during the typhoid epidemic of 1912. Robert Moran was raised in the Gashouse District and educated in ", "score": "1.4984937" }, { "id": "5528049", "title": "Robert Katona", "text": " Katona was born in Ohio in 1947. His father, a sociology professor, moved his family to Colorado shortly after Robert was born. Both of his parents were teachers and provided the intellectual stimulus for him to develop quickly as an artist. He began to draw at age 2 and turned to art as a full time profession after attending the University of Colorado. He is a falconer and has trained and flown many species of raptors including the peregrine falcon. His knowledge of birds of prey has led to illustration contributions to the Raptor Research Foundation and the North American Falconers Association.", "score": "1.4976745" }, { "id": "5196545", "title": "Robert Z'Dar", "text": " Robert James Zdarsky (June 3, 1950 – March 30, 2015), better known by his stage name Robert Z'Dar, was an American character actor and film producer, best known for his role as officer Matt Cordell in the cult horror film Maniac Cop and its two sequels. Z'Dar worked mainly in low-budget B-movies and direct-to-video features, but occasionally in mainstream Hollywood films and television. Due to his cherubism, a medical condition resulting in an enlarged jawline, Z'dar had a unique and easily recognizable look with a slightly sinister appearance, which aided his career as he usually portrayed villains. A prolific actor, Z'Dar appeared in 121 films over the course of his 39-year career.", "score": "1.4971325" }, { "id": "16441552", "title": "Robert Jachimowicz", "text": " Jachimowicz was born in Poland in 1967. He is married and has one son.", "score": "1.493552" } ]
In what city was John A. Shaud born?
[ "Cleveland", "Cleveland, Ohio", "Cleveland, OH" ]
place of birth
John A. Shaud
604,250
84
[ { "id": "963925", "title": "John A. Shaud", "text": " General John Albert Shaud (born December 15, 1933) is a retired United States Air Force four-star general who served as Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (COFS SHAPE) from 1988 to 1991. Shaud was born in 1933 in Cleveland, Ohio, where he graduated from Cleveland Heights High School. He attended Lafayette College for a year prior to entering the United States Military Academy. Upon graduation from West Point in 1956, he received a Bachelor of Science degree and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Air Force. He received a Master of Science degree from The George Washington University in 1967 and a doctorate from Ohio State University ", "score": "1.6701694" }, { "id": "8923609", "title": "Grant Shaud", "text": " Edward Grant Shaud III was born in Evanston, Illinois, the son of Anna Barbara (née Dougherty) and Edward Shaud, Junior. His family is Irish Catholic. He attended Conestoga High School in Berwyn, Pennsylvania, and graduated in 1979. In 1983, he graduated with a journalism degree from the University of Richmond, where he was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.", "score": "1.6276011" }, { "id": "31416307", "title": "John H. Shary", "text": " Shary's parents were Austrian immigrants who came to America and became pioneer farmers. John Shary grew up and went to school in Crete, Nebraska. By the age of eighteen he had worked his way through college to become one of the youngest men certified as a pharmacist in that state. When he was twenty-two, he accepted a job as a traveling salesman for a California drug company. His travels took him throughout the United States and Canada. While in Texas, he took notice of the great potential for land development. He first purchased 30,000 acres (120 km²) of land between Corpus Christi and San Antonio. The sale of this property earned him much profit and inspired him to enter the land development business.", "score": "1.5235329" }, { "id": "5980450", "title": "John and Elivera Doud House", "text": " Mamie Eisenhower's father John Doud was born in 1870 in Rome, New York. He moved to Chicago, and then to Boone, Iowa, where Mamie was born in 1896. In 1905, the Douds moved to Denver, and lived at 101 Logan Street. In 1906, John Doud bought a residence at 750 Lafayette Street. This single family home was built at a cost of $6925 in 1905 by Gustave A. Ziegler. The architect was Edwin Moorman.", "score": "1.5143733" }, { "id": "963927", "title": "John A. Shaud", "text": " the operations staff of the 388th Tactical Fighter Wing at Korat Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand, and later became an RF-4C flight commander with the 12th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron at Tan Son Nhut Air Base, South Vietnam. Shaud returned to the United States and attended Ohio State University, where he received his doctorate in June 1971. He then was assigned to Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama, and served on the faculty of the Air Command and Staff College until entering the National War College in August 1973. After graduating in June 1974, the general was assigned to the 449th Bombardment Wing, Kincheloe Air Force Base, Michigan, as deputy commander for ", "score": "1.5140975" }, { "id": null, "title": "John A. Shaud", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Paul Weitz (filmmaker)", "text": "Paul Weitz (filmmaker)\n\nPaul John Weitz (born November 19, 1965) is an American screenwriter, director and producer. He is the older brother of filmmaker Chris Weitz. Together they worked on the comedy films \"American Pie\" and \"About a Boy\"; for the latter, they were both nominated for the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. Weitz is also a writer, executive producer, and director of the Amazon Prime Video web series \"Mozart in the Jungle\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jane Leeves", "text": "Jane Leeves\n\nJane Elizabeth Leeves (born 18 April 1961) is an English actress. Leeves played Daphne Moon on the NBC television sitcom \"Frasier\" from 1993 until 2004, for which she was nominated for an Emmy Award and a Golden Globe Award. She also played Joy Scroggs on TV Land's sitcom \"Hot in Cleveland\".\n\nLeeves made her screen debut with a small role in 1983 on the British comedy television show \"The Benny Hill Show\", and appeared as a dancer in \"Monty Python's The Meaning of Life\". She moved to the United States, where she performed in small roles. From 1986 to 1988, she had her first leading role in the short-lived sitcom \"Throb\", then secured a recurring part in the television sitcom \"Murphy Brown\". She received further recognition for roles in films such as \"Miracle on 34th Street\" (1994), \"James and the Giant Peach\" (1996), \"Music of the Heart\" (1999), and \"The Event\" (2003). In 2018, she began starring in the Fox medical drama \"The Resident\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of United States Air Force four-star generals", "text": "List of United States Air Force four-star generals\n\nThis is a complete list of four-star generals in the United States Air Force. The rank of general (or \"full general\", or \"four-star general\") is the highest rank normally achievable in the U.S. Air Force. It ranks above lieutenant general (\"three-star general\") and below General of the Air Force (\"five-star general\").\n\nThere have been 230 four-star generals in the history of the U.S. Air Force. Of these, 226 achieved that rank while on active duty, 3 were promoted after retirement, and one was promoted posthumously. Generals entered the Air Force via several paths: 60 were commissioned via the U.S. Military Academy (USMA), 49 via the aviation cadet program, 45 via the U.S. Air Force Academy (USAFA), 42 via Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps (AFROTC) at a civilian university, 13 via AFROTC at a senior military college, 9 via Air Force Officer Training School (OTS), 4 via the U.S. Naval Academy (USNA), 4 via Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) at a civilian university, 2 via direct commission (direct), one via direct commission inter-service transfer from the Army National Guard (ARNG), and one via direct commission inter-service transfer from the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF).", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Antz", "text": "Antz\n\nAntz is a 1998 American computer-animated adventure comedy film produced by DreamWorks Animation (in its debut film) and Pacific Data Images and released by DreamWorks Pictures. It was directed by Eric Darnell and Tim Johnson (in their feature directorial debuts) from a screenplay by Todd Alcott, Chris Weitz, and Paul Weitz. The film features the voices of Woody Allen, Sharon Stone, Jennifer Lopez, Sylvester Stallone, Christopher Walken, Dan Aykroyd, Anne Bancroft, Danny Glover and Gene Hackman. Some of the main characters share facial similarities with the actors who voice them. The film involves a worker ant, Z (Allen), who falls in love with Princess Bala (Stone). When the treacherous scheming of the evil General Mandible (Hackman) threaten to wipe out the entire worker population, Z must save the ant colony and strives to make social inroads.\n\nDevelopment began in 1988 when Walt Disney Feature Animation pitched a film called \"Army Ants\", about a pacifist worker ant teaching lessons of independent thinking to his militaristic colony. Meanwhile, Jeffrey Katzenberg had left the company in a feud with CEO Michael Eisner over the vacant president position after the death of Frank Wells. Katzenberg would later go on to help co-found DreamWorks with Steven Spielberg and David Geffen, and the three planned to rival Disney with the company's new animation division. The film began production in May 1996, after production had already commenced on \"The Prince of Egypt\" (1998). DreamWorks had contracted Pacific Data Images (PDI) in Palo Alto, California to begin working on computer-animated films to rival Pixar's features. Harry Gregson-Williams and John Powell composed the music for the film, making their first animated film. During its production, a public feud erupted between Jeffrey Katzenberg of DreamWorks, and Steve Jobs and John Lasseter of Pixar, due to the production of their similar film \"A Bug's Life\", which was released a month later. This is only worsened when Disney refused to avoid competition with DreamWorks' intended first animated release, \"The Prince of Egypt\".\n\n\"Antz\" premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 19, 1998, and was released theatrically in the United States on October 2, 1998. It grossed $171.8 million worldwide on a budget of $42–105 million and received positive reviews, with critics praising the voice cast, animation, humor, and its appeal towards adults.<ref name=rt />", "score": null }, { "id": "1018737", "title": "John C. Shabaz", "text": " Shabaz was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He attended the University of Wisconsin–Madison as an undergraduate. He received a Bachelor of Laws from Marquette University Law School in 1957. He served in the United States Army from 1954 to 1956. He was in private practice in West Allis, Wisconsin from 1957 to 1981.", "score": "1.5041342" }, { "id": "5333051", "title": "George Shadid", "text": " Shadid was born in Clinton, Iowa to immigrants from Lebanon. At age 14, once in Peoria, Illinois, Shadid worked with future mayor Jim Maloof at the Maloof family cleaning business. They remained friends until Maloof's death.", "score": "1.5009207" }, { "id": "3439185", "title": "John J. Nimrod", "text": " were born in Chicago. The family lived in the Lincoln Park section of the city where many Assyrian families had settled. After high school graduation (1940), Nimrod started at Northwestern University but his education was interrupted by service in the US army (Europe) but returned to graduate in 1950 with a degree in mechanical engineering. Later he served in the Korean War and was discharged with the rank of captain. He worked for Fisher Body and later started a fiberglass plant in Chicago that built molds for swimming pools. He married Dorothy (Ingrid) Paul, and during the 1960s they adopted four children, John, Joseph, Lizabeth and Naomi. Nimrod spoke the Neo-Aramaic language well, a skill he polished in Chicago as he became increasingly active in Assyrian affairs.", "score": "1.4607842" }, { "id": "8766307", "title": "List of people from New Jersey", "text": " Gene Shalit (born 1926), film critic of NBC's Today (New York City, raised in Morristown) ; Brooke Shields (born 1965), actress, Suddenly Susan (New York City, grew up in Englewood) ; Andrew Shue (born 1967), actor, Melrose Place (Wilmington, Delaware, raised in South Orange) ; Elisabeth Shue (born 1963), actress, Back to the Future Part II (Wilmington, Delaware, raised in South Orange) ; George P. Shultz (1920–2021). Secretary of State, Secretary of the Treasury, Director of the Office of Management and Budget, and Secretary of Labor (New York City, grew up in Englewood) ; Bryan Singer (born 1965), film director ", "score": "1.4559386" }, { "id": "9677451", "title": "East Ascension High School", "text": " San Francisco 49ers before the 2013 season. In Dorsey's first six seasons he has compiled six sacks and 279 tackles. John McConnell (actor) was born in 1958, nicknamed Spud. McConnell is an actor best known for his work in films such as O Brother, Where Art Thou?, Django Unchained, 12 Years a Slave, and A Confederacy of Dunces. McConnell was also an afternoon radio personality, hosting a daily call-in talk show, \"The Spud Show\", on WWL 870 AM until 2015. Shawn Nelson (American football) graduated in 2004. Nelson played tight end at University of Southern Mississippi where he was a first-team All-Conference USA selection in 2006 and 2007 and MVP of the 2005 New Orleans Bowl. He was a fourth round selection of the Buffalo Bills ", "score": "1.4556918" }, { "id": "2164604", "title": "Erick Rowan", "text": " Joseph Ruud was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on November 28, 1981. He grew up in Montrose, Minnesota. He is of Norwegian descent, with his ancestors having emigrated to the U.S. from Nannestad. He attended the University of Minnesota Morris, where he played football.", "score": "1.4501894" }, { "id": "27061626", "title": "Joseph Sharts", "text": " Joseph Sharts was born September 14, 1875 in Hamilton, Ohio. He was the son of an attorney who moved the family to the small city of Dayton, Ohio, when Joseph was just a boy. It was in Dayton that Sharts attended public school, graduating from high school there. After graduation Sharts enrolled at Harvard College, from which he graduated in 1897.", "score": "1.4422351" }, { "id": "27683848", "title": "John Tyler Caldwell", "text": " John Tyler Caldwell was born on December 19, 1911 in Yazoo City, Mississippi. He received a B.S. from Mississippi State College in 1932, an M.A. from Duke University in 1936, and a Ph.D. in political science from Princeton University in 1939 as a Julius Rosenwald Fellow.", "score": "1.4402261" }, { "id": "1018736", "title": "John C. Shabaz", "text": " John C. Shabaz (June 25, 1931 – August 31, 2012) was an American lawyer, politician, and judge. He served 30 years as a United States District Judge for the Western District of Wisconsin, and was Chief Judge between 1996 and 2001. Earlier in his career, he represented Waukesha County in the Wisconsin State Assembly for 16 years as a Republican, serving as minority leader from 1973 to 1981.", "score": "1.4330319" }, { "id": "11347759", "title": "Milton Shapp", "text": " Shapp was born Milton Jerrold Shapiro in Cleveland, Ohio, to Aaron Shapiro, a businessman and staunch Republican, and Eva (née Smelsey) Shapiro, a Democrat and outspoken suffragette. His family was Jewish, and all of his grandparents had emigrated from Eastern Europe. He attended the Case School of Applied Science. (In 1948, the Case School of Applied Science was renamed the Case Institute of Technology and in 1967 it federated with Western Reserve University to form Case Western Reserve University.) He graduated in 1933 with a degree in electrical engineering. Unfortunately, the effects of the Great Depression ravaged America, and Shapp, unable to find work in the engineering field, worked as a coal truck driver. In 1936, he took a job selling electronic parts and moved to Pennsylvania. It was during this time that he changed his name from Shapiro to Shapp to avoid prejudice, even though he continued to identify openly as being Jewish.", "score": "1.4268327" }, { "id": "12234507", "title": "John Allen Shauck", "text": " John Allen Shauck (March 26, 1841 – January 3, 1918) was a Republican politician in the U.S. State of Ohio who was an Ohio Supreme Court Judge 1895–1914. John Allen Shauck was born on a farm near Johnsville, Morrow County, Ohio to Elah Shauck and Barbara (née Haldeman) Shauck. He attended private and public schools there. In 1864 he graduated from Otterbein University and entered 100 days service in the 136th Ohio Infantry during the American Civil War. In 1867 he graduated from the University of Michigan Law School. He moved to Kansas City, Kansas for a year, then returned to Ohio, establishing a practice in Dayton in 1868. Shauck continued a private practice until 1884, when he was elected ", "score": "1.4234893" }, { "id": "8923608", "title": "Grant Shaud", "text": " Grant Shaud (born Edward Grant Shaud III) (born February 27, 1961) is an American actor known for his portrayal of the character of Miles Silverberg on the television sitcom Murphy Brown.", "score": "1.4205667" }, { "id": "14693107", "title": "John Berry (film director)", "text": " John Berry was born Jak Szold in The Bronx, New York, the son of a Polish-Jewish father and a Romanian mother. He was a child performer in vaudeville, first going on stage at the age of four. In his teens he briefly worked as a boxer under the name Jackie Sold. Berry's father was a restaurateur who at one point owned 28 restaurants around New York City, but he went out of business during the Great Depression and Berry sought to support himself by working as a comedian and master of ceremonies in the Catskill resorts as well as working as an actor.", "score": "1.4196119" }, { "id": "31416306", "title": "John H. Shary", "text": " John H. Shary (March 2, 1872 &ndash; 1945) was an American farmer and entrepreneur.", "score": "1.4064503" }, { "id": "31127686", "title": "Ehud Havazelet", "text": " Ehud Havazelet (July 13, 1955 – November 5, 2015) was an American novelist and short story writer. Ehud Havazelet was born in Jerusalem, Israel. His father, Meir Havazelet, a rabbi and emeritus professor at Yeshiva University, emigrated to the United States in 1957. He graduated from Columbia University in 1977, and received an M.F.A at the University of Iowa Writers Workshop in 1984. He was a Wallace Stegner Fellow and Jones Lecturer at Stanford University from 1984 to 1989. He taught creative writing at Oregon State University from 1989 to 1999. He began teaching at the University of Oregon in 1999 and held the position of Professor of Creative Writing at the time of his death in 2015.", "score": "1.4032028" } ]
In what city was Gianni Lonzi born?
[ "Florence", "Firenze", "Florence, Italy", "Florence, Tuscany", "Florencia", "Florentia", "Florenz", "Firenca", "Florencie", "Fiuränza", "Florentzia", "Firense", "Firenz", "Firenzi" ]
place of birth
Gianni Lonzi
491,829
63
[ { "id": "12532464", "title": "Gianni Lonzi", "text": " Gianni Lonzi (born August 4, 1938) is an Italian water polo player who competed in the 1960 Summer Olympics, in the 1964 Summer Olympics, and in the 1968 Summer Olympics. He was born in Florence. In 1960 he was a member of the Italian water polo team which won the gold medal. He played five matches. Four years later he finished fourth with the Italian team in the water polo competition at the Tokyo Games. He played six matches. At the 1968 Games he was part of the Italian team which finished again fourth in the Olympic water polo tournament. He played all nine matches. As a head coach, Lonzi led Italy men's national team to win an Olympic silver medal in 1976, becoming one of a few sportspeople who won Olympic medals in water polo as players and head coaches. He is married from 1968 with the Italian fencer Olympic Champion Antonella Ragno.", "score": "1.794698" }, { "id": "29775597", "title": "Carla Lonzi", "text": " Carla Lonzi was born in Florence, Italy, on March 6, 1931 to a middle-class family. Her father owned a small industrial company and her mother dedicated her life to the nurture and education of Lonzi and her four siblings. In her early twenties, Lonzi became greatly interested in film and theatre, both as a spectator and creator. This lead her to performance art, a practice she liked for its ability to stage real life experiences and revealing truths. Lonzi did her final dissertation on theatre and graduated from the University of Florence. Later in her career, the lessons she learned from film and the theatre continued to influence her work. In 1955 Lonzi married Mario Lena. In 1960, she gave birth to their son, Battista Lena. Lonzi found married life straining. She and Lena separated in 1963. The following year, in 1964, Lonzi began her relationship with Pietro Consagra, an Italian sculptor. Lonzi and Consagra never married. Their relationship ended in 1969, following the publication of Lonzi's \"Autorittrato\".", "score": "1.6739888" }, { "id": "25157617", "title": "Eli Giannini", "text": " Giannini was born in the historic city of Rome, Italy in 1956, and when she was 15 her family made the decision to migrate to Australia, which bought her to Melbourne. Giannini considers herself privileged to have had the experience of living in two cities, garnering a wealth of experience. Giannini came from a family of no other architects but feels that a possible influence may have been the many gallery excursions she experienced with her mother and grandparents. For Giannini, her personal and professional life share many overlaps. McGauran Giannini Soon (or MGS, Giannini's architectural practice) was established in 1985 with ", "score": "1.6194339" }, { "id": "4175175", "title": "Vincenzo Zanzi", "text": " Born in Lugo di Romagna, Italy, he began his career with his city side Baracca Lugo, graduating from their youth team into the Serie C first team where in 1997 he signed a three-year professional contract. Strong and good in the air. In 2000 out of necessity the manager Mario Somma moved him as a defender with good results. Zanzi spent mostly of is career at the Serie D playing for Valleverde Riccione F.C., U.S. Pergolese and Pol. Virtus Castelfranco Calcio before moving to England in January 2009. Snapped up by Bromley F.C. after impressing in a trials Zanzi joined the club shortly after arriving in England. He made his debut against Worcester City F.C.", "score": "1.6041517" }, { "id": "8528693", "title": "Clay Regazzoni", "text": " Gianclaudio Regazzoni was born in Mendrisio, Switzerland on 5 September 1939, a few days after the start of the Second World War. Regazzoni grew up in Porza, in the Canton of Ticino, part of the Italian speaking region of Switzerland. He was married to Maria Pia, with whom he had two children: Alessia and Gian Maria.", "score": "1.595132" }, { "id": null, "title": "Gianni Lonzi", "text": "Gianni Lonzi\n\nGianni Lonzi (born August 4, 1938) is an Italian water polo player who competed in the 1960 Summer Olympics, in the 1964 Summer Olympics, and in the 1968 Summer Olympics.\n\nHe was born in Florence.\n\nIn 1960 he was a member of the Italian water polo team which won the gold medal. He played five matches.\n\nFour years later he finished fourth with the Italian team in the water polo competition at the Tokyo Games. He played six matches.\n\nAt the 1968 Games he was part of the Italian team which finished again fourth in the Olympic water polo tournament. He played all nine matches.\n\nAs a head coach, Lonzi led Italy men's national team to win an Olympic silver medal in 1976, becoming one of a few sportspeople who won Olympic medals in water polo as players and head coaches.\n\nHe is married from 1968 with the Italian fencer Olympic Champion Antonella Ragno.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Antonella Ragno-Lonzi", "text": "Antonella Ragno-Lonzi\n\nAntonella Ragno-Lonzi (born 6 June 1940) is an Italian fencer and Olympic champion in foil competition.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Lonzi", "text": "Lonzi\n\nLonzi () is an Italian surname. Notable people with this surname include:\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Water polo players at the 1968 Summer Olympics ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:High-importance Water polo articles", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "9456952", "title": "Gianni Mazzocchi", "text": " Gianni Mazzocchi was born on the same day as Alec Issigonis. He was born in Ascoli Piceno, a regional capital across the mountains to the north-east of Rome. His father died in 1933, when he was 27. The family had become prosperous over the years through the silk industry. His father had at one stage been a breeder of silk worms. His grand parents had died in the postwar flu pandemic. Before his father died the family had been destroyed: Gianni's mother was in poor health and his sister was \"in and out of nursing homes\". The family business had, in the words of one source, been \"stolen\" by a clever trickster, ", "score": "1.5866581" }, { "id": "13123549", "title": "Giancarlo Giannini", "text": " Giannini was born in La Spezia and he spent most of his childhood in the settlement of Pitelli. In 1952, Giannini and his family moved to Naples where he received a diploma in electronic engineering at the Alessandro Volta Technological State Technical Institute. During his teen years, he moved to Rome and studied at the Silvio d’Amico Academy of Dramatic Arts. He made his stage debut at the age of 18.", "score": "1.5860558" }, { "id": "11664327", "title": "Gianni Bongioanni", "text": " Gianni Bongioanni was born in Turin on August 6, 1921. His mother was a housewife and his father was a turner. At the age of 11, he started working as a turner in his father's store while attending middle school. He found his life at home unsatisfying, and the cinema offered him the best chance of escape from this lifestyle. At the age of 5, he saw his first film (The Kid, directed by Charlie Chaplin) and was so excited by this film that he began to believe that his life could be just like an American film. Bongioanni began attending the two inexpensive cinemas below his house as often as he could; during the ", "score": "1.5685917" }, { "id": "883463", "title": "Giacomo Gianniotti", "text": " Giacomo Gianniotti was born 19 June 1989, in Rome, Italy. He emigrated with his family at a young age and grew up in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. He divides his time between Toronto and Rome, working in Canadian and Italian stage, films and television. He attended high school at Cardinal Carter Academy for the Arts in Toronto, then graduated from Humber College's Theatre Program. He has also completed an actor's residency at Norman Jewison's Canadian Film Centre in Toronto.", "score": "1.5549296" }, { "id": "32618279", "title": "Gianni Vernetti", "text": " Gianni Vernetti was born in Torino, Italy. In 1985 he graduated in Architecture at the Polytechnic University of Turin. In 1987 he was awarded a PhD in Urban Ecology from the Polytechnic University of Milan.", "score": "1.5440047" }, { "id": "31718440", "title": "Francesco Carrozzini", "text": " Carrozzini was born in Monza, Italy. The son of Franca Sozzani, former editor-in-chief of Italian Vogue, he grew up in Milan. He began taking pictures and making short films with friends in his early teens. In the summer of 1999, he relocated to Los Angeles to study film at the University of California, Los Angeles. He later returned to Italy to study philosophy at the University of Milan before moving to New York City in 2004 to assist photographers such as Bruce Weber and Peter Lindbergh.", "score": "1.5325365" }, { "id": "25800453", "title": "Gianni Infantino", "text": " Infantino was born on 23 March 1970 in Brig, Switzerland. He is a son of Italian immigrant parents from Calabria and Lombardy. He studied law at the University of Fribourg. He is fluent in Italian, Spanish, French and German, and also speaks English, Portuguese and Arabic.", "score": "1.5237513" }, { "id": "32094085", "title": "Ezio Loik", "text": " Loik was born in Fiume (then part of Italy, current Rijeka, Croatia). He played as a midfielder, debuting for U.S. Fiumana aged 17 in the 1936–37 serie C tournament. After three seasons in Serie A with A.C. Milan, he moved to Venezia, where he obtained a third place and a Coppa Italia in 1941. He moved to Torino in 1942, where he formed a notable midfield duo with Valentino Mazzola, who had also previously played for Venezia. With the Grande Torino side, Loik won five consecutive Serie A scudetti and one further Coppa Italia (1942–43), until dying with most of the team in the Superga air disaster near Turin, on 4 May 1949, which also made up much of the Italian national team at the time.", "score": "1.5194988" }, { "id": "32292172", "title": "Ilario Zannino", "text": "Imprisonment Ilario Zannino was born to Joseph Zannino and Isabella LaGrada and was raised in a house on Shawmut Avenue in South End, Boston. He stood at 5'7 and weighed 160 pounds with brown eyes and dark brown hair. Although he was born in the North End, like Gennaro Anguilo he moved at an early age to Franklin, Massachusetts. Zannino moved to South Boston in the late 1930s. He is the husband of Isabella Tawa. He was often found bouncing with Stephen Flemmi. He lived for a time in Franklin, MA and graduated from Franklin High School in 1938. His relatives owned a pig farm in Stoughton, Massachusetts where ", "score": "1.5188148" }, { "id": "14392539", "title": "Gianni Lunadei", "text": " Lunadei was born in Rome in 1938. His mother was a seamstress and his father a brick mason, and the young Lunadei first developed an interest in acting when at age five, his parents introduced him to the cinema and theater. The family struggled during World War II, however, and his mother emigrated to Buenos Aires, Argentina, where Gianni arrived in 1950, followed by his father shortly afterward. He debuted in the local theater in 1954 playing George in a local production of Arthur Miller's All My Sons, and was later cast in Seán O'Casey's The Shadow of a Gunman and Anton Chekhov's Platonov. His ", "score": "1.5155427" }, { "id": "16585328", "title": "Gianni Pezzani", "text": " Gianni Pezzani was born in Colorno, a small town in the Province of Parma on 18 June 1951. He attended the University of Florence where in 1979 he graduated in Agricultural sciences.", "score": "1.5083687" }, { "id": "10292823", "title": "Matt Lattanzi", "text": " Lattanzi was born and raised in Portland, Oregon, the son of Jeanette (née Slowikowski) and Charles Paul Lattanzi. His father was a maintenance foreman of Italian descent, while his mother is of Polish ancestry. He graduated from Benson Polytechnic High School in 1977. While filming Xanadu, Lattanzi met Olivia Newton-John, whom he married in 1984. The couple had one daughter, Chloe Rose Lattanzi, born on January 17, 1986. By 1992, his acting career was largely over, and he took a job as a contractor for a homebuilding company in California. Lattanzi and Newton-John moved to their farm in Australia in 1993 so that he could audition for the new soap opera, Paradise Beach. He won a six-month contract for the show. On April 24, 1995, Lattanzi and Newton-John announced their divorce. From 1997 to 2003, Lattanzi was in a relationship with Cindy Jessup. In 2008, Lattanzi briefly appeared in the MTV reality series Rock the Cradle, supporting his daughter Chloe (a contestant on the show). That same year, Lattanzi—a lifelong environmentalist —was reported to be living off the grid near Malibu, California. He now resides in Portland Oregon.", "score": "1.5064781" }, { "id": "3700820", "title": "O. Louis Guglielmi", "text": " decline to his being \"a relentless borrower, an irrepressible eclectic who seemed to prey voraciously on the styles of others\". Born in Cairo, Egypt, as a child he lived in Milan and Geneva while his Italian father, a professional violinist, toured the world. In 1914 his parents brought him to the U.S., where they lived in Italian Harlem, New York. He was interested in sculpture at a young age and worked at a casting factory. He attended the National Academy of Design in the evening beginning in 1920, while also attending high school, and attended full-time from 1923 to 1926. The next year he became a naturalized citizen. The Great Depression brought financial hardship, but the difficult times inspired his artwork. From 1935 to 1939, he worked with ", "score": "1.4994266" }, { "id": "2838160", "title": "Nanni Loy", "text": " Loy was born in Cagliari, Sardinia: his father was Guglielmo Loy-Donà, a lawyer issue from a distinguished Sardinian-Venetian family, and his mother was the noblewoman Donna Anna Sanjust of the Marquesses of Neoneli. Rosetta Loy, an Italian novelist, is his sister-in-law. He became famous for introducing in Italy the candid camera with his show Specchio segreto (Secret mirror) in 1965. His 1962 film The Four Days of Naples was nominated for two Academy Awards. It also won the FIPRESCI Prize at the 3rd Moscow International Film Festival in 1963. His 1971 film Detenuto in attesa di giudizio was entered into the 22nd Berlin International Film Festival. The star, Alberto Sordi, won the Silver Bear for Best Actor award. He specialized in comedy films such as Padre di famiglia but he also shot film dealing with social themes (Detenuto in attesa di giudizio and Sistemo l'America e torno). Loy died at Fregene, near Rome, in 1995.", "score": "1.4965014" }, { "id": "7267564", "title": "Gianni Poggi", "text": " Born in Piacenza, Poggi studied first in Bologna with soprano Valeria Manna, and later in Milan with baritone Emilio Ghirardini. He made his debut in Palermo, as Rodolfo, in 1947. He first sang at La Scala in 1948 and appeared there until 1965, his roles included: Riccardo, Enzo, Fernando, Edgardo, Duca di Mantua, Alfredo, Cavaradossi, etc. He also sang at all the major opera houses throughout Italy, notably in Florence in 1955, in a revival of Donizetti's Dom Sebastien. He portrayed the role of Lohengrin at Arena of Verona in 1949 and in his home town Piacenza in 1963 (both sung in Italian). Poggi made his debut at the Metropolitan Opera in 1955, in Rigoletto, opposite Robert Merrill and Roberta ", "score": "1.4932754" } ]
In what city was Maksim Andreyevich Fyodorov born?
[ "Rasskazovo" ]
place of birth
Maksim Fyodorov (footballer, born 1989)
5,060,276
56
[ { "id": "30853944", "title": "Maksim Fyodorov (footballer, born 1989)", "text": " He made his professional debut in the Russian Second Division in 2006 for FC Krylia Sovetov-SOK Dimitrovgrad. He played in the Russian Football National League for FC Dynamo Bryansk in 2010.", "score": "1.8215532" }, { "id": "30853943", "title": "Maksim Fyodorov (footballer, born 1989)", "text": " Maksim Andreyevich Fyodorov (Максим Андреевич Фёдоров; born 5 April 1989) is a Russian former professional footballer.", "score": "1.8129995" }, { "id": "13969227", "title": "Maksim Fyodorov (footballer, born 1986)", "text": " He spent the first five seasons of his senior career in the FC Dynamo Kyiv system, but did not make any appearances for the first squad. He played 3 seasons in the Russian Football National League for 4 different teams.", "score": "1.7678792" }, { "id": "26142046", "title": "Pyotr Fyodorov", "text": " Pyotr Fedorov was born on April 21, 1982 in Moscow, into a family of actors. His father Pyotr Evgenievich Fedorov (October 27, 1959 - March 10, 1999), was a Soviet and Russian theater and film actor, art critic, television presenter (died of cancer at the age of thirty-nine). Grandfather - Yevgeny Fyodorov (born March 3, 1924), is a Soviet and Russian theatrical actor, \"Honored Artist of the RSFSR\", artist of the Vakhtangov State Academic Theater (1945 to present). Pyotr spent his childhood in the Altai, Uimon Valley. He was fond of drawing and wanted to become an artist. The eight-grader moved with his ", "score": "1.7522594" }, { "id": "13969226", "title": "Maksim Fyodorov (footballer, born 1986)", "text": " Maksim Viktorovich Fyodorov (Максим Викторович Фёдоров; born 20 January 1986) is a former Russian professional football player.", "score": "1.7442309" }, { "id": null, "title": "Maksim Fyodorov (footballer, born 1989)", "text": "Maksim Fyodorov (footballer, born 1989)\n\nMaksim Andreyevich Fyodorov (; born 5 April 1989) is a Russian former professional footballer.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Yuri Zhelyabuzhsky", "text": "Yuri Zhelyabuzhsky\n\nYuri Andreyevich Zhelyabuzhsky (; – 24 October 1955) was a Russian and Soviet cinematographer, film director, screenwriter and animator, film theorist and professor at VGIK.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Politicians from Saint Petersburg", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Vasily Kalinnikov", "text": "Vasily Kalinnikov\n\nVasily Sergeyevich Kalinnikov (; 13 January 1866 – 11 January 1901 ) was a Russian composer. His body of work consists of two symphonies, several additional orchestral works, and numerous songs, all of them imbued with characteristics of folksong. His symphonies, particularly the First, were frequently performed in the early 20th century.\n\nHis younger brother Viktor Kalinnikov (1870–1927) was also a composer, mainly of choral music.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Russian people", "text": "List of Russian people\n\nThis is a list of people associated with the modern Russian Federation, the Soviet Union, Imperial Russia, Russian Tsardom, the Grand Duchy of Moscow, Kievan Rus', and other predecessor states of Russia.\n\nRegardless of ethnicity or emigration, the list includes famous natives of Russia and its predecessor states, as well as people who were born elsewhere but spent most of their active life in Russia. For more information, see the articles Rossiyane, Russians and Demographics of Russia. For specific lists of Russians, see and .\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "8093161", "title": "Svyatoslav Fyodorov", "text": " Fyodorov was born in Proskurov, Ukrainian SSR (now Khmelnytskyi, Ukraine), to ethnic Russian parents. Fyodorov graduated from Rostov Medical Institute in Rostov on Don, then worked as a practicing ophthalmologist in a small town in Rostov Oblast.", "score": "1.7439382" }, { "id": "25729652", "title": "Victor Fyodorov", "text": " Viktor Georgiyevich Fyodorov was born in Alma-Ata, Russian Turkestan on 11 November 1885. It was a region in straitened circumstances, being dependent on cattle husbandry and farming. Fyodorov left it behind when he departed for the University of Kharkov; he became one of only 12,500 college students in the entirety of Russia. While at university, he became imbued with Social Democratic Party politics. As those views were considered revolutionary at the time, Fyodorov moved to Belgium in 1908. From there, he went on to France, and found life there enjoyable. When World War I erupted, he was still in France. On 21 August 1914, he volunteered for military service in the 2nd Regiment of the French Foreign Legion. He was assigned to Battalion F, and committed to front line service on 24 October 1914. On 21 November, he was promoted to Caporal.", "score": "1.7402812" }, { "id": "3468226", "title": "Andrey Venediktovich Fyodorov", "text": " Andrey Venediktovich Fyodorov was born on April 19, 1906 in Saint Petersburg. He graduated from the Philological Faculty at the State Institute for the History of Arts in 1929. He was a student of the following philologists and linguists: Lev Vladimirovich Shcherba, Yury Nikolaevich Tynyanov, Viktor Vladimirovich Vinogradov, Viktor Maksimovich Zhirmunsky, Sergey Ignatyevich Bernshteyn, Boris Alexandrovich Larin. From 1930 he taught in high school; from 1956 at the Leningrad State University. In 1960 he became a professor, and he was the chairman of the Department of German Philology from 1963 to 1979. During World War II, Fyodorov was in the army field forces: He worked as a translator, writer of leaflets, and captain of administrative ", "score": "1.7157233" }, { "id": "3468225", "title": "Andrey Venediktovich Fyodorov", "text": " Andrey Venediktovich Fyodorov (Russian: Андре́й Венеди́ктович Фёдоров, April 19, 1906 – November 24, 1997) was a Soviet philologist, translator, literary translation theorist, one of the founders of Soviet translation theory, and professor. For 15 years (1963–1979), he was the chairman of the Department of German Philology at Saint Petersburg State University (formerly Leningrad State University).", "score": "1.7138693" }, { "id": "4822371", "title": "Andrei Fyodorov (footballer)", "text": " Andrei Vitalyevich Fyodorov or Fedorov (Андрей Витальевич Фёдоров) (born 10 April 1971 in Fergana, Uzbek SSR, Soviet Union) is a retired football defender and football coach who works now as a manager of Kazanka Moscow. Fyodorov is a former Uzbekistani international. He is a naturalized Russian citizen.", "score": "1.6911228" }, { "id": "30166516", "title": "Fyodor Vasilyev", "text": " Fyodor Vasilyev was born in Gatchina to a low-level government official, Alexander Vasilyevich Vasilyev, and Olga Emelyanova Polyntseva on 22 February N.S. 1850. His parents married four years later, so he was always considered an illegitimate child. Feodor had to earn his living from the age of 12 – he worked as a mailman, scribe, and assistant to a restorer of pictures. After his father’s death, he became the sole supporter of the family. In 1863, he managed to enter the evening classes of the School of Painting at the Society for Promotion of Artists (Школа Поощрения Художеств). While at school, ", "score": "1.6733513" }, { "id": "8093160", "title": "Svyatoslav Fyodorov", "text": " Svyatoslav Nikolayevich Fyodorov (Святослав Николаевич Фёдоров; born August 8, 1927 – June 2, 2000) was a Russian ophthalmologist, politician, professor, full member of the Russian Academy of Sciences and Russian Academy of Medical Sciences. He is considered to be a pioneer of refractive surgery. He was also one of the candidates in the 1996 Russian presidential election, running as a member of the Party of Workers' Self-Government.", "score": "1.6698016" }, { "id": "31153621", "title": "Nikolay Fyodorov (politician)", "text": " Nikolai Fyodorov was born in 1958 in the village of Chyodino, Mariinsko-Posadsky District of the Chuvash ASSR (now part of Novocheboksarsk), into a large family of a WWII veteran. In 1980, after graduating from the law faculty of Kazan State University, he came to Cheboksary and taught the disciplines \"Soviet law\" and \"Scientific communism\" in 1980–82 and 1985–89 at the Chuvash State University.", "score": "1.6695063" }, { "id": "6171024", "title": "Innokenty Omulevsky", "text": " Innokenty Vasilyevich Fyodorov (Иннокентий Васильевич Фёдоров; 26 October 1836 in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Imperial Russia – 26 December 1883 in Saint Petersburg, Imperial Russia) was a Russian writer, poet and translator better known under his pen name Omulevsky (Омулевский) and occasionally referred to as Fyodorov-Omulevsky.", "score": "1.6556656" }, { "id": "10669302", "title": "Yevgeny Yurievich Fyodorov", "text": " Yevgeni Fyodorov (born November 11, 1980) is a retired Russian professional ice hockey centre who last played for Edinburgh Capitals of the Elite Ice Hockey League (EIHL). Fedorov was drafted in the seventh round, 201st overall by the Los Angeles Kings in the 2000 NHL Entry Draft.", "score": "1.6449747" }, { "id": "25179743", "title": "Yevgeny Petrovich Fyodorov", "text": " Fyodorov was born on 28 December 1911 in Strelna in Saint Petersburg Governorate in the family of a worker. He graduated from junior high school in 1926 and in 1929 from a trade school, working as a mechanic in a Leningrad rail depot. He was drafted into the Red Army in 1930. Fyodorov graduated from the Leningrad Military Pilot School in 1932 and the Orenburg Military Pilot School a year later. He joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1932. Between 1933 and 1937 he served as a pilot in a long range aviation regiment. In 1938 he became a detachment commander. Fyodorov became a squadron commander in the 6th Long Range Aviation Regiment of the 27th Long Range Aviation Division in 1939.", "score": "1.6373672" }, { "id": "7689476", "title": "Aleksey Fyodorov (triple jumper)", "text": " Born in Russia's Smolensk Oblast, Fyodorov had international success at a young age, taking the silver medal at the 2007 World Youth Championships in Athletics. He marked himself out as one of the world's most promising jumpers by clearing sixteen metres in 2008 before winning gold medals at the 2009 European Athletics Junior Championships and 2010 World Junior Championships in Athletics. He was Russia's first world junior champion in that event since Sergey Bykov's win in 1990. His first clearance over seventeen metres was in June 2010 and his mark of 17.12 m was a Russian junior record. In one of the ", "score": "1.6370709" }, { "id": "26142045", "title": "Pyotr Fyodorov", "text": " Pyotr Petrovich Fyodorov (Пётр Петрович Фёдоров, born 21 April 1982) is a Russian actor. He is known for playing the role of Guy Gaal in The Inhabited Island, Gromov in Stalingrad and Yakovlev in The Duelist.", "score": "1.6312659" }, { "id": "29443849", "title": "Vladimir Fyodorov (footballer)", "text": " Vladimir Ivanovich Fyodorov (Владимир Иванович Фёдоров; 5 January 1956 – 11 August 1979) was a Soviet football player. Fyodorov was one of the FC Pakhtakor Tashkent players killed in the 1979 Dniprodzerzhynsk mid-air collision.", "score": "1.6309538" }, { "id": "26142047", "title": "Pyotr Fyodorov", "text": " to Moscow. In 1997, after receiving an incomplete secondary education, he entered the Moscow Theater Art Technical School (MTTU), after which he planned to enter the Stroganov Moscow State University of Arts and Industry, but after his father's death changed his decision and left the school after the second year of training. In 1999, he entered the acting department of the Boris Shchukin Theatre Institute. In 2003 he graduated from the institute. He played a student Belyaev in the graduation performance \"Beautiful People\" based on the play of Ivan Turgenev, where actors Grigory Antipenko and Olga Lomonosova were also engaged. In September ", "score": "1.6279907" } ]
In what city was Scott McCuaig born?
[ "Surrey", "Surrey, British Columbia" ]
place of birth
Scott McCuaig
5,707,753
52
[ { "id": "1018735", "title": "Scott McCuaig", "text": " Scott McCuaig (born June 5, 1984 in Surrey, British Columbia) is a professional Canadian football defensive lineman who is currently a free agent. He most recently played for the BC Lions. He was drafted by the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League in the third round of the 2009 CFL Draft. He played CIS football for the UBC Thunderbirds. McCuaig was signed by the Hamilton Tiger-Cats on May 28, 2009, following the 2009 CFL Draft. He was placed on the practice roster on June 29, 2009, at the conclusion of the pre-season. On August 19, 2009, unhappy with being placed on the practice roster and seeing an opportunity to return to British Columbia, he requested a release from the Tiger-Cats and signed with the BC Lions on August 28, 2009.", "score": "1.7615943" }, { "id": "9346226", "title": "Scott McCaig", "text": " McCaig was born December 12,1965 in Duncan, British Columbia on Vancouver Island. His parents grew up in Northwestern Ontario. He grew up in Kamloops, British Columbia.", "score": "1.7527987" }, { "id": "101408", "title": "Scott Montieth", "text": " Montieth was born in Kitchener, Ontario.", "score": "1.6282609" }, { "id": "2118951", "title": "Scott McQuaig", "text": " Scott McQuaig (born January 27, 1959, in Meridian, Mississippi ) is an American country music singer-songwriter. In 1989, McQuaig charted two singles on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. A third single charted on the RPM Country Tracks chart in Canada in 1990.", "score": "1.6208968" }, { "id": "32879902", "title": "Craig Scott (politician)", "text": " Scott was born and raised in Windsor, Nova Scotia. From 1979 to 1981, he attended Lester B. Pearson United World College of the Pacific in Canada, where he gained the International Baccalaureate Diploma. He then earned undergraduate degrees from McGill University and from the University of Oxford where he was a Rhodes Scholar at St John's College. He has a Bachelor of Laws from Dalhousie University and a Masters of Law from the London School of Economics. His academic specialty is international law with a focus on human rights law. Scott was a professor in the University of Toronto Faculty of Law from 1989 to 2001. He was Osgoode Law School's Associate Dean (Research and Graduate Studies) from 2001 to 2004 and has remained on the faculty subsequently. Scott and his partner Kovit Ratchadasri previously owned the Craig Scott Gallery, an art gallery on Berkeley Street near Toronto's Distillery District.", "score": "1.581537" }, { "id": null, "title": "Scott McQuaig", "text": "Scott McQuaig\n\nScott McQuaig (born January 27, 1959, in Meridian, Mississippi) is an American country music singer-songwriter. In 1989, McQuaig charted two singles on the \"Billboard\" Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. A third single charted on the \"RPM\" Country Tracks chart in Canada in 1990.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Scott McCuaig", "text": "Scott McCuaig\n\nScott McCuaig (born June 5, 1984 in Surrey, British Columbia) is a retired professional Canadian football defensive lineman. He most recently played for the BC Lions. He was drafted by the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League in the third round of the 2009 CFL Draft. He played CIS football for the UBC Thunderbirds, as a standout defensive lineman, sharing the single season record for QB sacks (11), named Canada West’s MOP, and in 2021 was named to UBC’s “All-Decade Team”\n\nMcCuaig was signed by the Hamilton Tiger-Cats on May 28, 2009, following the 2009 CFL Draft. He was placed on the practice roster on June 29, 2009, at the conclusion of the pre-season. On August 19, 2009, unhappy with being placed on the practice roster and seeing an opportunity to return to British Columbia, he requested a release from the Tiger-Cats and signed with the BC Lions on August 28, 2009.\nFollowing his football career he became a firefighter in BC’s Lower Mainland.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "McCuaig", "text": "McCuaig\n\nMcCuaig is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Canadian football defensive lineman stubs", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Sportspeople from Surrey, British Columbia", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "32895010", "title": "Scott Innes", "text": " Innes was born on October 1, 1966 in Poplar Bluff, Missouri.", "score": "1.5443835" }, { "id": "9840739", "title": "James Simeon McCuaig", "text": " James Simeon McCuaig (September 29, 1819 &ndash; August 4, 1888) was a businessman and political figure in Ontario, Canada. He represented Prince Edward in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in 1872, and in the House of Commons of Canada as a Conservative member from 1879 to 1882. He was born in Picton in Upper Canada in 1819, the son of John McCuaig, was educated there and established himself in business in Picton. He owned steamships that operated on Lake Ontario and Lake Erie. McCuaig served two years as Inspector of Provincial Canals. He ran unsuccessfully for a seat in the assembly for the Province of Canada in 1854. McCuaig was elected to the provincial assembly in a by-election in 1872 but resigned his seat to run unsuccessfully for the federal parliament later that year. He was elected to the House of Commons in 1878 supporting temperance in Prince Edward County. McCuaig was married twice: first to Julia Isabella Glass and then to Maria Augusta Pope. He died near Picton at the age of 68.", "score": "1.5199897" }, { "id": "7776744", "title": "David Scott (rugby league)", "text": " Scott was born in Stirling, Scotland. Due to his heritage, Scott is affectionately known to his Batley Bulldogs teammates as \"McCock\".", "score": "1.5184011" }, { "id": "6235085", "title": "Scott McKay", "text": " McKay was born to a francophone mother and an Irish-anglophone father in the town of Montréal-Est. He has completed a M.Sc. in Environmental sciences at the Université du Québec à Montréal and is currently working in the field of water treatment. He also obtained a bachelor's degree in sciences at the UQAM in 1987.", "score": "1.5175714" }, { "id": "26486256", "title": "Jeremy Scott", "text": " Scott was born in 1975 in Kansas City, Missouri. He grew up partly on a farm in Lowry City and partly in a suburb outside Kansas City. Jeremy was interested in fashion from an early age. At 14, he began studying French and took night courses in Japanese because he was determined to become a fashion designer. In high school, he drew fashion in his notebooks and was bullied because of his dressing style. He discovered runway fashion in Details, looking up to Jean Paul Gaultier, Martin Margiela, Thierry Mugler, and Franco Moschino as role models. In 1992, Scott moved to New York to study fashion design at Pratt Institute, one of the city's Art and Design colleges, where he wore sci-fi-inspired clothes, \"1880s vs 1980s\" outfits, and shredded and decaying clothes. Scott did an internship in the New York offices of Aeffe, the company that owns Moschino.", "score": "1.5171211" }, { "id": "4272768", "title": "Scott Unrein", "text": " Unrein was born in Portland, Oregon, United States. He was raised in Salem, Oregon, and attended South Salem High School graduating in 1995. He attended University of Puget Sound where he studied music and theatre. He then attended University of Oregon graduating with a master's in composition. In 2004, Unrein moved to Kansas City, MO where he attended school at the University of Missouri and pursued a doctorate in composition. While there, he taught music at University of Missouri and Kansas City Kansas Community College.", "score": "1.5098436" }, { "id": "6355301", "title": "Brandon Scott", "text": " Scott was born and raised in Park Heights. He ran track and cross country at Mergenthaler Vocational-Technical High School where he graduated in 2002 and received a degree in political science from St. Mary's College in 2006. After graduating, he worked as a liaison for City Council President Stephanie Rawlings-Blake.", "score": "1.5079474" }, { "id": "11851322", "title": "Scott McPhee", "text": " McPhee was born in Adelaide on 2 January 1992. , he lives in the Adelaide suburb of Wayville where he is a student at the University of Adelaide working on a Bachelor of Law. He attended West Lakes Shore Primary School and completed high school at Prince Alfred College.", "score": "1.5031204" }, { "id": "12085346", "title": "Rion Amilcar Scott", "text": " Scott was born in Washington, D.C. and grew up in Silver Spring, MD to parents who are from Trinidad and came to the United States to study at Howard University. He graduated from George Mason University and teaches at The University of Maryland.", "score": "1.5014198" }, { "id": "9939914", "title": "Ronald McCuaig", "text": " McCuaig's parents lived at Mayfield, on the rural fringe of Newcastle. In 1915, when McCuaig was seven BHP established an iron and steel works at the nearby suburb of Port Waratah. His mother died the same year. BHP's iron and steel works are depicted in Berceuse de Newcastle, the poem which opens McCuaig's Selected Poems (1992): It's always sunset in the east With a roddle-toddle-toddle, When the night furnace is in blast With a roddle-toddle-toddle And all night long the rolling-mill Goes roddle-toddle-toddle McCuaig recalled in an interview with Peter Kirkpatrick he had taken elocution lessons in Newcastle from a woman called Beatrice Welch. At the time he would stand on the back fence and shout his poetry lessons in the ", "score": "1.4983363" }, { "id": "9475319", "title": "Brian Torrey Scott", "text": " Scott was born on July 28, 1976 in Dallas, Texas to Torrie (Scott) Lloyd, a Realtor and his brother Andrew Scott, an adventurer and real estate entrepreneur. He graduated from Richardson High School as a National Honor Society Scholar and performed his first award-winning play, EZRA, in 1994. He received his BA degree from Southern Methodist University with honors in 1998 where he was a winner of the New Visions New Voices competition. In 2001, Scott was awarded a place in the Master's Writing Program at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Brian earned a coveted spot at Brown University where he would earn his Ph.D. in Theater and Performance Studies in Providence, Rhode Island. Scott's ", "score": "1.4982312" }, { "id": "7698944", "title": "John Scott McRoberts", "text": " McRoberts was born on 14 September 1962 in Scarborough, Ontario. He resides in Victoria, British Columbia. He became a quadriplegic at 18 years old after diving into shallow water.", "score": "1.4981753" }, { "id": "27614490", "title": "John T. Scott", "text": " Scott was born on a farm in Gentilly, a historic section of New Orleans, Louisiana. When he was 7 years old, his family moved to the Lower Ninth Ward. His father was a chauffeur and restaurant cook. Scott said his art training began at home where he learned embroidery from his mother. Scott was raised Catholic.", "score": "1.4953667" }, { "id": "11862534", "title": "James Scott (actor)", "text": " Scott was born in Jesmond, Newcastle Upon Tyne, England. The eldest of four children, he has two brothers and a sister. Initially schooled in Newcastle, Scott moved to an all-boys boarding school in Lancaster. After school, Scott moved to Edinburgh, Scotland on a voyage of self-discovery. His mother is Scottish and he spent a lot of time in Scotland as a boy. His first summer there he managed to get a job working at the famous \"Gilded Balloon Theatre\", one of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe's best-known venues, established by Karen Koren in 1986 in Edinburgh's Cowgate and worked with such actors/comedians as Stephen Fry, Ben Elton, and Eddie Izzard. \"They set me in motion, giving me the drive I needed to move forward. Soon it became apparent that I would need to move to London in order to truly focus on this as a career,\" Scott remembers.", "score": "1.4906151" }, { "id": "31965385", "title": "Scott McCurley", "text": " Born in New Castle, Pennsylvania, McCurley graduated from Mohawk High school in Bessemer, Pennsylvania and attended the University of Pittsburgh. He is married to Colleen (Crisi) McCurley and has two children. They reside in De Pere, Wisconsin.", "score": "1.4875801" } ]
In what city was Louis-Arsène Lavallée born?
[ "Berthierville" ]
place of birth
Louis-Arsène Lavallée
2,470,274
86
[ { "id": "8741958", "title": "Louis-Arsène Lavallée", "text": " Louis-Arsène Lavallée (2 February 1861 at Berthier-en-Haut, Province of Canada &ndash; 19 November 1936 at Montreal) was a Mayor of Montreal, Canada. His education was first at the Collège de Joliette, then at Université Laval's Montreal campus for law studies (which is today the Université de Montréal). He was formally installed as a lawyer in 1884. Lavallée worked with Hormidas Laporte to create the Alliance Nationale insurance company in 1892. After an unsuccessful campaign at the St. James riding in the 1896 federal election, Lavallée became a Montreal local councillor, since 1900 for the Saint-Jacques ward then in 1904 at La Fontaine ward. In 1912, he was elected Mayor of Montreal and served that role until the 1914 election. During his local political career, Lavallée promoted consolidation and amalgamation of municipalities towards a larger Montreal government and saw annexation of municipalities such as Côte-des-Neiges during that time.", "score": "1.8560609" }, { "id": "3377693", "title": "Augustin Lavallée", "text": " Jean-Baptiste Augustin Lavallée (August 22, 1816 &ndash; February 15, 1903) was a music teacher, violin maker, conductor and blacksmith in Quebec. His surname also appears as Paquet or Paquet dit Lavallée. He was born near Verchères, Lower Canada, the son of Jean-Baptiste Paquet and Charlotte Lalu. In 1842, Lavallée married Caroline Valentine. He settled in Verchères towards the end of that year. Around 1848, he moved with his family to Saint-Hyacinthe, where he worked with pipe organ manufacturer Joseph Casavant. Lavallée also taught music and conducted the village band. In 1852, he opened an instrument repair shop. In 1865, he moved his business to Montreal. He operated in partnership with his son Charles from 1888 to 1894 as Lavallée & Fils; they are believed to have manufactured over 200 violins. Lavallée then retired and Charles took over the operation of the business. His son Calixa became a famous pianist and composer, who wrote the music for O Canada. He died in Montreal at the age of 86.", "score": "1.680825" }, { "id": "28760866", "title": "Calixa Lavallée", "text": " Lavallée was born Calixte Paquet dit Lavallée near Verchères, a village near present-day Montreal in the Province of Canada (now the Canadian province of Quebec). He was a descendant of Isaac Pasquier, from Poitou, France, who arrived in Nouvelle-France in 1665 as a soldier in the Carignan-Salières regiment. Lavallée's father Augustin Lavallée, worked as a blacksmith, logger, bandmaster, self-taught luthier and bandleader, and also worked for the pipe organ builder Joseph Casavant. Calixa Lavallée's mother was Charlotte-Caroline Valentine, descendant of James Valentine, a soldier from Montrose, Scotland who married a Quebecer by the name of Louise Leclerc and then settled down in Verchères, Québec. Lavallée began his musical education with his father (Eli Grande), who taught him organ by age 11. Lavallée also studied in Montréal with Paul Letondal and Charles Wugk Sabatier.", "score": "1.6255381" }, { "id": "5961397", "title": "Victor LaValle", "text": " Victor LaValle was born on February 3, 1972 and raised in the Flushing and Rosedale neighborhoods of Queens, New York by a single mother who had emigrated from Uganda in her twenties. He attended Woodmere Academy and went on to earn a degree in English from Cornell University and a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from Columbia University.", "score": "1.5847504" }, { "id": "5977019", "title": "Marcel Trudel", "text": " Marcel Trudel was born in Saint-Narcisse-de-Champlain, Quebec, northeast of Trois-Rivières, the son of Hermyle Trudel and Antoinette Cossette, the ninth of eleven children. Orphaned at the age of five, he was adopted by a local couple in his extended family, Théodore Baril and Mary Trépanier. He showed great academic progress and spent some months at a seminary at Trois-Rivières, but concluded that the priesthood was not for him. Rather, he had a particular interest in literature and hoped to make his living as a writer. He earned a licence ès lettres (cum laude) in 1941 and a Doctorat ès lettres (magna cum laude) in 1945, both from Université Laval. He then had two years of post-doctoral studies at Harvard University before returning to Laval to teach history.", "score": "1.5754648" }, { "id": null, "title": "Louis-Arsène Lavallée", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Lavallee", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Médéric Martin", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of mayors of Montreal", "text": "List of mayors of Montreal\n\nThis is a list of mayors of Montreal, Quebec, since the city was incorporated in 1832. Party colours do not indicate affiliation or resemblance to a provincial or a federal party.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "James John Edmund Guerin", "text": "James John Edmund Guerin\n\nJames John Edmund Guerin (4 July 1856 – 10 November 1932) was a Canadian physician and politician.", "score": null }, { "id": "1267860", "title": "Henri Beau", "text": " Henri Beau was born Louis-Henri Beau to a working class French-Canadian family in Montréal, in 1863. He was the third child of restaurateur Charles-Arsène Beau and Marguerite-Clémentine Hupé. He had seven brothers and three sisters. He was baptized at Notre-Dame Basilica in Montréal on 28June 1863, a day after his birth. He was raised in a boarding house located at 129 Craig Street according to Lovell's Directory of the Citizens of 1863–1864. His father, Charles-Arsène Beau, born in Belleville, east of Paris, France, in 1823, arrived in New York City in 1848, and settled in Montreal in 1858, where he lived until ", "score": "1.571132" }, { "id": "10831146", "title": "Rhéal Fortin", "text": " Fortin was born in Laval-des-Rapides, Quebec. He started working when he was 18. He completed a CEGEP electrician's diploma, equivalent to junior college. He was a worker in a factory in Laval from 1977 to 1985, then left to attend university to study law. After completing his legal education, he began practising law in Saint-Jérôme in 1992.", "score": "1.567896" }, { "id": "4628871", "title": "Ars-en-Ré", "text": "Mathurin Renaud (14 October 1641 – 1676), born in Ars-en-Ré (parish of Saint-Étienne), an important historical figure: a pioneer of New France and one of the first inhabitants of Charlesbourg. ; William Barbotin (1861-1931), painter and engraver. ; Marie-Thérèse Dethan-Roullet (1870-1945), painter, was born here. ; Lionel Jospin, former Prime Minister of France, had a house here where he stayed regularly. ; Claude Barma, former Italian Film director, father of Catherine Barma, was buried here. ; In the Narthex of the church there is a representation of John Vianney (1786-1859), the famous \"Curé of Ars\" although he was a priest in the commune of Ars-sur-Formans in Ain. ", "score": "1.5569575" }, { "id": "27083714", "title": "Louis-Philippe Bourassa", "text": " Bourassa was born in Shawinigan to parents Michel and Agathe.", "score": "1.5543897" }, { "id": "7239917", "title": "Honoré Laval", "text": " Louis-Jacques Laval was born 6 January 6, 1807, in the small hamlet of Joimpy, Saint-Léger-des-Aubées in Eure-et-Loir. He was professed in the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary (Picpus) December 30, 1825, under the name of Brother Honore and was ordained priest in Rouen in 1831.", "score": "1.548916" }, { "id": "31672440", "title": "Adélard Laurendeau", "text": " He was born on December 1, 1883, in Montreal. He became an industrial painter and a union activist.", "score": "1.5477649" }, { "id": "29288880", "title": "Franco-Columbian", "text": "Richard Stewart, mayor of the city of Coquitlam and former minister. ; Jean-Luc Bilodeau, actor (born 1990) ; Sébastien Bordeleau, hockey player (born 1975) ; Modeste Demers, Canadian missionary and first Bishop of Vancouver Island (1809-1871) ; David Emerson, politician and former minister (born 1945) ; Grimes, musician (born 1988) ; Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière, premier of Québec and later Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia (1829-1908) ; Georges Payrastre, television producer ; Denise Savoie, politician (born 1943) ; Lucille Starr, Franco-Manitoban and resident of Maillardville (born 1938) ; Emmanuelle Vaugier, actor (born 1976) ; Françoise Yip, comedian (born 1972 to a Chinese-Canadian father and a Québécois mother) ", "score": "1.5454407" }, { "id": "7571259", "title": "Joseph Lavallée", "text": " Louis-Joseph Lavallée marquis de Boisrobert, called Joseph Lavallée (23 August 1747, Dieppe – 28 February 1816, London) was an 18th–19th-century French polygraph and man of letters. <!--", "score": "1.5363524" }, { "id": "706381", "title": "1891 in Canada", "text": "January 4 – Antoine Labelle, priest and settler (b.1833) ; January 21 – Calixa Lavallée, musician and composer (b.1842) ; May 31 – Antoine-Aimé Dorion, politician and jurist (b.1818) ; June 6 – John A. Macdonald, politician and 1st Prime Minister of Canada (b.1815) ", "score": "1.5288697" }, { "id": "30275436", "title": "Marius Barbeau", "text": " Frédéric Charles Joseph Marius Barbeau was born March 5, 1883, in Sainte-Marie, Quebec. In 1897, he began studies for the priesthood. He did his classical studies at, Collège de Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatière. In 1903 he changed his studies to a law degree at Université Laval, which he received in 1907. He went to England on a Rhodes Scholarship, studying at Oriel College, Oxford from 1907 to 1910, where he began his studies in the new fields of anthropology, archeology and ethnography. During the summers he would attend École des hautes études de la Sorbonne and École d'anthropologie. In Paris he would meet Marcel Mauss who would encourage him to study North American Aboriginal Folklore. He studied under R. R. Marett.", "score": "1.5280833" }, { "id": "313083", "title": "Jean-Paul Beaulieu", "text": " He was born on January 22, 1902 in Saint-Paul-de-l'Île-aux-Noix, Montérégie. He studied at the Université de Montréal and McGill University. He obtained a license degree in commercial sciences from McGill. He has received honorary doctorates from Université Laval and Université de Montréal", "score": "1.5266485" }, { "id": "28583015", "title": "Bernard Assiniwi", "text": " Bernard Assiniwi was born on July 31, 1935 and died on 4 September 2000. Son of Églantine Bleau and Joseph-Leonidas Zephirin Lapierre, from Algonquin, Cree and Quebecois heritage. As a child he spoke Cree but French was the language of his schooling. He graduated from the University of Guelph, obtaining a BScA in animal science. He went on to follow a variety of careers. He was involved with the beginning of the cultural section of the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development from 1965 to 1968. In 1965, he also appeared in the film \"La vie heureuse de Léopold Z\". Other film appearances were \"Les smattes\" ", "score": "1.5264049" }, { "id": "27285996", "title": "Louis-Adolphe Paquet", "text": " Joseph-Louis-Adolphe Paquet was born on August 4, 1859 to a farmer couple, Adolphe Pâquet and Éléonore Demers, on the family domain in Saint-Nicolas, on the southern shore of the Saint Lawrence River opposite Quebec City. He was their eldest son, though not their eldest child, which was his sister Joséphine. Adolphe Pâquet would later be mayor of the municipality in the 1870s and 1880s. Louis-Adolphe came from an influential family: two of his uncles, Benjamin and Louis-Honoré Pâquet, were notable churchmen, and one of his cousins, Étienne-Théodore, would later be elected to the provincial legislature. Paquet studied in nearby Saint-Louis-de-Lotbinière, then at the Séminaire de Québec before continuing his theological ", "score": "1.5260468" }, { "id": "29955919", "title": "Kevin Lavallée (ice hockey, born 1981)", "text": " Kevin Lavallée (born December 12, 1981) is a Canadian-born German professional ice hockey defenceman who currently plays for the Fischtown Pinguins in the Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL). He previously played for Kölner Haie, EHC München, Hamburg Freezers and Iserlohn Roosters. He participated at the 2011 IIHF World Championship as a member of the Germany men's national ice hockey team.", "score": "1.524922" }, { "id": "7387535", "title": "Louis Trudel", "text": " Trudel was born in Massachusetts to Canadian parents who had moved there from Montreal. When he was a small child, his family migrated to Edmonton, Alberta where he started to play junior hockey.", "score": "1.5210881" } ]
In what city was Clemente Isnard born?
[ "Rio de Janeiro", "Rio", "Rio de Janeiro city", "Río", "Río de Janeiro" ]
place of birth
Clemente Isnard
3,048,422
47
[ { "id": "30465189", "title": "Jacob Clemente", "text": " Clemente was born in North Greenbush, New York on April 12, 1997. He began his study of dance in Colonie, New York at The World of Dance. Clemente appeared in regional theatre productions in his early career, including Toy Camp, The Music Man, High School Musical on Stage!, and Seussical. During this time Clemente participated in dance competitions including with The New York City Dance Alliance (NYCDA).", "score": "1.7116494" }, { "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": "1.6984494" }, { "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": "1.6877298" }, { "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": "1.6515758" }, { "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": "1.6498532" }, { "id": null, "title": "Clemente Isnard", "text": "Clemente Isnard\n\nClemente José Carlos de Gouvea Isnard, O.S.B. (July 8, 1917 – August 24, 2011) was a Brazilian bishop of the Roman Catholic Church.\n\nIsnard was born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 1917 and was ordained a priest on December 19, 1942 of the Order of Saint Benedict. He was appointed Bishop of the Diocese of Nova Friburgo on April 23, 1960 and was ordained bishop July 25, 1960. Isnard remained at the diocese for over 30 years, retiring July 17, 1992.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Clemente", "text": "Clemente\n\nClemente is both an Italian, Spanish and Portuguese surname and a given name. Notable people with the surname include:\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Luciano Mendes de Almeida", "text": "Luciano Mendes de Almeida\n\nLuciano Pedro Mendes de Almeida (5 October 1930 – 27 August 2006) was a Brazilian Roman Catholic prelate and professed member from the Jesuits who served as the Archbishop of Mariana from 1988 until his death. He was a noted pastor passionate about the defence of human rights and for the participation of the faithful in ecclesial affairs; he oversaw the establishment of retirement homes and facilities for disabled people during his tenure as archbishop.\n\nIn 2011 calls were made for his cause for beatification to be introduced and the national episcopal conference made a formal application to officials in Rome to commence the cause. The start to the cause saw the late archbishop titled as a Servant of God.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "José Freire Falcão", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Wikipedia requested photographs in Brazil", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "5837207", "title": "Clement Renzi", "text": " Clement Renzi was the third of seven children, born to parents Clemente Renzi and Luisa Guastaferro. The couple had been drawn to Central California's Tulare County because of its resemblance to the landscape of Clemente's native village of Dugenta, Italy. After the family lost their prune orchard in the stock market crash of 1929, they moved to Farmersville, California, where Clemente worked managing a ranch.", "score": "1.6445371" }, { "id": "3297510", "title": "Clemente Villaverde", "text": " Clemente was born in Cangas de Onís, Asturias. He joined Atlético Madrid in 1977, going on to spend the vast majority of his first five years at the club with the reserves, playing two seasons in Segunda División and three in Segunda División B. Definitely promoted to the main squad for the 1982–83 campaign, Clemente proceeded to be regularly used, helping them to two major titles. He was part of the team that reached the final of the 1986 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, appearing in the decisive match against FC Dynamo Kyiv (0–3 loss). In summer 1987, Clemente joined second-tier side CD Málaga alongside Atlético teammate Miguel Ángel Ruiz. He experienced both one La Liga promotion and relegation with the Andalusians, and retired at the age of 31.", "score": "1.6415818" }, { "id": "807346", "title": "Adolphe Clément-Bayard", "text": " Adolphe Clément, the son of a grocer, was born at rue du Bourg, Pierrefonds, Oise. He was the second of five children of Leopold Adolphus Clément and Julie Alexandrine Rousselle. His mother died when he was seven years old and although his father remarried he also died 2 years later when Adolphe was nine years old. For the next seven years he was raised by his stepmother who had remarried a school teacher. Adolphe studied at the primary school in Pierrefonds and then at the College of Villers-Cotterêts. He worked in the family business by delivering groceries, and at 13 chose to be apprenticed to a farrier/blacksmith. During the winter of 1871–1872, the 16-year-old Adolphe left Pierrefonds to travel around France as a Compagnon du Tour ", "score": "1.62959" }, { "id": "6634938", "title": "Fernando Clemente", "text": " Fernando Clemente (1917&ndash;1998) was an architect and urbanist born in Sassari, Sardinia, Italy.", "score": "1.6263498" }, { "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": "1.6238428" }, { "id": "15020415", "title": "John Clemente", "text": " John Faust Clemente was born in Bari, Italy, in 1926. He graduated in medicine and surgery from the universities of Bari and Padua in 1948. In 1949 he met the Australian, Ruth Greene, at Christ Church, Oxford, and they married the same year in London. They moved to Brisbane at the end of 1949 where Clemente re-qualified in medicine at the University of Queensland.", "score": "1.604094" }, { "id": "14748176", "title": "L. Gary Clemente", "text": " Born in New York City, he attended St. Ann's Academy in Manhattan and LaSalle Military Academy in Oakdale. He received a Reserve officer's certificate at Plattsburgh in 1925 and a Reserve commission in 1929. In 1931 he graduated from Georgetown Law School, and was admitted to the District of Columbia bar. Clemente practiced in Washington, D.C. and in New York. Clemente entered the United States Army as a second lieutenant in 1941 and served until released from active duty as a lieutenant colonel in 1946. He was a member of the New York City Council from 1946 to 1949. He was elected as a Democrat to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses, holding office from January 3, 1949 to January 3, 1953. He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1952 to the Eighty-third Congress. After leaving Congress Clemente was executive vice president of Unexcelled Chemical Corp., Ohio Bronze Corp., Premier Chemical Corp., and Modene Paint Corp. He died in Jamaica, New York; interment was in St. John's Cemetery, Flushing.", "score": "1.6033297" }, { "id": "11986373", "title": "Clemente Estable", "text": " Estable was born on 23 May 1894, close to San Juan Bautista. This was the historical name of what is now known as the Town of Santa Lucia, Canelones, Uruguay. Born of Italian immigrants, his parents Giuseppe Stabile and Giuseppa Fallobella met and married in Uruguay in 1877. A few years later, the family re-located to La Union, an area that, at the time, was semi-rural, although situated on the outskirts of the capital city of Montevideo. His parents had a farm and ran a grocery store, that was manned, in part, by Clemente and his brothers. He learnt how to read with his older ", "score": "1.6002215" }, { "id": "32911704", "title": "Michael Clemente", "text": " Born in New York City, Clemente lived in Brooklyn. He married Josephine Tresonte and was the father of three daughters. His official jobs included labor organizer, secretary, and business agent for Manhattan Local 856 of the International Longshoremen's Association (ILA). Clemente's criminal record included rape, assault, disorderly conduct, extortion, conspiracy to violate federal liquor laws, and perjury. Originally a lieutenant in a crew of Rocco Pellegrino, Clemente used his power at the waterfront to extort money from shipping companies and the companies that loaded and unloaded cargo. At one point, the president of a company managing stevedores paid Clemente $11,000 for one of his daughter's weddings. In 1953, Clemente was ", "score": "1.5990036" }, { "id": "13275338", "title": "Roberto Clemente Jr.", "text": " Sports City, a place both young and old could be instructed in sports, but more importantly, spend quality time with family and become involved citizens. In 1978 he was chosen to carry the torch and light the Pavilion for the Pan Am Games. Clemente excelled in sports at the junior high and high school levels. He was captain of the volleyball team and participated in track and field and basketball, and was offered a spot on a professional basketball team. After high school, Clemente moved to Bradenton, Florida to attend a community college. In 1984, he was spotted by a Philadelphia Phillies scout, and signed by the organization, joining ", "score": "1.5896182" }, { "id": "5645592", "title": "Denis Clemente", "text": " Denis Clemente (born April 10, 1986 in Bayamón, Puerto Rico) is a Puerto Rican professional basketball player with BK Bemaco SPU Nitra of the Slovak Basketball Association, he played collegiately in the United States with the Kansas State University Wildcats, which he graduated from in 2010. He is a 6'1, 175 pound combo guard. Clemente led Kansas State to the elite 8 round of the 2010 NCAA men's basketball tournament before losing to the Butler Bulldogs. Clemente entered the 2010 NBA Draft but went undrafted. He played in the NBA Summer League with the Charlotte Bobcats but was cut prior to training camp. He is the second cousin of Major League Baseball Hall of Fame player Roberto Clemente. In December 2010 he signed with Greek club Maroussi BC. In September 2011 he signed with Slovak club BK Bemaco SPU Nitra. In 2011 he was selected Rookie of the Year in Puerto Rico's Professional league. He is playing on Mineros de Zacatecas in the LNBP of México in the 2019-2020 season.", "score": "1.5847169" }, { "id": "13275336", "title": "Roberto Clemente Jr.", "text": " Roberto Clemente Jr. -- or in the Spanish naming system Roberto Clemente Zabala (born August 17, 1965) —is a baseball broadcaster and former professional baseball player from San Juan, Puerto Rico. He was born in the Santurce barrio. His father Roberto Clemente was the first Latin American player to compile 3,000 hits in Major League Baseball history. His mother Vera Clemente hosted a telethon in Puerto Rico in order to raise funds for the Ciudad Roberto Clemente, a sporting complex located in Carolina, Puerto Rico.", "score": "1.5784411" }, { "id": "14961386", "title": "Pia Clemente", "text": " Clemente was born in the Philippines and removed to New Jersey at the age of three. is a 1989 graduate of the Peddie School in Hightstown, New Jersey. Clemente first attended Lehigh University in 1989 and later transferred to Barnard College in 1990 where she was on both tennis teams. She was an Academic All-Ivy tennis player and had dreams of playing professionally before she suffered an injury and turned her interest toward theater and film. While at Barnard, Clemente produced a short film called Christmas in New York, which later won the Academy Award for Dramatic Short Student Film in 1997. In 1993, Clemente graduated from Barnard College with a degree in English. Afterwards, she earned a Master of Fine Arts from the American Film Institute Conservatory.", "score": "1.5713134" }, { "id": "4501961", "title": "Clément Cabanettes", "text": " Clément Cabanettes (14 August 1851 – 14 July 1910) was born in Ambec near the small town of Saint-Côme-d'Olt in the southern French département of Aveyron. He is remembered for bringing forty families (164 men, women and children) from Aveyron to Argentina and founding the town of Pigüé, Saavedra in 1884.", "score": "1.5577173" }, { "id": "2471586", "title": "Clémentine Célarié", "text": " She was born as Meryem Célarié in Dakar in what was then the French colony of Senegal on 12 October 1957. After passing her Baccalaureate, she spent a year living in the United States. Back in France, she took acting lessons and became an actress. She has three sons, Abraham, Gustave and Balthazar. She lives in Aix-en-Provence.", "score": "1.5519447" } ]
In what city was Dale Polley born?
[ "Georgetown", "Georgetown, KY", "Georgetown, Kentucky" ]
place of birth
Dale Polley
3,825,824
81
[ { "id": "26292166", "title": "Gerald Polley", "text": " Gerald A. Polley (January 29, 1947 – July 4, 2012) was an American political campaigner, singer, animator and alleged psychic who resided in Bismarck, North Dakota. He was married to Linda Polley, who shares his political and religious views. Polley grew up in Maine, before moving to North Dakota in 1999. He founded the religion of Spiritism, which according to him and his wife is based on a faith that originated 500,000 years ago on a planet named Hades and was brought to Earth by extraterrestrial colonizers, who died in a cataclysmic event remembered in human legend as the Great Flood. The Polleys claimed to be in contact with God, Jesus and Muhammad, along with the spirits of such well-known figures as John ", "score": "1.662458" }, { "id": "1852548", "title": "Dale Starkey", "text": " Dale Starkey was born in 1924 in Pryor, Oklahoma, to Flossie Jones and Garland Starkey. He started his radio career at age 6 as a singer on radio station [WHB]'s program \"Kansas City Kiddies Review\". Serving in the U.S. Naval Amphibious forces during World War II, he participated in the Invasion of Omaha Beach, Normandy, France, on his 20th birthday. He was subsequently involved in a bombing during the invasion of Okinawa by a Suicide plane. On discharge from the service in 1945, he went to work as one of the original voices of classical music station KDFC in San Francisco, California. He then worked at CBS in Hollywood as singer, writer, actor and announcer, retiring in 1982 from San Francisco station KABL. Starkey continues to do commercial announcing and writes fiction and screenplays at his home in Carmel, California.", "score": "1.6584041" }, { "id": "7077516", "title": "Eugene Polley", "text": " Eugene J. Polley was born November 29, 1915 in Chicago, Illinois; He attended the City Colleges of Chicago and Armour Institute of Technology, but left before graduating. In 1935, he was hired as a stock boy for Zenith Electronics; he moved to the company's parts department, where he created the company's first catalog, then transferred to engineering, where his assignments included work on radar during World War II for the U.S. Department of Defense. His 1955 invention, marketed as the Flash-Matic, used visible light to remotely control a television outfitted with four photo cells in the cabinet at the corners of the screen. Aiming the pistol-shaped control at an individual photocell could turn the receiver on and off, mute the sound ", "score": "1.6512058" }, { "id": "3352908", "title": "Michael Polley (footballer)", "text": " An 18-year-old at the time he was drafted, Polley spent his first season with Melbourne developing in the reserves. For the last match of the 1995 home and away season, Polley was named as an emergency in the squad, but was not required to play. After a season's development, Polley was one of several young players at Melbourne that were expected to \"take the next step\" in 1996. Due to the Demons need for pace, Polley was named to make his AFL debut in the second round of the season, but was ultimately not selected. After being suspended for one week and injuring his hand in May, Polley finally made his AFL debut against Essendon in round 9. ", "score": "1.6166381" }, { "id": "28652260", "title": "Stan Polley", "text": " Polley was born on April 7, 1922 in New York City. After serving as a corporal in the U.S. Army during World War II, he practiced law and worked in retail shops before beginning his managerial career in New York's garment industry. He began artist management after he met Lou Christie in the mid-1960s. It was through his association with Christie that he met and began working with other artists in the New York and Los Angeles entertainment fields. In 1968, Polley formed a company called Five Arts Management, for his work with singer Lou Christie, musician Al Kooper, arranger Charles Calello, TV director Michael Cooper, composer Sandy Linzer and WABC disc jockey Bob Lewis. He formed further companies for legal and accounting purposes to manage artists including ", "score": "1.607439" }, { "id": null, "title": "Dale Polley", "text": "Dale Polley\n\nEzra Dale Polley (born August 9, 1965) is a former Major League Baseball pitcher for the New York Yankees. He bats right-handed and throws left-handed.\n\nHe was signed by the Atlanta Braves as an amateur free agent in 1987. He played only in with the Yankees. Polley had a 1-3 record in 32 games, with a 7.89 ERA. Polley attended Kentucky State University.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Polley", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Road to Avonlea", "text": "Road to Avonlea\n\nRoad to Avonlea is a Canadian television series first broadcast in Canada between January 7, 1990, and March 31, 1996, as part of the \"CBC Family Hour\" anthology series, and in the United States starting on March 5, 1990. It was created by Kevin Sullivan and produced by Sullivan Films (later Sullivan Entertainment) in association with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) and the Disney Channel, with additional funding from Telefilm Canada. It follows the adventures of Sara Stanley, a young girl sent to live with her relatives in early 20th-century eastern Canada. It was loosely adapted from novels by Lucy Maud Montgomery, with many characters and episodes inspired by her stories.\n\nSome episodes were turned into independent books by various authors; around 30 titles have been released.\n\nIn the United States, its title was shortened to \"Avonlea\", and a number of episodes were retitled and reordered. The series was released on VHS and DVD there as \"Tales from Avonlea\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Danny Rios", "text": "Danny Rios\n\nDaniel Rios (born November 11, 1972) is a former professional baseball player. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB), the KBO League, and Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB). Rios's repertoire included a sharp slider, change-up and fastball around 90 mph.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "The Law of Enclosures (film)", "text": "The Law of Enclosures (film)\n\nThe Law of Enclosures is a 2000 Canadian drama film. It was written and directed by John Greyson, and based on the novel \"The Law of Enclosures\" by Dale Peck.\n\nThe story traces the marital relationship of Henry and Beatrice, characters based on Peck's real-life parents, over the course of their lives from their courtship as young adults to their 40th wedding anniversary. For the film adaptation, Greyson set the events in 1991 against the backdrop of the first Gulf War, with Henry and Beatrice's younger and older selves all coexisting in a single time frame.\n\nSarah Polley and Brendan Fletcher play Beatrice and Henry as a young couple, with Diane Ladd and Sean McCann playing the older characters. While author Peck was born in New York and raised in Kansas, Greyson set the film in Sarnia, Ontario. The score was written by Don Pyle and Andrew Zealley.\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "1311670", "title": "Ryan Pollie", "text": " Ryan Pollie (born August 2, 1988) is an American musician from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania that now lives in Los Angeles, California. Pollie is primarily known for music under his own name and as Los Angeles Police Department. He is also a music producer that mostly self produces his own albums.", "score": "1.5933897" }, { "id": "7503703", "title": "Michael Polley", "text": " Michael Robert Polley (born 4 November 1949 in Westbury, Tasmania) is a Labor Party politician and former member of the Tasmanian House of Assembly in the Division of Lyons. First elected in 1972 at age 22 he was the longest-serving member of the Tasmanian parliament, having been re-elected at ten successive State elections. He is married with two sons and one daughter. He was the youngest Cabinet Minister in Tasmanian history, appointed at the age of 27 in the government of premier Doug Lowe. His wife Kim Polley is Mayor of Northern Midlands Council, on which his son Tim also serves. His sister Helen Polley is a member of the Australian Senate. In 1989 during the Field government he was made the speaker of the Tasmanian House of Assembly. He became speaker again in 1998 when Labor won government. He was minister for national parks 1976–1981. In the Tasmanian state election 2006, Polley received the highest primary vote in Lyons. Polley announced in June 2013 that he would retire at the 2014 Tasmanian state election. In September 2014 Polley announced he would stand as councillor for the Northern Midlands Council in the 2014 Tasmanian Local Government Elections.", "score": "1.5682967" }, { "id": "30568344", "title": "Marty Pollio", "text": " operation. As a teenager, his weekend job was delivering the \"gifts\" to cops and judges for his father. After graduating from St. Xavier High School in Louisville, Pollio was in his third year of a four-year apprenticeship as an electrician when he quit on a whim to become an actor. While attending theatre classes at the University of Louisville, he studied movement theatre and mime with Avner Eisenberg (Avner the Eccentric) and later in Los Angeles with Israeli mime, Yaakov Noy. His performing career began in 1977 as a roving entertainer at the theme park, Opryland USA, in Nashville, TN. Once his act became choreographed to music, he started doing ", "score": "1.5543473" }, { "id": "16586313", "title": "Horace N. Polley", "text": " Horace Newton Polley (March 10, 1842 &ndash; September 18, 1914) was a farmer, musician, stonemason, and politician. Born in Massena, New York, St. Lawrence County, New York, Polley moved with his parents to West Point, Wisconsin, Columbia County, Wisconsin and settled on a farm. He was a farmer and a stonemason. In 1858, he went back to St. Lawrence County, New York but returned to West Point, Wisconsin in 1861. During the American Civil War, Polley served in the 11th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry Regiment and was a musician and later served as principal musician. In 1866, Polley moved to the Town of Bridge Creek, Wisconsin, Eau Claire, Wisconsin. Polley was the assessor for the Town of Bridge Creek and was a Republican. From 1897 to 1901, Polley served in the Wisconsin State Assembly. Polley ran unsuccessfully for Eau Claire County assessor in 1907. He moved to Trempealeau County, Wisconsin and then moved back to Eau Claire County, Wisconsin, where he died.", "score": "1.5490987" }, { "id": "14855281", "title": "Sydney Pollack", "text": " Pollack was born in Lafayette, Indiana, to a family of Russian-Jewish immigrants, the son of Rebecca (née Miller) and David Pollack, a semi-professional boxer and pharmacist. The family relocated to South Bend and his parents divorced when he was young. His mother, who suffered from alcoholism and emotional problems, died at the age of 37, when Pollack was 16. Despite earlier plans to attend college and then medical school, Pollack left Indiana for New York City soon after finishing high school at age 17. Pollack studied acting with Sanford Meisner at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre from 1952 to 1954, working on a lumber truck between terms. After two years of army service ending in 1958, he returned to the Playhouse at Meisner's invitation to become his assistant. In 1960, John Frankenheimer, a friend of Pollack, asked him to come to Los Angeles to work as a dialogue coach for the child actors on Frankenheimer's first big picture, The Young Savages. It was during this time that Pollack met Burt Lancaster, who encouraged the young actor to try directing.", "score": "1.5374185" }, { "id": "2506741", "title": "Sarah Polley", "text": " Polley was born and raised in Toronto, Ontario, the youngest of five children born to Diane Elizabeth Polley (née MacMillan). Her siblings are Susy and John Buchan from Diane's first marriage to George Deans-Buchan, and Mark and Joanna Polley from her second marriage to Michael Polley (1933–2018), a British-born actor who became an insurance agent after Diane and he started a family. Her mother was an actress (best known for playing Gloria Beechham in 44 episodes of the Canadian TV series Street Legal) and a casting director. She died of cancer the week of Polley's 11th birthday. Polley was raised by Diane and Michael. During ", "score": "1.5345443" }, { "id": "7217305", "title": "David Pollack", "text": " Pollack was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey. He attended Shiloh High School in Snellville, Georgia, and was a star in football, basketball and wrestling. In football, as a senior, he was a Class 5A all-state selection and the Atlanta Touchdown Club named him the Defensive Lineman of the Year.", "score": "1.5332949" }, { "id": "27110669", "title": "Richard J. Daley", "text": " Richard J. Daley was born in Bridgeport, a working-class neighborhood of Chicago. He was the only child of Michael and Lillian (Dunne) Daley, whose families had both arrived from the Old Parish area, near Dungarvan, County Waterford, Ireland, during the Great Famine. Richard's father was a sheet metal worker with a reserved demeanor. Michael's father, James E. Daley, was a butcher born in New York City, while his mother, Delia Gallagher Daley, was an Irish immigrant. Richard's mother was outgoing and outspoken. Before women obtained the right to vote in 1920, Lillian Daley was an active suffragette, participating in marches and often bringing her son to them. She hoped her son's life would be more professionally successful than that of his parents. Prior to his mother's death, Daley had won the Democratic nomination for Cook County sheriff. Lillian wanted more than this for her son, telling a friend, \"I didn't raise my son to be a policeman.\" Daley would later state that his wellsprings were his religion, his family, his neighborhood, the Democratic Party, and his love of the city.", "score": "1.5156686" }, { "id": "28485036", "title": "Dale Archer", "text": " Dewy Dale Archer, Jr. was born in New Orleans Louisiana, and moved to Lake Charles at the age of 4. His father Dewey Dale Archer Sr. (born 1923), was an Ophthalmologist whose parents lived outside of Knoxville Tennessee. His mother, Valerie Archer (née Grode; born 1930) is a native of New Orleans who can trace her lineage to Jean Lafitte. Archer has one sister, Lee Ann Archer, who received her undergraduate degree at Rice University, and attended Tulane Law School.", "score": "1.5129251" }, { "id": "15280406", "title": "Richard D. Poll", "text": " Poll was born in Salt Lake City, where he lived until moving to Fort Worth, Texas at age 10. He published his first article at age 13 in Liahona, the Elders' Journal, a missionary magazine published by the LDS Church. From 1939-1941 he served as an LDS missionary, first in Germany until World War II began, and then in Canada. From 1942-1945, Poll served as a first lieutenant in the U.S. Army Air Force without seeing the front. He married Emogene (Gene) Hill in 1943 in the Salt Lake Temple, and they remained married until their deaths in 1994 in Provo, Utah. Throughout his life, Poll was active in the LDS Church and served in various positions, such as stake high councilor.", "score": "1.506463" }, { "id": "28652259", "title": "Stan Polley", "text": " Stanley Herbert Polley (April 7, 1922 – July 20, 2009) was an American entertainment manager and fraudster active in the 1960s and 1970s. His clients included rock band Badfinger, musician Al Kooper, and singer Lou Christie. Throughout his career, Polley defrauded a number of clients and associates.", "score": "1.5036494" }, { "id": "8716437", "title": "Dale Godboldo", "text": " Godboldo was born in Dallas, Texas.", "score": "1.4969413" }, { "id": "16091599", "title": "Dale Dickey", "text": " Diana Dale Dickey was born in Knoxville, Tennessee, and attended Bearden High School. She played several roles in high school productions, notably as Emily in Our Town. She later attended the University of Tennessee from 1979 to 1984, but left to pursue her acting career. On December 10, 2015, she returned to the University of Tennessee as a guest speaker, where she gave the commencement speech to fall graduates and was awarded an honorary Master of Fine Arts degree from the university. Dickey has been working as a character actress in both mainstream and independent films since the 1990s. She is known for her recurring ", "score": "1.495918" }, { "id": "3352906", "title": "Michael Polley (footballer)", "text": " Michael Polley (born 14 September 1976) is a former Australian rules footballer who played for Melbourne Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL).", "score": "1.4956733" }, { "id": "31448764", "title": "Dale Wasserman", "text": " Dale Wasserman was born in Rhinelander, Wisconsin, the child of Russian immigrants Samuel Wasserman and Bertha Paykel, and was orphaned at the age of nine. He lived in a state orphanage and with an older brother in South Dakota before he \"hit the rails\". He later said, \"I'm a self-educated hobo. My entire adolescence was spent as a hobo, riding the rails and alternately living on top of buildings on Spring Street in downtown Los Angeles. I regret never having received a formal education. But I did get a real education about human nature.\"", "score": "1.4941497" } ]
In what city was Robert Crannell Minor born?
[ "New York City", "NYC", "New York", "the five boroughs", "Big Apple", "City of New York", "NY City", "New York, New York", "New York City, New York", "New York, NY", "New York City (NYC)" ]
place of birth
Robert Crannell Minor
564,506
95
[ { "id": "318340", "title": "Robert Crannell Minor", "text": " Robert Crannell Minor (1839–1904), American artist, was born in New York City on April 30, 1839. His father, Israel Minor, was a merchant who made a large fortune in the pharmaceutical business. As a young man, Robert Minor worked as a bookkeeper in New York City but decided to study art in his early thirties. After studying in New York with painter Alfred Cornelius Howland, Minor went abroad in 1871 to continue his artistic education. He visited various galleries in England before traveling to Barbizon, France, where he studied under Diaz. He later studied in Antwerp under Joseph Van Luppen and Hippolyte Boulenger. In 1874, he was vice president of the Société artistique et ", "score": "2.1748471" }, { "id": "4493872", "title": "Robert Lee Minor", "text": " Robert Lee Minor or Bob Lee Minor (born January 1, 1944) is an American stunt performer, television and film actor, best known for doubling many African-American celebrities such as: Jim Brown, Fred Williamson, Bernie Mac, Danny Glover, Carl Weathers, Roger E. Mosley and John Amos. Minor was born in Birmingham, Alabama, and made his first television appearance in 1973 on the television program, Search, then appeared in tons of shows such as: Barnaby Jones, McCloud, The Six Million Dollar Man, Eight is Enough, Magnum, P.I. and Starsky and Hutch among other popular television programs.", "score": "1.8738544" }, { "id": "318343", "title": "Robert Crannell Minor", "text": " during the last decade of his life. Despite later speculation, it did not materially impact the quantity of his output, and the suggestion that it impacted the quality of his work is a misreading of the increasing abstraction in certain of his later Tonalist paintings. He died at his home in Waterford, Connecticut, on August 4, 1904. His paintings are owned by the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Yale University Art Gallery, the Mead Art Museum, the Lyman Allyn Museum, the Florence Griswold Museum, the Brooklyn Museum, the Newark Museum, the Robert Hull Fleming Museum, the Haggin Museum, the Salmagundi Club, the Memorial Art Gallery, and the University of Arizona Museum of Art.", "score": "1.8210161" }, { "id": "318341", "title": "Robert Crannell Minor", "text": " of Antwerp. On his return to the United States in 1874, he opened a studio in New York. He painted for many years out of his studio in the Old University Building of New York University. Painting in the Adirondack Mountains and later in Waterford, Connecticut, Minor soon became known for his landscapes resembling the Barbizon School. Under the influence of George Inness and Alexander Helwig Wyant, he also began to paint in a Tonalist style. His painting Great Silas at Night (1897) displays his adoption of the Tonalist style while his lingering Barbizon style can be seen in A Hillside Pasture. From the 1890s until his death, Minor exhibited frequently with the Tonalists ", "score": "1.8064935" }, { "id": "15940421", "title": "Robert Minor", "text": " Robert Minor, best known to those who knew him by the nickname \"Bob,\" was born July 15, 1884, in San Antonio, Texas. Minor came from old and respected family lines. On his father's side, General John Minor had served as Thomas Jefferson's Presidential campaign manager; his mother was related to General Sam Houston, first President of the Republic of Texas. His father was a school teacher and lawyer, later elected as a judge, while his maternal grandfather was a doctor. Despite the notable family forefathers, Bob Minor was not brought up with a silver spoon in his mouth — rather he was the product of what one historian has called \"the hard-up, run-down middle class,\" living in an \"unpainted frontier cottage in San Antonio.\" Minor was unable to begin school until age 10 due to his family's dire financial straits before leaving school at age 14 to take a job as a Western Union messenger boy to help support his family. Minor left home two years later, going to work at a variety of different jobs, including time spent as a sign painter, a carpenter, a farm worker, and a railroad laborer.", "score": "1.7286353" }, { "id": null, "title": "Robert Crannell Minor", "text": "Robert Crannell Minor\n\nRobert Crannell Minor (1839–1904), American artist, was born in New York City on April 30, 1839. His father, Israel Minor, was a merchant who made a large fortune in the pharmaceutical business. As a young man, Robert Minor worked as a bookkeeper in New York City but decided to study art in his early thirties. After studying in New York with painter Alfred Cornelius Howland, Minor went abroad in 1871 to continue his artistic education. He visited various galleries in England before traveling to Barbizon, France, where he studied under Diaz. He later studied in Antwerp under Joseph Van Luppen and Hippolyte Boulenger. In 1874, he was vice president of the Société artistique et littéraire of Antwerp.\n\nOn his return to the United States in 1874, he opened a studio in New York. He painted for many years out of his studio in the Old University Building of New York University. Painting in the Adirondack Mountains and later in Waterford, Connecticut, Minor soon became known for his landscapes resembling the Barbizon School. Under the influence of George Inness and Alexander Helwig Wyant, he also began to paint in a Tonalist style. His painting \"Great Silas at Night\" (1897) displays his adoption of the Tonalist style while his lingering Barbizon style can be seen in \"A Hillside Pasture\". From the 1890s until his death, Minor exhibited frequently with the Tonalists in New York. In 1897, he was elected a member of the National Academy of Design, New York. In 1900, Minor achieved the height of his success at the historic William T. Evans sale in 1900, where his painting \"The Close of Day\" (private collection) fetched $3,050, the highest price for a landscape by a living American painter at that auction.\n\nOver the course of his lifetime, Minor was a member of the Society of American Artists and the Salmagundi Club. He exhibited in New York, Brooklyn, Chicago, and elsewhere in the United States, as well as in the Royal Academy of London and the salons of Paris and Antwerp. Minor was plagued with bad health during the last decade of his life. Despite later speculation, it did not materially impact the quantity of his output, and the suggestion that it impacted the quality of his work is a misreading of the increasing abstraction in certain of his later Tonalist paintings. He died at his home in Waterford, Connecticut, on August 4, 1904. His paintings are owned by the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Yale University Art Gallery, the Mead Art Museum, the Lyman Allyn Museum, the Florence Griswold Museum, the Brooklyn Museum, the Newark Museum, the Robert Hull Fleming Museum, the Haggin Museum, the Salmagundi Club, the Memorial Art Gallery, and the University of Arizona Museum of Art.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Robert Minor (disambiguation)", "text": "Robert Minor (disambiguation)\n\nRobert Minor (1884–1952) was a political cartoonist, journalist and leading member of the American Communist Party.\n\nRobert Minor may also refer to:\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "File:Robert C. Minor - October - 1953.3.7 - Smithsonian American Art ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "File:Robert C. Minor - Great Silas at Night - 1909.7.48 - Smithsonian ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "File:Robert C. Minor - A Hillside Pasture - 1909.7.47 - Smithsonian ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "15940423", "title": "Robert Minor", "text": " Minor moved to St. Louis to take a position as a cartoonist for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Minor's work, initially very conventional in form using pen-and-ink, was transformed by his move to the use of grease crayon on paper. Minor gained recognition as the chief cartoonist at the Post-Dispatch and was considered by many to be among the best in the country. In 1911, Robert Minor was hired by the New York World, where he became the highest paid cartoonist in the United States. His father was on a parallel path of advancement, transformed by a 1910 election \"from an unsuccessful lawyer to an influential district judge.\"", "score": "1.6968818" }, { "id": "318342", "title": "Robert Crannell Minor", "text": " New York. In 1897, he was elected a member of the National Academy of Design, New York. In 1900, Minor achieved the height of his success at the historic William T. Evans sale in 1900, where his painting The Close of Day (private collection) fetched $3,050, the highest price for a landscape by a living American painter at that auction. Over the course of his lifetime, Minor was a member of the Society of American Artists and the Salmagundi Club. He exhibited in New York, Brooklyn, Chicago, and elsewhere in the United States, as well as in the Royal Academy of London and the salons of Paris and Antwerp. Minor was plagued with bad ", "score": "1.6954236" }, { "id": "15940426", "title": "Robert Minor", "text": " before Minor came to the banks of the Rubicon, when his employer demanded that the artist begin to draw pro-war panels. Minor was unalterably opposed to the World War and was faced with a choice between his paycheck and his beliefs. His convictions won and Minor was successful in having his contract with The World annulled. On June 1, 1915, Minor moved to the New York Call, a Socialist Party-affiliated daily broadsheet. Minor also began contributing aggressively anti-war cartoons to Max Eastman's radical New York monthly, The Masses. Minor's radical cartoons would later provide fodder for the United States government's prosecution of The ", "score": "1.6913573" }, { "id": "15940422", "title": "Robert Minor", "text": " In 1904, at the age of twenty, Robert Minor was hired as an assistant stereotypist and handyman at the San Antonio Gazette, where he developed his artistic talent in his spare time. Minor emerged as an accomplished political cartoonist.", "score": "1.6504788" }, { "id": "431701", "title": "William J. Minor", "text": " Minor was born on January 27, 1808 in Natchez, Mississippi. His father was Stephen Minor (1760-1844), a planter and banker, and his mother, Katherine (Lintot) Minor (1770-1844). Minor was educated in Philadelphia in the 1820s. He learned Latin, French and English with a private tutor. He also \"attended lectures in chemistry and philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania.\"", "score": "1.6422344" }, { "id": "15940424", "title": "Robert Minor", "text": " In 1907 Minor joined the Socialist Party of America but by the beginning of 1912 he had moved towards an anarchist orientation and support of revolutionary industrial unionism. Minor had saved several hundred dollars earned in St. Louis and decided that he wanted to go to Paris to attend art school to perfect his craft. In France he enrolled in a class at the Ecole des Beaux Arts, the French national art school, but he found the experience unsatisfying. Minor spent the rest of his time in Paris studying art on his own and taking part in the left wing labor movement through the ", "score": "1.6278535" }, { "id": "15940420", "title": "Robert Minor", "text": " Robert Berkeley \"Bob\" Minor (1884 – 1952), alternatively known as \"Fighting Bob,\" was a political cartoonist, a radical journalist, and, beginning in 1920, a leading member of the American Communist Party.", "score": "1.618207" }, { "id": "16013780", "title": "Mike Minor (actor)", "text": " Minor was born on December 7, 1940, in San Francisco to newspaper advertising man Don Fedderson, who would later become a leading television producer, and Tido Minor. He began voice lessons in 1953 at the age of 13. His first singing job was at Ye Little Club in Beverly Hills, where he was engaged for two weeks and held over for ten. He attended University High School in Los Angeles and Brown Military Academy in San Diego. After that he appeared at Bimbo's in San Francisco, the Rat Fink Room in New York City, the Elegante in Brooklyn, Izzy's Supper Club in Vancouver and the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Los Angeles.", "score": "1.610712" }, { "id": "15477828", "title": "Francis Minor", "text": " Minor was born on August 20, 1820. He graduated from Princeton University and the University of Virginia before he and his wife (a distant cousin), moved to St. Louis in 1845 from Virginia. They had only one child, a son named Francis Gilmer Minor, who was born in 1852 and died in 1866 as a result of a \"shooting accident.\"", "score": "1.5988631" }, { "id": "26417350", "title": "Lewis J. Minor", "text": " Lewis Joseph Minor was born in Harbour Beach, Michigan to Kathleen Mary Hill, who immigrated from Tipperary, Ireland and Newell Wellington Minor, an analytical chemist and combustion engineer for Ford Motor Company. Minor attended schools in nearby Highland Park. At the age 18, he graduated from St. Benedict High School and began working for the Donahue Varnish Company. Minor graduated with honors from Highland Park Junior College in 1937. He then enrolled at Michigan State College where he graduated with a bachelor's degree in Chemistry in 1939. Earlier that same year, he married Ruth Eloise Angell of Lansing, Michigan. Minor went on to receive his master's degree in Analytical Chemistry from Wayne State University in 1944, and his Ph.D. in Food Science from Michigan State University.", "score": "1.5976446" }, { "id": "734502", "title": "Robert Smalls", "text": " Robert Smalls was born in 1839 to Lydia Polite, an enslaved woman owned by Henry McKee. She gave birth to him in a cabin behind McKee's house, at 511 Prince Street in Beaufort, South Carolina. He grew up in the city under the influence of the Lowcountry Gullah culture of his mother. His mother lived as a servant in the house but grew up in the fields. Robert was favored over other enslaved people, so his mother worried that he might grow up not understanding the plight of enslaved field workers, and asked for him to be made to work in the fields ", "score": "1.579081" }, { "id": "12432243", "title": "Wesley Lyng Minor", "text": " Wesley Lyng Minor (born 1851) was an American architect in Massachusetts. Minor was born in Franklin, Louisiana in 1851, and moved north to New Bedford with his family at the age of seven. They later moved to Marion and Middleborough. He began studying architecture with a retired carpenter who taught at the Pierce Academy. Three years later he moved to Boston, where he worked for William R. Ware. After a few months he moved to Philadelphia, where he worked for John McArthur, Jr. A year later he went to New York City and worked for Richard Morris Hunt. In 1878 Minor established himself as an architect in Charleston, South Carolina. He also worked at Topeka, Denver, and Catlettsburg, never remaining long in any one place. Around ", "score": "1.5715957" }, { "id": "16310686", "title": "Bill Minor", "text": " Born in Hammond, Louisiana, Minor graduated from Tulane University. He served in the Navy in World War II as a gunnery officer aboard the USS Stephen Potter. Minor was a reporter for the New Orleans Times-Picayune. He covered the Civil Rights Movement. In 1973, he bought the Jackson Capital Reporter.", "score": "1.5694838" }, { "id": "32788600", "title": "William T. Minor", "text": " Minor was born in Stamford, Connecticut on October 3, 1815 to Simeon Hinman Minor and Catherine Lockwood Minor. He studied at Yale University and graduated in 1834. Minor taught school for five years while he studied law under his father, Simeon Minor, a former Connecticut legislator.", "score": "1.5517063" }, { "id": "28962034", "title": "George Minor", "text": " George Minor (December 7, 1845, Richmond, Virginia - January 30, 1904, Richmond, Virginia) was an American composer. Minor attended a military academy in Richmond, and served during the American Civil War as Chief of Ordnance and Hydrography of the Confederate States Navy. After the war, he went into the music field, teaching at singing schools and conducting at musical conventions. He helped found the Hume-Minor Company, which made pianos and organs. A member of the First Baptist Church of Richmond, Minor was the Sunday school superintendent there.", "score": "1.5502179" } ]
In what city was Izumi Iimura born?
[ "Japan", "State of Japan", "Land of the Rising Sun", "Nihon", "Nippon", "JP", "Nippon-koku", "Nihon-koku", "JA", "JPN", "jp", "JAP", "Ja", "Jap" ]
place of birth
Izumi Iimura
4,591,465
30
[ { "id": "13437786", "title": "Izumi Kazuto", "text": "She is currently living in Tokyo, but she was born in Ota, Tokyo. ", "score": "1.8172297" }, { "id": "32377894", "title": "Iimura", "text": "Izumi Iimura (born 1980), Japanese women's cricketer ; Jo Iimura (飯村 穣), Japanese general ; Rikiya Iimura, Japanese karateka ; Iimura Takahiko (飯村 隆彦), Japanese film director Iimura (written: 飯村) is a Japanese surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.7989112" }, { "id": "29973743", "title": "Izumi Inamori", "text": " Izumi Inamori was born and grew up in Kagoshima Prefecture. After finished from the local high school, Inamori went to University of Texas at Arlington to study English abroad. After a year and a half of school life in the United States, her family was poor so she returned to Japan, and soon started her career as a model locally at the age of 20 in 1992. In 1994, she made her film debut in the TV drama series \"Ue o muite arukō!\". She is also a first dan kendoka.", "score": "1.7922605" }, { "id": "11010950", "title": "Shigeru Izumi", "text": " Shigeru Izumi was born in 1922 in Osaka, Japan. He attended the Nakanoshima School of Western Art, and the Osaka City Kogei School (Osaka City School of Applied Arts), graduating in 1939. In 1951 he established the Osaka demokurato bijutsu kyokai (Democratic Artists Association) with fellow artists Ei-Q and Yoshio Hayakawa. In 1959 he traveled to New York where he was guest professor at the Pratt Graphic Art Center. In 1963 he moved to Paris where he lived until around 1968, when he returned to Japan. Shigeru Izumi taught at the Osaka University of Arts from 1970 through the early 1990s. Shigeru Izumi died in 1995. His work is in the collections of the Harvard Art Museums, the Museum of Modern Art, the National Gallery of Art, and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. His work is also in the Carnegie Museum of Art, the Hyōgo Prefectural Museum of Art, the Machida City Museum of Graphic Arts, the Miyazaki Prefectural Art Museum, the Musée d'art moderne de la Ville de Paris, the National Museum of Art, Osaka, the National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto, the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, and the Tokushima Modern Art Museum.", "score": "1.777209" }, { "id": "29050555", "title": "Kyōka Izumi", "text": " Kyōka was born Izumi Kyōtarō on November 4, 1873 in the Shitashinmachi section of Kanazawa, Ishikawa, to Izumi Seiji (泉 清次), a chaser and inlayer of metallic ornaments, and Nakata Suzu (中田 鈴), daughter of a tsuzumi hand-drum player from Edo and younger sister to lead protagonist of the Noh theater, Kintarō Matsumoto. Because of his family's impoverished circumstances, he attended the tuition-free Hokuriku English-Japanese School, run by Christian missionaries. Even before he entered grade school, young Kintarō's mother introduced him to literature in picture-books interspersed with text called kusazōshi, and his works would later show the influence of this early contact with such visual forms of story-telling. In April 1883, at nine years old, Kyōka lost his mother, who was 29 at the time. It was a great blow ", "score": "1.7493684" }, { "id": null, "title": "Izumi Iimura", "text": "Izumi Iimura\n\nIzumi Iimura (born 2 December 1980) is a former Japanese cricketer who played three Women's One Day International cricket matches for Japan national women's cricket team in 2003.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Iimura", "text": "Iimura\n\nIimura (written: 飯村) is a Japanese surname. Notable people with the surname include:\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Bon-Bon Blanco", "text": "Bon-Bon Blanco\n\nBon-Bon Blanco (sometimes B3 or B) is a Japanese rock group during 2002–2009. The group used to belong to Columbia Music Entertainment, but has moved to Bouncy Records in 2006.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Sendai", "text": "Sendai\n\nIn the summer, the Sendai Tanabata Festival, the largest Tanabata festival in Japan, is held. In winter, the trees are decorated with thousands of lights for the , lasting through most of December.\n\nOn 11 March 2011, coastal areas of the city suffered catastrophic damage from a magnitude 9.0 offshore earthquake, which triggered a destructive tsunami.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Imperial Japanese Navy admirals", "text": "List of Imperial Japanese Navy admirals\n\nThe following is a list of the Admirals of the Imperial Japanese Navy during its existence from 1868 until 1945.\n", "score": null }, { "id": "16076273", "title": "Izumi Suzuki", "text": " Suzuki was born in Itō, Shizuoka in 1949. Her father Eiji Suzuki was a reporter for the Yomiuri Shimbun. After graduating from Shizuoka Prefectural Itō High School in 1968, she worked briefly as a keypunch operator at Itō City Hall. In 1969 she was selected as a runner-up for the New Writers' Award administered by the monthly literary magazine Shōsetsu Gendai and moved to Tokyo, where she found work as a hostess, nude model, and actor. Though her acting career was brief, her work was varied, and she appeared in both pink films and on stage, as a member of Tenjō Sajiki, the avant-garde theater troupe co-founded by Shūji Terayama. Suzuki appeared in Tenjō Sajiki's 1970 play 人力飛行機ソロモン The Man-powered Plane Solomon, and in January 1971 the troupe presented \"Izumi Suzuki's ", "score": "1.7400931" }, { "id": "15805009", "title": "Kei Marimura", "text": " Kei Marimura was born on August 29, 1957 in Chiyoda ward, Tokyo. Graduated from the Shōei Joshi Gakuin Junior and Senior High School, she made her debut as jazz singer in 1982 through the Toho College of Music. She also worked as an actress, appearing in many movies, TV-dramas and V-Cinema releases. In 2009, at 52, she made her debut as AV actress with the label Alice Japan. In 2011 she released her first novel, Intimacy (インティマシー).", "score": "1.7270525" }, { "id": "11840544", "title": "Masanobu Izumi", "text": " Izumi was born in Hiroshima Prefecture on April 8, 1944. After graduating from Meiji University, he joined Japanese Regional Leagues club Toyota Motors in 1967. The club was promoted to Japan Soccer League Division 1 in 1972 and Division 2 in 1973. He retired in 1976.", "score": "1.723468" }, { "id": "33173415", "title": "Iimura Takahiko", "text": " Takahiko Iimura (飯村隆彦) is a Japanese avant-garde filmmaker and fine artist. He is considered one of the pioneers of experimental and independent filmmaking in Japan. Iimura was born in Tokyo and is a graduate of Keio University. His film Onan (1963) won the Special Prize at the Brussels International Independent Film Festival in 1964. He published a seminal work on experimental filmmaking in 1970, Geijutsu to higeijutsu no aida, and a biography of Yoko Ono, Ono Yōko hito to sakuhin, in 1985. Iimura made much of his film in New York City, but became a professor at the Nagoya Zokei University of Art & Design in 1992.", "score": "1.720491" }, { "id": "27881069", "title": "Izumi Yukimura", "text": " Izumi Yukimura (雪村 いづみ) is a Japanese popular singer and actress. Yukimura made her debut with the song \"Omoide no Warutsu\" (想い出のワルツ) in 1953. Her style of singing varied from jazz to rock and roll. She became one of the three most popular female singers in the early postwar Japan, along with Chiemi Eri and Hibari Misora. On her 1974 album Super Generation, she sang Ryoichi Hattori's songs along with four popular musicians: Masataka Matsutoya, Shigeru Suzuki, Tatsuo Hayashi and Haruomi Hosono. Eri, who died in 1982, and Misora, who died in 1989, also recorded songs with Yukimura as a group in the 1950s, but those recordings had not been released for about 50 years because they each belonged to separate record labels. In 2004, their album including those songs was finally released for the first time.", "score": "1.7141494" }, { "id": "11410346", "title": "Iyo Matsumoto", "text": " Matsumoto was born in Ōta, Tokyo, Japan. She attended Morimura Academy (森村学園) from kindergarten through middle school and continued to Horikoshi High School a private high school in the Nakano section of Tokyo. She completed her studies at Toita Women's College also in the city.", "score": "1.7088103" }, { "id": "11672733", "title": "Izumi Kimura", "text": " Izumi Kimura was born in Yokohama-shi, Kanagawa, Japan in 1973. She studied music and specifically the piano from an early age. Kimura attended the Toho Gakuen School of Music with Akikio Teranishi, Akira Miyoshi and Kazuoki Fujii. After graduating in 1995, she sought to explore music outside of the classical realm and moved to Ireland, where she studied at the Royal Irish Academy of Music with Ray Keary.", "score": "1.6949114" }, { "id": "27587689", "title": "Izumi Shima", "text": " Shima was born Keiko Ishida (石田恵子) in the Shinjuku district of Tokyo, Japan on December 3, 1953. Ishida made her acting debut by 1975, using the alias Keiko Ono (小野恵子), in the TV series Taiyō ni Hoero!, but this alias was soon changed to avoid confusion with another actress. Ishida also used the aliases Emi Shirakawa (白川恵美) and Nozomi Shirakawa (白川望美) during this period. In 1977, Ishida came under exclusive contract with Nikkatsu studio and was given the stage name \"Izumi Shima\". She made her debut with the studio in the August 1977 Roman Porno film Lady Chatterley In Tokyo. Nikkatsu promoted Shima for this ", "score": "1.6867359" }, { "id": "8037978", "title": "Laura Izumikawa", "text": " Izumikawa was born in Tokyo. Her mother is Korean and her father is Chinese-Japanese. When she was 3 years old, Izumikawa's family immigrated to Southern California. Izumikawa became interested in journalism and photojournalism while attending law school, where she had an interest in African international law. A 2007 trip to Rwanda inspired a career shift to photojournalism and photography.", "score": "1.6794457" }, { "id": "10937219", "title": "Sohji Izumi", "text": " Sohji Izumi (和泉 崇司) is a Japanese actor. Izumi was born in Hiroshima, Japan in 1988. He started Javelin throw when he was in high school, and placed 4th in Hiroshima prefecture and 8th in Chugoku Area. While studying in the University of Central Arkansas, he broke school record and received athletic scholarship until his graduation. He participated in the United States ARMY ROTC and received basic military leadership training such as Land Navigation, Field Operation Training, Water Survival Training, Rappelling, and Firearms Training. He also completed the Emergency Medical Technician training at the local fire station, and Advanced Life-support training at the Tokyo Fire Department. In 2012, Izumi started his acting career after his graduation of Graduate School. He is best known for his roles as Carlito in the drama Angel Heart which is the after story of City Hunter written by Tsukasa Hojo.", "score": "1.6679407" }, { "id": "13239906", "title": "Izumi Sakai", "text": " Born in Hiratsuka, Kanagawa, Sakai grew up in Hadano, Kanagawa. Her father was a driving instructor, and she had a younger brother and younger sister. After her death, a neighbor recalled how popular and beautiful Sakai had been in elementary school. She was also athletic, joining the track and field team in junior high and playing tennis in high school. Graduating from Shoin Women's College (now Shoin University) in Atsugi City, Kanagawa, Sakai worked in a real estate company office for two years before being scouted by Stardust Promotion. Throughout her life, Sakai remained with her family, living modestly and mostly out of the public eye. Upon achieving career success, ", "score": "1.6631715" }, { "id": "11672732", "title": "Izumi Kimura", "text": " Izumi Kimura (born 10 March 1973) is a Japanese pianist and teacher now living in Ireland. Kimura currently teaches at the Dublin City University in jazz and contemporary music studies. As a performer and composer, she has been associated with contemporary music and is perhaps best known for her 2010 début album Asymmetry.", "score": "1.6615584" }, { "id": "14255771", "title": "Shigeru Izumiya", "text": " Shigeru Izumiya (泉谷 しげる Izumiya Shigeru, born May 11, 1948 in Aomori, raised in Meguro, Tokyo) is a Japanese poet, folk singer, actor, tarento. He established the record company For Life Records with Takuro Yoshida, Yosui Inoue, and Hitoshi Komuro in 1975. He also directed the 1986 film Death Powder (Desu Paudā). Between August 1995 and March 1996, Izumiya co-hosted the Satellaview-based weekly SoundLink Magazine, \"King of After School\" (放課後の王様), with Ayumi Hamasaki.", "score": "1.6401308" }, { "id": "12704140", "title": "Sayoko Izumi", "text": " Sayoko Izumi (泉彩世子) is a Japanese singer-songwriter and actor from Toyonaka, Osaka Prefecture. She was signed to King Records (Japan) until January, 2015. She debuted in 2013 with the single \"Scramble\".", "score": "1.6383585" }, { "id": "10038524", "title": "Akedo Kazumi", "text": " Kazumi was born in Hamamatsu, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan. He is a student of Toshio Sakai.", "score": "1.6322517" } ]
In what city was Aleksandar Madžar born?
[ "Bar", "Tivar", "Tivari", "Antivari", "Antibari", "Stari Bar" ]
place of birth
Aleksandar Madžar (soccer)
3,270,447
58
[ { "id": "27021713", "title": "Aleksandar Josipović", "text": " Aleksandar was born on 15 January in 1981. in Lazarevac, former Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. His dancing career starts at age of 9, and during his career he won 9 national championships in ballroom dancing, he was a finalist in the Golden World Cup (England) and a semifinalist in the World Cup (Hungary). He has danced and performed for many royal families, as well as for some countries presidents. Aleksandar is one of the most successful of dancers but also of the pedagogues in the world that come from Yugoslavia. He holds French and Serbian citizenship.", "score": "1.5792569" }, { "id": "7504809", "title": "Aleksandar Tijanić", "text": " Tijanić was born in Đakovica, FPR Yugoslavia. After finishing high school in his home town, he moved to Belgrade to study journalism at University of Belgrade's Faculty of Political Sciences. He did not complete his studies.", "score": "1.5461514" }, { "id": "852695", "title": "Aleksandar Nikolić", "text": " Though his parents lived in Brčko, Nikolić was born in Sarajevo, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, due to his pregnant mother, Krista, suddenly going into labour while visiting her sister in Sarajevo. Young Aleksandar enjoyed a privileged upbringing courtesy of his wealthy father, Đorđe Nikolić, who had him at the age of 62. After spending the first few years of his life in Brčko, Nikolić moved with his family to the capital Belgrade, where he would grow up. Nikolić attended the Kralj Aleksandar Gymnasium at the Belgrade neighbourhood of Banovo Brdo. He then studied medicine and law at the University of Belgrade, graduating in 1946.", "score": "1.5402299" }, { "id": "13075685", "title": "Nenad Lazarevski", "text": " Born in Novi Sad, SR Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia, Lazarevski started playing for RFK Novi Sad. In 2006, he moved to Russia where he played with the B team of FC Lokomotiv Moscow and after half of year he moved to Bulgaria where he played with PFC Slavia Sofia in the PFG A. In 2007, he returned to Serbia and joined SuperLiga side FK Borac Čačak. In the summer of 2009 he signed with another SuperLiga side, OFK Beograd, but after a year was loaned to FK Radnički Sombor in the Serbian First League. Two years later he was released by OFK and he joined the club he had represented at the beginning of his career, RFK Novi Sad.", "score": "1.5247002" }, { "id": "27964838", "title": "Aleksandar Milutinović", "text": " Milutinović was born in Belgrade, in what was then the People's Republic of Serbia in the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia. He was a graduated engineer.", "score": "1.5242712" }, { "id": null, "title": "Aleksandar Madžar (musician)", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Aleksandar Madžar", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Aleksandar Madžar (soccer)", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Sabine Weyer", "text": "Sabine Weyer\n\nSabine Weyer (born 8 May 1988) is a pianist from Luxembourg. She is a professor of piano at the Conservatoire de la Ville de Luxembourg.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:FK BSK Batajnica players", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "32338950", "title": "Philip Zepter", "text": " Philip Zepter was born in Kozarska Dubica (in modern-day Bosnia and Herzegovina) on 23 November 1950. He is the son of Milisav Jankovic and Nada Reljan. From their union is born in addition to Philip, Gojko, the youngest son. Zepter's education was strict, focusing on mathematics lessons and intensive sports practice. He completed his secondary education at the secondary school of Bosanska Dubica (Bosnia and Herzegovina), then went to study Economics and graduated with a master's degree from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Economics. He is fluent in Serbian, German and English. On February 21, 1976, he married Madlena Horvat, professor of literature. They have a daughter Emma, born in 2000.", "score": "1.5187681" }, { "id": "26565522", "title": "Svetozar Marković", "text": " Marković was born in the town of Zaječar on 9 September 1846, the son of a police clerk. Marković's childhood was spent in the village of Rekovac and then the town of Jagodina. The family moved to Kragujevac in 1856. He reached adolescence at about the time Mihailo Obrenović became the Prince of Serbia. In 1860 he began to study at the gymnasium in Belgrade and in 1863 at the Velika škola of Belgrade, the highest educational body in Serbia at that time, founded in 1808. While at the Velika škola he became interested in literature and politics, falling under the influences of Vuk Karadžić and Vladimir Jovanović, a leading Serbian Liberal. Because of his outstanding record as a student at the Belgrade college, his professors unanimously nominated him for a post-graduate scholarship to study abroad. He chose to study in Russia, in St. Petersburg in particular, at the Alexander I Institute of Communication Engineers.", "score": "1.5143583" }, { "id": "30294477", "title": "Svetozar Radojčić", "text": " Born in Sremski Karlovci, Austria-Hungary (now Serbia), his father Nikola was a professor at the Karlovci gymnasium, where Svetozar finished primary school in 1920. The same year he began secondary education in Ljubljana, where his father was employed at the Ljubljana University. Upon completion of art studies, he studied archaeology at the Ljubljana University between 1928 and 1932. In 1930–31 he also studied at the Zagreb University and summer school at the Archaeology Institute in Feistritz (Bistrica). He also studied at Vienna and Prague (Institute of N. P. Kondakov and Karlov University), and in 1933 worked at archaeological sites and museums ", "score": "1.5127344" }, { "id": "27139623", "title": "Miroslav Aleksić (People's Party politician)", "text": " Aleksić was born in Kruševac, in what was then the Socialist Republic of Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He was raised in Trstenik, trained as an economist, and worked as a public sector manager in Trstenik from 2008 to 2012.", "score": "1.5092287" }, { "id": "14045938", "title": "Aleksandar Šešelj", "text": " Šešelj was born in Belgrade, Serbia, in what was then the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He is a graduate student at the University of Belgrade Faculty of Law.", "score": "1.5074748" }, { "id": "9962064", "title": "Aleksandar Džambazov", "text": " Aleksandar Džambazov (Александар Џамбазов; born February 3, 1936, in the village Stapar, Vojvodina, Kingdom of Yugoslavia) is a Macedonian conductor and composer. He finished Musical academy in Belgrade, and spent his work age at Macedonian Radio Television, as a conductor of the Dance and Special orchestra. Has made numerous recordings and live concerts, and has performed in North Macedonia and in many countries abroad (mostly in Slovenia). He has won many (around 50) awards.", "score": "1.5050049" }, { "id": "12492630", "title": "Bojan Aleksov", "text": " Aleksov was born in Belgrade, Serbia. At the beginning of the war in Croatia in 1991, Aleksov was in the Yugoslav People's Army fulfilling his regular military service. In August, after trying to escape from the service, Aleksov was caught and sent to a military hospital in Sarajevo. He was later released after being certified as \"mentally unable to serve in the army.\" Aleksov received his Ph.D. in Comparative History of Central, Southern, and Eastern Europe at the Central European University in Budapest in 2005. His thesis was Religious Dissent in the Age of Modernization and Nationalism: Nazarenes in Hungary and Serbia 1850-1914. Aleksov completed his MA studies in Central European History at the Central European University, Budapest in 1999. His thesis was The Dynamics of Extinction: The Nazarene Religious Community in Yugoslavia after 1945. He received his B.A. degree in History from the University of Belgrade, Serbia in 1998. He was awarded Humboldt fellowship at the Free University of Berlin in 2004 and Max Weber fellowship at the European University Institute in Florence in 2006.", "score": "1.5038154" }, { "id": "25226212", "title": "Aleksandar Radenkovic", "text": " Radenković was born on December 17, 1979, in Novi Sad, SR Serbia, Yugoslavia. He studied acting at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater \"Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy\". After finishing his studies Wolfgang Engel offered him to play at Schauspiel Leipzig. From the Season 2008/2009 he is going to play for Deutsches Schauspielhaus Hamburg.", "score": "1.5024214" }, { "id": "27411850", "title": "House of Velimir Gjinovski", "text": " 1886 from measles. ; Aleksandar \"Aleksa\" Gjinovski - son of Krste (1851-1894). He was interested in woodcutting and he mastered it. He followed his father's footsteps and became a photographer and he owned a photo studio in Vranje. He made a number of photos of Galičnik, and other places in Macedonia such as Skopje, Ohrid, Thessalonica, Bitola, Kališta, Serres, and also in Serbia. He also photographed the Bigorski Monastery. In 1872, he and his brothers moved for good to Podgorica. He died in 1984 at the age of 43. ; Dragiša Gjinoski - son of Aleksa. He worked a official in Podgorička banka. ; Milan Gjinoski - son of ", "score": "1.5019811" }, { "id": "9094187", "title": "Svetozar Pudarić", "text": " Born in 1959 in Sarajevo, Pudarić completed his studies in archeology at the Faculty of Philosophy in Belgrade in 1983. In 1984, he was employed at the Institute for the Protection of the Cultural, Historical and Natural Heritage of Bosnia and Herzegovina. He worked at the Institute until 1993. During 1991 and 1992, Pudarić was a member of the Assembly of the City of Sarajevo, and then a member of the War Presidency of the City of Sarajevo. He and his wife Sanda were married in a hospital bed in 1992, in the intensive care unit, after being wounded by the same grenade. They later had three children. After the war in Bosnia and ", "score": "1.493642" }, { "id": "26347487", "title": "Jakov Lazaroski", "text": " Born in Oktisi in 1936, Lazaroski graduated from the Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade in 1959. He earned a master's degree in 1970 and a doctorate in 1990. He began working as an industrial psychologist before moving to Skopje to work at the Service for Psychological Research at the Republic Secretariat for Internal Affairs. He became an assistant professor at the Institute for Sociological and Political-Legal Research in Skopje in 1966 and a research associate in 1969. In 1972, he became a lecturer at the Faculty of Philosophy in Skopje and a full professor of psychology in 1996. In addition to his academic work, Lazaroski served on the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Macedonia, of which he was president from 1986 to 1989. He also served on the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia. Jakov Lazaroski died on 16 May 2021 at the age of 84. The cause of death has not been disclosed.", "score": "1.4931722" }, { "id": "5664354", "title": "Nikola Madžirov", "text": " Nikola was born on 27 May 1973 in Strumica, then in SFR Yugoslavia, now in North Macedonia. He has worked as an essayist and editor besides being a poet and is an international coordinator for Lyrikline, Haus für Poesie, Berlin. He won the Studentski Zbor award for best debut in Macedonia and subsequently the DJS award for contribution to international poetry in China.", "score": "1.4911643" }, { "id": "32159788", "title": "Veroljub Arsić", "text": " Arsić was born in Požarevac, in what was then the Socialist Republic of Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. His graduated from the high school of electrical engineering in Kostolac, was appointed director of a business centre in Požarevac in January 1990, and has operated his own business in the city since 1992.", "score": "1.4898964" }, { "id": "26728951", "title": "Lazar Komarčić", "text": " Lazar Komarčić was born in a small village of Komartica, near the town of Pljevlja, Montenegro (then part of the Ottoman Empire), on the ninth of January 1839, to Milenko and Spasenija Komorica of Gornja Maoca in northeastern Bosnia. Turks killed Lazar's uncle and Milenko (Lazar's father) took revenge. He was captured and imprisoned in Pljevlja. After Milenko escaped, he took his wife and children and moved with kin in Valjevo. It was at this time that the family changed their surname to Komarčić. In Valjevo Lazar started school, but his parents soon both died. He moved to Belgrade where he studied at the Grandes écoles (University of Belgrade). A defining incident of Komarčić's life was the Turkish bombardment of Belgrade in ", "score": "1.4892738" }, { "id": "14324685", "title": "Nikola Aleksić", "text": " He came from a family of artists in Stari Bečej. He was taught painting at the studio of Arsenije Teodorović of Novi Sad until 1826. Then, he went to Vienna and enrolled at the Academy of Fine Arts (1828–1830). Later, he traveled to Italy to broaden his art education. There he honed his craft for three years, getting to know the art of the Nazarene movement, and making a living from portrait painting. He also copied old masters in the city's galleries and painted portraits of Austrian officers of Serbian descent. In 1834 he left Italy for Novi Sad, then he went ", "score": "1.4871337" } ]
In what city was Roland Wieser born?
[ "Zschopau" ]
place of birth
Roland Wieser
4,338,636
67
[ { "id": "31257039", "title": "Kurt Wiese", "text": " Wiese was born in Minden, Germany. He aspired to be an artist but was discouraged by his community.", "score": "1.6525176" }, { "id": "11833740", "title": "Roland Riese", "text": " Roland Riese (born 29 July 1960 in Neuenhaus, Lower Saxony) is a German politician that belongs to the Free Democratic Party. He was elected to the Lower Saxon Landtag in 2003, and has been re-elected on one occasion. Riese holds a master's degree in Business administration from the University of West Florida. He is member of the Beta Gamma Sigma Society.", "score": "1.6487345" }, { "id": "15554904", "title": "Roland Wiesendanger", "text": " According to the CV published on his department website, Wiesendanger was born in Basel. He grew up in Lörrach, Germany, where he attended high-school, the Hans-Thoma-Gymnasium from 1972 to 1981. In 1981 he studied physics, mathematics, and astronomy at the University of Basel, Switzerland. Since 1984 he had been working in the field of Scanning Tunneling Microscopy. In 1986, he graduated in Physics with highest distinction and in 1987, he received his Ph.D. with “summa cum laude” for his work on “Scanning Tunneling Microscopy on Non-Crystalline Solids”.", "score": "1.6242958" }, { "id": "15625408", "title": "Chur", "text": "Robert Platow (1900–1982 in Chur), German journalist, founder and publisher of the Platow Brief ; Heinrich Willi (1900–1971), pediatrician who co-discovered Prader–Willi syndrome ; Andreas Walser (1908–1930), a Swiss painter in Paris ; Gustav Guanella (1909–1982), a Swiss inventor, developed high-frequency electronics ; Meinrad Schütter (1910–2006), a Swiss composer ; Rudolf Olgiati (1910–1995), local architect, of the New Objectivity movement ; H. R. Giger (1940–2014), visual artist, painter and Oscar winner ; Peter Zumthor (born 1943), an uncompromising and minimalist Swiss architect, works in Chur ; Alex P. Schmid (born 1943), a Swiss-born Dutch scholar in terrorism studies and former Officer-in-Charge of the Terrorism Prevention Branch of the United Nations ; Mario Illien (born 1946), engineer, specialising in motorsport engine design ; Robert Indermaur (born 1947), a Swiss painter and sculptor ; Hans Danuser (born 1953), a Swiss artist and photographer ; Corin Curschellas (born 1956), a Swiss singer-songwriter, vocalist, free improvisation, actress and voice actress ; Valerio Olgiati (born 1958), renowned architect of Grisonian buildings ; Raphael Zuber (born 1973), architect ; Adrian J. Meier (born 1976), politician of local council and explorer ; Rebecca Indermaur (born c. 1977), a Swiss film and television actress ", "score": "1.6196249" }, { "id": "3375632", "title": "Conrad Roland", "text": " Roland was born in München. After his final secondary-school examinations, he completed an apprenticeship as a carpenter. From 1954 until 1963 he studied architecture at Technical University of Munich, at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago and at TU Berlin. During his studies from 1959 till 1961 he was an assistant in Mies van der Rohe's office in Chicago. In 1963 Roland began to work self-employed in Berlin. He mainly compiled studies, projects and documentations on Hanging-houses and Spacenets. The plans for the construction of a sports stadium in Abu Dhabi, which he developed in co-operation with Jörn-Peter Schmidt-Thomsen in the 1960s, won the tendering competition, but has never been realized. The subject of spatial net architecture was elaborately covered in his ", "score": "1.6167067" }, { "id": null, "title": "Roland Wieser", "text": "Roland Wieser\n\nRoland Wieser (born 6 May 1956, in Zschopau) is an East German racewalker who won the bronze medal in the 20 kilometer walk during the 1980 Summer Olympics with a time of 1:25:59 hours. During his active career he measured 1.86 meters in height and 68 kg in weight.\n\nWieser's first success came at an early age, when he became the East German 10 kilometer walk Youth Champion in 1971. In 1975 he became the European Junior Champion in the same event. In 1978, Weiser competed in the East German National Championship and won the 50 kilometer walk; in the same year he achieved his first major success when he became the European Champion in the 20 kilometer walk at the elite level with a time of 1:23:11.5 hours. He followed this two years later with his Olympic bronze medal.\n\nAfter his Olympic triumph Wieser did not win any additional medals in international competition. In 1982 he finished ninth in the European Championships, in 1983 he managed tenth in the World Championships, and in 1987 he retired from competitive walking.\n\nAfter his retirement Wieser studied to become an auto mechanic, and later became a sports instructor at the Volkspolizei-Präsidium in Berlin. During these years he ran at the club level for SC Dynamo Berlin and trained under Max Weber.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wieser", "text": "Wieser\n\nWieser is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Anatoliy Solomin", "text": "Anatoliy Solomin\n\nAnatoliy Vasilyevich Solomin (; born 2 July 1952) is a former Soviet Ukrainian race walker. Solomin competed in men's 20 km walk at the 1980 Summer Olympics and contended for the gold medal, but was disqualified from the lead shortly before the finish. He was European indoor champion in men's 5000 m walk in 1983 and briefly held the 20 km world best. He was born in Komarovka in Penza Oblast.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Zschopau", "text": "Zschopau\n\nZschopau (), is a town in the Erzgebirgskreis district of Saxony, Germany.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "May 6", "text": "May 6\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "9301512", "title": "Joe Kaeser", "text": " Joe Kaeser was born in Arnbruck, in the Bavarian Forest in West Germany, on June 23, 1957. He spent his early life in education throughout Germany. Following his studies in business administration at the Regensburg University of Applied Sciences, he joined Siemens in 1980.", "score": "1.5936878" }, { "id": "747793", "title": "Richard Wiese", "text": " Wiese was born on Long Island, New York. His father, Richard Wiese, Sr., was the first man to solo the Pacific Ocean in an aircraft. Richard climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania at the age of 11. He attended St. Anthony's High School in Huntington, New York, and then Brown University, graduating in 1982 with a Bachelor of Science in Geology and Biology. He also studied Applied Physiology at Columbia University and completed the USDA Graduate Program in Meteorology. Wiese lives in Weston, Connecticut.", "score": "1.5877166" }, { "id": "31313709", "title": "Roland Riemers", "text": " Riemers was born in 1943 in Lake City, Minnesota. He attended San Antonio College, received his AS in nursing from Anoka-Ramsey Community College in 1973, his BS in industrial technology from the University of North Dakota in 1984, and attended but did not graduate from the University of North Dakota School of Law in 1998 and 1999. Riemers currently lives in Grand Forks, North Dakota, and has 8 children. Riemers was an early adopter of solar energy, and in the 1970s built and lived in the first completely solar-powered home in the northern United States. He currently works as a real estate investor and manager.", "score": "1.5845866" }, { "id": "33059341", "title": "Torsten Wiesel", "text": " Wiesel was born in Uppsala, Sweden in 1924, the youngest of five children. In 1947, he began his scientific career in Carl Gustaf Bernhard's laboratory at the Karolinska Institute, where he received his medical degree in 1954. He went on to teach in the Institute's department of physiology and worked in the child psychiatry unit of the Karolinska Hospital. In 1955 he moved to the United States to work at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine under Stephen Kuffler. Wiesel began a fellowship in ophthalmology, and in 1958 he became an assistant professor. That same year, he met David Hubel, beginning a collaboration that would last over twenty years. In 1959 Wiesel and Hubel moved to Harvard University. He became an instructor in pharmacology at Harvard ", "score": "1.5660013" }, { "id": "9923909", "title": "Klaus Biesenbach", "text": " Biesenbach was born in Bergisch Gladbach, West Germany. From 1987, he began studying medicine in Munich before moving to Berlin, where he shared an apartment with artist Andrea Zittel at one point.", "score": "1.5643439" }, { "id": "30140578", "title": "Vladimir Wiese", "text": " Wiese was born to German immigrants to Saint Petersburg, Julius Friedrich Franz Wiese and Lydia Karoline Amalie Gertrud Blass. He graduated from the Saint Petersburg University and the University of Göttingen.", "score": "1.5619032" }, { "id": "14560376", "title": "Roland Steinacher", "text": " Roland Steinacher was born in Innsbruck, Austria, on 22 September 1972. He received his PhD in history at the University of Vienna in 2002 under the supervision of Herwig Wolfram. Steinacher subsequently worked as a researcher at the University of Vienna and the Austrian Academy of Sciences. During this time, Steinacher was a research assistant for Walter Pohl at projects financed by the European Research Council. Steinacher received his habilitation at the University of Vienna in 2012. As fellow of the Gerda-Henkel-Stiftung, the Alexander von Humboldt Stiftung, the Alfried Krupp Wissenschaftskolleg Greifswald and the Berliner Antike-Kolleg he worked in Berlin, Erlangen, Greifswald and finally spent another year as an assistant professor at the University of Tübingen. In October 2018 he was appointed Professor of Ancient History at the University of Innsbruck.", "score": "1.5533023" }, { "id": "7157028", "title": "Roland Glaser", "text": " Glaser was born in Jena. His father worked as an engineer with Carl Zeiss, then as now a high-profile Jena company. When he was 10 the war which had been a feature of his early life ended and Jena found itself in the Soviet occupation zone of what remained of Germany. Glaser's father was forcibly relocated to the Soviet Union where he was put to work as a scientific researcher between 1946 and 1952. Roland Glaser was nevertheless able to pass his final school exams in Jena in 1953. Glaser studied Biology at Jena's Friedrich Schiller University, obtaining his first degree in 1958. His doctorate, supervised by Manfred Gersch (1909–1981), followed in ", "score": "1.5495265" }, { "id": "15554903", "title": "Roland Wiesendanger", "text": " Roland Wiesendanger (born 5 October 1961) is a German physicist, specializing in nanoscience. Since 1993 he has been a full professor at the University of Hamburg, Germany. He has been awarded three times in a row with the ERC Advanced Grant of the European Research Council as first scientist in Europe.", "score": "1.5468683" }, { "id": "28737446", "title": "Jacob Wiese", "text": " Jacob Wiese was born in January 1981, the eldest of three children of Christo Wiese and his wife Caro. He received a bachelor's degree in Value & Policy Studies from the Stellenbosch University, a masters in International Economics & Management from the Bocconi University, Italy in 2004, and a bachelor's degree in Law from the University of Cape Town in 2008.", "score": "1.5286391" }, { "id": "24926461", "title": "Winterthur", "text": "Georges Miez (1904–1999), gymnast ; Willy Hess (composer) (1906–1997), musicologist and composer ; Albert Büchi (1907–1988), cyclist ; Max Bill (1908–1994), architect, artist and designer ; Warja Lavater (1913–2007), graphic artist and illustrator ; Sigmund Widmer (1919–2003), Swiss politician, historian and writer, University of Zürich faculty ; Rudolf Friedrich (1923–2013), lawyer and politician ; Georg Gerster (born 1928), journalist, pioneer of flight photography ; Bruno Hunziker (1930–2000), politician, parliamentarian and economic attorney ; Richard R. Ernst (1933–2021), chemist (Nobel Prize Laureate 1991) ; Ursula Bagdasarjanz (born 1934), violinist ; Hannes Keller (born 1934), computer pioneer, entrepreneur, diving pioneer and amateur pianist ; Niklaus Wirth (born 1934), computer scientist ; Oscar Fritschi (1939–2016), politician ; Michael Gempart (born 1941), actor ; Markus Imhoof (born 1941), film director and screenwriter ; Hans-Ulrich Brunner (1943–2006), painter ; Beat Raaflaub (born 1946), conductor ; Jürg Amann (1947–2013), writer ", "score": "1.5242884" }, { "id": "6520769", "title": "Frederick Widmann", "text": " Frederick Widmann was born in 1859 in Germany. He emigrated to the United States in 1874, settling in St. Louis, Missouri. Widmann was an apprentice carpenter to Walsh and Jungenfeld for three years and he studied at Washington University in St. Louis.", "score": "1.5177791" }, { "id": "747792", "title": "Richard Wiese", "text": " Richard Wiese (born July 13, 1959), an American explorer, is the author of the guidebook, Born to Explore: How to Be a Backyard Adventurer. In 2002 he was the youngest man to become president of the Explorers Club. He was the 44th president of the club. He is the host and executive producer of the Emmy Award-winning television series Born to Explore with Richard Wiese, which debuted September 3, 2011 on ABC as part of Litton's Weekend Adventure.", "score": "1.5153747" }, { "id": "7984447", "title": "Dortmund", "text": "Klaus Niedzwiedz (born 1951), racing driver and television presenter ; Ulla Burchardt (born 1954), politician (SPD) ; Klaus Segbers (born 1954), political scientist and professor ; Antony Theodore (born 1954), poet, educator and social worker ; Susanne Kippenberger (born 1957), journalist and writer ; Achim Peters (born 1957), obesity specialist ; Barbara Havliza (born 1958), politician (CDU) and judge ; Dietmar Bär (born 1961), actor ; Stefan Heinig (born 1962), director and shareholder ; Martin Zawieja (born 1963), weightlifter ; Ralf Husmann (born 1964), writer, producer and author ; Vincent Mennie (born 1964), Scottish footballer ; Matthias Kohring (born 1965), media and communications scientist ; André Erkau (born 1968), director and screenwriter ; Florian Schwarthoff (born 1968), hurdler, bronze medallist in 110m hurdles at the 1996 Olympic Games ; Yasemin Şamdereli (born 1973), film director and screenwriter ; Kevin Grosskreutz (born 1988), football player ; Marco Reus (born 1989), football player ", "score": "1.5121677" }, { "id": "13740180", "title": "Meir Wieseltier", "text": " Meir Wieseltier was born in Moscow in 1941, shortly before the German invasion of Russia. He was taken to Novosibirsk in southwestern Siberia by his mother and two older sisters. His father was killed while serving in the Red Army in Leningrad. After two years in Poland, Germany and France, the family immigrated to Israel. Wieseltier grew up in Netanya. In 1955, he moved to Tel Aviv, where he has lived ever since. He published his first poems at the age of eighteen. He studied at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. In the early 1960s, he joined a group known as the Tel Aviv Poets. He was co-founder and co-editor of the literary magazine Siman Kriya, and a poetry editor for the Am Oved publishing house.", "score": "1.5074489" } ]
In what city was Doc Parker born?
[ "Theresa", "Theresa, New York" ]
place of birth
Doc Parker
3,927,677
59
[ { "id": "1592972", "title": "List of Third Watch characters", "text": " in the entire series, dealing with many traumatic events and occurrences from his past as well as during the course of his time on the show. Monte 'Doc' Parker was born in 1962 in New York City, one of 5 sons of John and Mrs Parker. As a youngster, he accidentally killed his best friend over a girl, something that would come back and haunt him in the future. After high school, Monte spent four years at City College, studying business and administration. After graduating, he spent 2 years selling stereos before switching to office suppliers. Bored, Monte considered joining the Air ", "score": "1.7587999" }, { "id": "414479", "title": "Doc Parker", "text": " Harley Park Parker (June 14, 1872 – March 3, 1941) was a pitcher in Major League Baseball who played from through for the Chicago Colts (1893, 1895–1896) and Cincinnati Reds (1901). Listed at 6ft 2in, 200 lb, Parker threw and batted right-handed. He was born in Theresa, New York. His younger brother, Jay Parker, also played in the majors. In a four-season career, Parker posted a 5–8 record with 24 strikeouts and a 5.90 ERA in 18 appearances, including 14 starts, 13 complete games, one shutout, one save, and 134 1⁄3 innings of work. Parker was responsible for one of the worst pitching performances in Major League Baseball history. Playing for the Reds against the Brooklyn Superbas on 21 June 1901, Parker gave up 26 hits in the Superbas' 21–3 win. He umpired in the National League during the season. Parker died in Chicago, at the age of 68.", "score": "1.7040715" }, { "id": "30758241", "title": "Joseph Parker Jr.", "text": " Joseph Lee Parker Jr. (November 20, 1916 – September 27, 2012) was an American medical doctor. Parker was the last surviving United States Naval physician who participated in the Allied invasion of Omaha Beach on June 6, 1944. Parker was born in Waycross, Georgia, to Joseph Lee Parker Sr. and Vera Estelle Sweat. He graduated from the University of Georgia before completing medical school at the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta, Georgia. Parker began his career at University Hospital in Augusta as an intern. Parker was assigned to the Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island in 1943. He was then transferred to the 6th Amphibious Forces, based at the former Camp ", "score": "1.610692" }, { "id": "32507791", "title": "Daniel Parker (artist)", "text": " Parker was born on November 18, 1959 in Portland, Oregon. He is the son of Donald Edward \"Don\" Parker (1938–2015) and Joan Arlue Sievers (1939-2019). The Parkers had moved to Portland in early 1959 from Kalispell, Montana, to find work but after less than a year in Oregon they moved back to Kalispell, their home town. Parker's great grandfather, originally from Norridgewock, Maine, had moved to the Flathead Valley in 1905 from Parker, Minnesota, to homestead on a farm on the Flathead River, near Demersville, about five miles south of Kalispell and two miles north of Flathead Lake. Parker's father, who by 1963 was an aspiring country western ", "score": "1.5979826" }, { "id": "25774258", "title": "Sonny Parker (musician)", "text": " Parker was born in Youngstown, Ohio, in 1925 or 1926 (sources differ), and was raised in Chicago by the popular vaudeville duo, Butterbeans and Susie (Jodie and Susie Edwards). He led a band at the Cotton Club in Cincinnati in 1948 which included King Kolax as one of his sidemen, and recorded with Kolax in Los Angeles later that year. He then replaced Rubell Blakely as vocalist in Lionel Hampton's ensemble. His time with Hampton included appearances in the films Lionel Hampton and His Orchestra (1949) and Jelly Roll (1952), and on Hampton's recordings from this time on Decca &ndash; including the 1949 R&B chart hit \"Drinkin' Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee\" &ndash; and MGM. He also recorded under his own name, for various labels including Aladdin, Spire, Peacock and Brunswick, often using various members of Hampton's orchestra. He toured Europe with Hampton several times between 1953 and 1955. In March 1955, during a concert at Valenciennes, France, Parker had a brain hemorrhage, from which he did not recover. He returned to the United States and died in hospital in New York City in 1957.", "score": "1.5608668" }, { "id": null, "title": "Colonel Tom Parker", "text": "Colonel Tom Parker\n\nThomas Andrew Parker (born Andreas Cornelis van Kuijk; June 26, 1909 January 21, 1997), commonly known as Colonel Parker, was a Dutch-born musical entrepreneur, best known for being Elvis Presley's manager.\n\nBorn in the Netherlands, Parker emigrated illegally to the United States at the age of 20. He changed his name and claimed to have been born in the United States. His Dutch birthplace and immigrant status were not revealed for many years. A carnival worker by background, Parker moved into music promotion in 1938, working with one of the first popular crooners, Gene Austin, and then country music singers Eddy Arnold, Hank Snow, and Tommy Sands in his early career. He also assisted Jimmie Davis's campaign to become Governor of Louisiana. As a reward, Davis gave him the honorary rank of \"colonel\" in the Louisiana State Militia.\n\nParker encountered Presley in 1955, and by 1956 had become his sole representative. Within months, he had won him a recording contract with RCA Victor. This contract led to Presley having a commercial breakthrough in 1956 with his first single \"Heartbreak Hotel\" and rising to become one of the most popular and commercially successful entertainers in the world. Parker was able to receive more than half of the income from the enterprise, an unprecedented figure for a music manager. He negotiated Presley's lucrative merchandising deals, TV appearances, and acting roles in films. He influenced Presley's personal life, including Presley's decisions to accept military service in 1958 and to marry Priscilla Beaulieu in 1967. Parker encouraged Presley to make film musicals which became the focus of his career during his commercial decline in the 1960s until his 1968 comeback and return to touring. Parker rarely saw him after that but continued in his management role until Presley's death in 1977.\n\nFor the rest of his life, Parker managed the Presley estate, but having sold the rights to Presley's early recordings to RCA Records, he struggled to secure a steady income, while also suffering significant gambling losses. In 1980, a judge ordered an investigation into Parker's management practices and found that Parker's management had been unethical.<ref name=\"Victor394\"/><ref name=\"Gaar240\"/> Parker's final years were spent living in Las Vegas, in increasingly poor health before his death in 1997.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Dorothy Parker", "text": "Dorothy Parker\n\nDorothy Parker (née Rothschild; August 22, 1893 – June 7, 1967) was an American poet, writer, critic, and satirist based in New York; she was known for her wit, wisecracks, and eye for 20th-century urban foibles.\n\nFrom a conflicted and unhappy childhood, Parker rose to acclaim, both for her literary works published in magazines, such as \"The New Yorker,\" and as a founding member of the Algonquin Round Table. Following the breakup of the circle, Parker traveled to Hollywood to pursue screenwriting. Her successes there, including two Academy Award nominations, were curtailed when her involvement in left-wing politics resulted in her being placed on the Hollywood blacklist.\n\nDismissive of her own talents, she deplored her reputation as a \"wisecracker.\" Nevertheless, both her literary output and reputation for sharp wit have endured. Some of her works have been set to music; adaptations included the operatic song cycle \"Hate Songs\" by composer Marcus Paus.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Third Watch characters", "text": "List of Third Watch characters\n\n\"Third Watch\" is an American television drama series which first aired on NBC from 1999 to 2005 and followed the lives of an ensemble cast of characters portraying police officers of the New York City Police Department (NYPD) and firefighters and paramedics of the New York City Fire Department (FDNY).", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Charlie Parker", "text": "Charlie Parker\n\nCharles Parker Jr. (August 29, 1920 – March 12, 1955), nicknamed \"Bird\" or \"Yardbird\", was an American jazz saxophonist, band leader and composer. Parker was a highly influential soloist and leading figure in the development of bebop, a form of jazz characterized by fast tempos, virtuosic technique, and advanced harmonies. Parker was an extremely brilliant virtuoso and introduced revolutionary rhythmic and harmonic ideas into jazz, including rapid passing chords, new variants of altered chords, and chord substitutions. Primarily a player of the alto saxophone, Parker's tone ranged from clean and penetrating to sweet and somber. \n\nParker acquired the nickname \"Yardbird\" early in his career on the road with Jay McShann. This, and the shortened form \"Bird\", continued to be used for the rest of his life, inspiring the titles of a number of Parker compositions, such as \"Yardbird Suite\", \"Ornithology\", \"Bird Gets the Worm\", and \"Bird of Paradise\". Parker was an icon for the hipster subculture and later the Beat Generation, personifying the jazz musician as an uncompromising artist and intellectual rather than just an entertainer.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Joseph Parker (theologian)", "text": "Joseph Parker (theologian)\n\nJoseph Parker (9 April 1830 – 28 November 1902) was an English Congregational minister.", "score": null }, { "id": "12559106", "title": "Jean Parker", "text": " Parker was born on August 11, 1915 in Deer Lodge, Montana to Lewis A. Green, a gunsmith, hunter, and chef from South Dakota, and Perl Melvina \"Millie\" Burch, a native of Deer Lodge. Many of the details surrounding Parker's birth have been reported with little consistency. Secondary sources regarding her birth year range from 1912 to 1916, and some claim she was born in Butte, not Deer Lodge. Furthermore, some sources state her birth name as Lois Mae Green, while others indicate she was born Luise Stephanie Zelinska. Despite these discrepancies, Parker's son, Robert, insisted she was born Lois May Green in Deer Lodge in 1915, which is consistent with contemporaneous Montana birth records from the United States Census ", "score": "1.5534394" }, { "id": "28683983", "title": "Junior Parker", "text": " There is some disagreement over the details of Parker's birth, but most reliable sources now indicate that he was born in March 1932 at Eastover Plantation near Bobo, Coahoma County, Mississippi. He moved with his mother to West Memphis, Arkansas, during the 1940s. Other birth dates in 1927 or 1932 have been suggested, and some research suggests that his name at birth was registered as Herbert Parker. He sang in gospel groups as a child and, beginning in his teenage years, played on various blues circuits. His biggest influence as a harmonica player was Sonny Boy Williamson, with whom he worked before ", "score": "1.5510628" }, { "id": "28640149", "title": "Jay S. Parker", "text": " Parker was born in Morland, Kansas July 1, 1895, and educated in Hill City graduating from high school in 1913. He obtained his law degree in 1918 from the University of Kansas School of Law and proceeded to start practising law in Hill City. He had an interest in crippled children and was the key sponsor of the Crippled Children Law in Kansas.", "score": "1.550688" }, { "id": "9504227", "title": "Mary Parker (American actress)", "text": " Born in Fort Worth, Texas, Parker (also known as \"Punkins\" Parker), was a protégé of Mitchell Leisen. Leisen recruited Parker for various projects both on and off the screen starting in 1938. Parker was discovered while performing at the Casa Mañana Theatre in her native Fort Worth, Texas during the Texas Centennial celebrations and given a contract with Paramount Pictures. She performed in several large budget films, and was chosen by Paramount and Max Factor Jr. as \"The Real Miss America\", yet her fame was short lived. In 1943, Parker signed a contract with MGM. Courtesy of MGM, in April 1944 Parker starred in a production of The Desert Song for the troops ", "score": "1.5503519" }, { "id": "7173842", "title": "Charles S. Parker", "text": " Parker was born March 31, 1882 in Corinne, Utah, but grew up in West Central, Spokane, Washington, USA. His father was a barber and the founder and publisher of a local newspaper, The Citizen. He attended South Central High School in Spokane, and then Trinity College, Oakland and Washington State College. He taught at the Booker T Washington Institute. During the first World War, Parker joined the US Army and was commissioned as Lieutenant. He served in Europe for over 10 months, including Germany after it surrendered. He gained BS (1923) and MS (1929) degrees in Botany from the Department of Plant Pathology at State College, Washington. In 1932 he received his Ph.D. in plant pathology from Pennsylvania State College working with Lee Oras Overholts and he then taught in several high schools and colleges. He was married. He died January 10, 1950 in Seattle, Washington, aged 68.", "score": "1.5461605" }, { "id": "27301961", "title": "Watson Parker", "text": " Parker was born in 1924. He was raised on his family's dude ranch and resort, the Palmer Gulch Lodge, at the base of Black Elk Peak near Hill City, South Dakota. Hill City is called the \"Heart of the Hills\" because of its location near the center of the Black Hills. Parker managed the Palmer Gulch Lodge from 1948 until 1960, when he left home to study history. The Parker family continued to run the ranch until 1962. Parker received an A.B. from the University of Chicago (1948), a B.S. from Cornell University (1951), and an M.A. from the University of Oklahoma (1962). He received a doctorate in history in 1965 from the University of Oklahoma.", "score": "1.5454485" }, { "id": "27557775", "title": "Fess Parker", "text": " Parker was born in Fort Worth, Texas, and raised on a farm in Tom Green County near San Angelo. His father, a tax assessor, had the same first name which had been given to him in honor of the educator and politician Simeon D. Fess. The middle name \"Elisha\" was chosen by the future actor himself, when he was a teenager (about 1937) because it sounded rhythmic and matched his middle initial. He enlisted in the U.S. Navy in the latter part of World War II, hoping to become a pilot. He was turned down because he was too tall at 6 ft. He then tried to become a radioman gunner, but he was found too big to fit comfortably into the rear cockpit. He was finally transferred to the United States Marine Corps as a radio ", "score": "1.5446635" }, { "id": "5617205", "title": "Jackie Parker", "text": " Parker was born on January 1, 1932, in Knoxville, Tennessee and given the name John Dickerson Flanagan. When his mother remarried, he took on the last name of her new husband, Carroll Parker. He suffered through two childhood health scares. The first was when he almost died of a ruptured appendix, and the second was when he suffered a flesh-eating disease that almost cost him his entire leg. Doctors wanted to amputate but Parker's mother would not allow it. Parker attended Young City High School in Knoxville, and despite playing only one year of football he was named an All-City tailback. While attending high school he met and married Peggy Jo, with whom he had three children, Jackie Jr., Peggy Mae and Jerri-Jo.", "score": "1.5392073" }, { "id": "32337104", "title": "Monroe Parker", "text": " Parker was born in Thomasville, Alabama and was reared in Edgewood and Chillicothe, Texas where his father worked in a dry goods store. Nevertheless, many of his uncles were Baptist ministers. In 1922 the family moved back to Thomasville, and Parker began working at a soda fountain and delivering newspapers while attending Thomasville High School, where despite his size, he proved a respectable football player. In 1927, Parker matriculated at Birmingham Southern College, where he \"dropped the pretense of religion,\" played football, and spent most of the rest of his time \"frolicking, drinking, dancing, and running around with a wild gang.\" After being caught in prank by students at a rival ", "score": "1.5384355" }, { "id": "12517343", "title": "Doc McKenzie", "text": " Milbert was born on April 29, 1949 in Olanta, South Carolina, the son of Leroy and Cora McKenzie, who were farmers. The family went to church at St. Mark's Holiness Church that is located in Lake City, South Carolina. His pastor at the time, Bishop, R. C. Eaddy, gave him his moniker \"Doc\" because he could fix anything. He started leading his church choir at the age of six. The Hi-Lites got started by his sister Beronzy McKenzie, and his cousin, Handy McFadden, and they relocated to Paterson, New Jersey, for a time during the 1960s and 1970s, moving back home in the mid-1980s to begin their musical recording careers.", "score": "1.5377374" }, { "id": "13111352", "title": "Frank Parker (singer)", "text": " Parker was born Frank Ciccio on April 29, 1903 (or April 29, 1906, or July 1, 1906 ) in New York City. He was a graduate of the Milan Conservatory of music, and was a dancer in a stage production of Little Nellie Kelly.", "score": "1.5376477" }, { "id": "30546488", "title": "Royal Parker", "text": " Born in Baltimore, Maryland, on April 8, 1929, Parker graduated from Baltimore City College in 1946. He began his broadcasting career in the late 1940s on WASA (now WHGM), an AM radio station in Havre de Grace, Maryland, hosting a music program called the Royal Record Review. He moved to television when the medium was in its infancy, joining WAAM-TV (now WJZ-TV) in Baltimore in 1951.", "score": "1.5371172" }, { "id": "32433945", "title": "Herb Parker", "text": " Parker was born in Jamestown, North Dakota and raised and educated in Nekoma. Parker was an all-conference athlete and captain of the basketball team, while at Jamestown College. In 1983, Parker was inducted into the college's Athletic Hall of Fame. Parker also has been inducted into the MSU Athletic Hall of Fame and the NAIA Hall of Fame. Parker received a master's degree from the University of Northern Colorado in Greeley.", "score": "1.5319462" }, { "id": "26241031", "title": "Doc Scurlock", "text": " He was born in Tallapoosa County, Alabama, January 11, 1849, the sixth of 11 children born to Priestly Norman Scurlock (July 3, 1806 &ndash; June 22, 1876) and Esther Ann Brown (May 19, 1819 &ndash; June 1, 1903). Josiah was said to have studied medicine in New Orleans, thus receiving his nickname \"Doc\". Described as 5 ft tall, weighing 150 lb, with brown eyes and dark blond hair, Doc went to Mexico in about 1870. While there, he and another man had an argument over a card game and drew their pistols. The other man shot first and the bullet went through Doc's mouth, knocking out his front teeth and coming out the back of his neck without any more serious damage. He quickly returned fire and killed the man who shot him.", "score": "1.5317937" }, { "id": "1592971", "title": "List of Third Watch characters", "text": "Personality Background Monte 'Doc' Parker is a fictional FDNY paramedic on the television show Third Watch. He was portrayed by Michael Beach. Doc appeared in the first four and a half seasons, and in the final episode as a cameo. Doc is the paramedic supervisor at the firehouse and is in charge of everyone else. He's one of the best paramedics in the city, but often takes the job too seriously and lets his emotions get in the way. Doc will take the blame for many incidents, even if they were not directly his fault. Doc is quite possibly the most conflicted ", "score": "1.5310947" } ]
In what city was Giovanni Stefano Marucelli born?
[ "Florence", "Firenze", "Florence, Italy", "Florence, Tuscany", "Florencia", "Florentia", "Florenz", "Firenca", "Florencie", "Fiuränza", "Florentzia", "Firense", "Firenz", "Firenzi" ]
place of birth
Giovanni Stefano Marucelli
2,820,569
62
[ { "id": "5680853", "title": "Giovanni Stefano Marucelli", "text": " Giovanni Stefano Marucelli (1586 - c. 1646) was an Italian painter and architect of the Baroque period, active in Tuscany, including Florence and Pisa. His name is also written as Maruscelli, Maruscielli, or Marscelli. Born in Florence, around 1600 he became a pupil of Andrea Boscoli in Pisa. His masterpiece is the Abraham and the angels (1628) in the apse of the Duomo di Pisa. He also painted an Ascencion for the church of the Sacrament in Pistoia; San Carlo Borromeo before a crucifix in the first altar to the right of the church of San Torpe, Pisa; a Coronation of the Virgin in the left chapel of the church of San Nicola, Pisa; St. George and St. Francis in adoration for the church of Santi Quirico e Giulitta in Lugnano; Madonna del Carmelo with the Bambino and Saints Catherine, Peter & Dominic and a Madonna with child and four saints in the church of the Santissima Annunziata in Uliveto Terme. In 1622, he painted an altarpiece depicting the Ascension of Christ (1622) for the Bronconi family altar in the church of San Leone, Pistoia. As an architect, he helped reconstruct the Palazzo dell'Orologio in Pisa.", "score": "1.9595051" }, { "id": "30862613", "title": "Francesco Marucelli", "text": " Francesco Marucelli (1625–1703) was an Italian abbot, bibliographer and bibliophile. Born in Florence into a wealthy and noble family, Marucelli graduated in civil and canon law at the University of Pisa, and then entered the papal court in Rome, where he held the title of abbot. He spent his life collecting books and bequest he donated his extensive collection to the foundation of a library in Florence, the Biblioteca Marucelliana, which was the first institution of this kind in the city which was open to the public. Marucelli was the author of Mare Magnum, a monumental bibliographic catalogue, which over the years grew to 111 volumes and over 6,000 entries which intended to catalogue the publications of that time, divided by subject fields. This work was ordered and published by his grandson Alessandro and is preserved in manuscript form at the Biblioteca Marucelliana.", "score": "1.789592" }, { "id": "25523979", "title": "Stefano Antonio Morcelli", "text": " Morcelli was born at Chiari near Brescia. He studied at the Jesuit College of Brescia and was admitted into the Society of Jesus, 3 November 1753. He successively taught grammar at Fermo, humanities at Ragusa, and oratory at the Roman College where he established an academy of archaeology at the Kircherian Museum. After the suppression of the Society of Jesus (1773) he became librarian to Cardinal Albani and in 1791 was appointed to a provostship in his native town. He declined the offer of the Archbishopric of Ragusa and continued his literary labors in Rome. His first publication was De stilo inscriptionum latinarum (On the style of Latin inscriptions, 1780). In the town of Chiari, his birthplace, to which he afterwards withdrew, he founded an institution for the education of girls, reformed the entire school system, devoted his library to public use, and restored many buildings and churches. Meantime his reputation as an epigraphist, numismatist, and archaeologist increased. Besides his numerous works on this subjects, he published five volumes of sermons and ascetic treatises. When the Society of Jesus was re-established he again took his place in its ranks, and died in Chiari in January 1822, aged eighty-four.", "score": "1.7408476" }, { "id": "31109687", "title": "Marucelli", "text": "Francesco Marucelli, Italian abbot, bibliographer and bibliophile ; Giovanni Stefano Marucelli, Italian painter and architect ; Germana Marucelli, Italian fashion designer Marucelli is a family name of Italian origin. It may refer to: ", "score": "1.709182" }, { "id": "25523978", "title": "Stefano Antonio Morcelli", "text": " Stefano Antonio Morcelli (17 January 1737 – 1 January 1822) was an Italian Jesuit scholar, known as an epigraphist. His work De stilo Latinarum inscriptionum libri III, published in three volumes in 1781, which shows a rigorous method, a novelty and originality of approach, as well as a solid preparation, gave him his European fame and is considered a milestone in the development of epigraphy.", "score": "1.6954517" }, { "id": null, "title": "Giovanni Stefano Marucelli", "text": "Giovanni Stefano Marucelli\n\nGiovanni Stefano Marucelli (1586 - c. 1646) was an Italian painter and architect of the Baroque period, active in Tuscany, including Florence and Pisa.\n\nHis name is also written as Maruscelli, Maruscielli, or Marscelli. Born in Florence, around 1600 he became a pupil of Andrea Boscoli in Pisa.\n\nHis masterpiece is the \"Abraham and the angels\" (1628) in the apse of the Duomo di Pisa. He also painted an \"Ascencion\" for the church of the Sacrament in Pistoia; \"San Carlo Borromeo before a crucifix\" in the first altar to the right of the church of San Torpe, Pisa; a \"Coronation of the Virgin\" in the left chapel of the church of San Nicola, Pisa; \"St. George and St. Francis in adoration\" for the church of Santi Quirico e Giulitta in Lugnano; \"Madonna del Carmelo with the Bambino and Saints Catherine, Peter & Dominic\" and a \"Madonna with child and four saints\" in the church of the Santissima Annunziata in Uliveto Terme. In 1622, he painted an altarpiece depicting the \"Ascension of Christ\" (1622) for the Bronconi family altar in the church of San Leone, Pistoia.\n\nAs an architect, he helped reconstruct the Palazzo dell'Orologio in Pisa.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "1586 in art", "text": "1586 in art\n\nEvents from the year 1586 in art.\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "1646 in art", "text": "1646 in art\n\nEvents from the year 1646 in art.\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:1586 births", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Italian fashion", "text": "Italian fashion\n\nItaly is one of the leading countries in fashion design, alongside France, the United States and the United Kingdom. Fashion has always been an important part of the country's cultural life and society, and Italians are well known for their attention to dress; \"la bella figura\", or good appearance, retains its traditional importance.\n\nItalian fashion became prominent during the 11th to 16th centuries, when artistic development in Italy was at its peak. Cities such as Rome, Palermo, Venice, Milan, Naples, Florence and Vicenza started to produce luxury goods, hats, cosmetics, jewelry and rich fabrics. From the 17th century to the early 20th, Italian fashion lost its importance and lustre and Europe's main trendsetter became France, with the great popularity of French fashion; this is due to the luxury dresses which were designed for the courtiers of Louis XIV. However, since the 1951–53 fashion soirées held by Giovanni Battista Giorgini in Florence, the \"\"Italian school\"\" started to compete with the French \"haute couture\", and labels such as Ferragamo and Gucci began to contend with Chanel and Dior. In 2009, according to the Global Language Monitor, Milan, Italy's centre of design, was ranked the top fashion capital of the world, and Rome was ranked fourth, and, although both cities fell in subsequent rankings, in 2011, Florence entered as the 31st world fashion capital. Milan is generally considered to be one of the \"big four\" global fashion capitals, along with New York, Paris, and London; occasionally, the \"big five\" also includes Rome.\n\nItalian fashion is linked to the most generalized concept of \"Made in Italy\", a merchandise brand expressing excellence of creativity and craftsmanship. Italian luxury goods are renowned for the quality of the textiles and the elegance and refinement of their construction. Many French, British and American high-top luxury brands (such as Chanel, Dior, Balmain and the main line of Ralph Lauren) also rely on Italian craft factories, located in highly specialized areas in the metropolitan area of Naples and in the centre-north of Italy (Tuscany, Marche, Veneto and Piedmont), to produce parts of their apparel and accessories.\n\nThe nonprofit association that co-ordinates and promotes the development of Italian fashion is the National Chamber of Italian Fashion (Camera Nazionale della Moda Italiana), now led by Carlo Capasa. It was set up in 1958 in Rome and now is settled in Milan and represents all the highest cultural values of Italian fashion. This association has pursued a policy of organisational support aimed at the knowledge, promotion and development of fashion through high-profile events in Italy and abroad. The talent of young, creative fashion is also promoted in Italy, as in the annual ITS (International Talent Support Awards) young fashion designer competition in Trieste.", "score": null }, { "id": "26311084", "title": "1586 in art", "text": "date unknown ; Giovanni Stefano Marucelli, Italian painter and architect active mainly in Tuscany (died 1646) ; Orazio Riminaldi, Italian Caravaggisti painter of the Baroque period (died 1631) ; Tiberio Tinelli, Italian painter of portraits of aristocracy, merchants, and intellectuals in Venice (died 1638) ; Luis Tristán, Spanish painter (died 1624) ; probable ; Massimo Stanzione, Italian Caravaggisti Baroque painter of frescoes (died 1656) ; Nicholas Stone, English sculptor and architect (died 1647) ", "score": "1.6923714" }, { "id": "16050086", "title": "Girolamo Ruscelli", "text": " Girolamo Ruscelli was born in Viterbo (from a family described by different sources as of humble origins, of minor nobility, or notaries), probably in 1518, although in many texts list the year of birth as 1504. He lived in Aquilea, then in Padua, and later in Rome where in 1541 he founded the \"Accademia dello Sdegno\". He later moved to Naples, and finally in 1548 he moved to Venice where he remained until his death. The exact term to describe his business is polygraph, a literary man who, immediately after the invention of printing, earned a living working for a publisher on his own works or translating and often plagiarizing the work of others. He was a writer on the most varied subjects, both as author or curator, and on behalf of ", "score": "1.6921294" }, { "id": "27756085", "title": "Giuseppe Roncelli", "text": " He was born to an Italian family in Candia (Crete), which fled when the Ottomans displaced the Venetians as rulers. He was sent to seminary in Bergamo. His artistic education is poorly documented and is said to have studied or been influenced by Antonio Cifrondi and in Brescia under Antonio Tempesta. He painted for the church of the Madonna di Stezzano.", "score": "1.668729" }, { "id": "30982922", "title": "Germana Marucelli", "text": " Germana Marucelli (13 October 1905 - 23 February 1983) was an Italian fashion designer.", "score": "1.6257265" }, { "id": "26367714", "title": "Stefano La Colla", "text": " He was born in Turin, but he is native from Alcamo, where he lived from 12 until he was 23; he started his studies at the Conservatorio Pietro Mascagni in Livorno and trained under the guide of the soprano Luciana Serra and later with the baritone Carlo Meliciani. In 2002 he won a scholarship at the Accademia d’alto Perfezionamento del Repertorio Pucciniano of Torre del Lago, where he attended its courses with Magda Olivero, Katia Ricciarelli and Raina Kabaivanska. Afterwards he performed together with Katia Ricciarelli at the Teatro Verdi of Pisa in a gala event organized by the Rotary Club. After a great debut in 2008 with Aida ", "score": "1.6236417" }, { "id": "11452527", "title": "Giovanni di Paolo Rucellai", "text": " Giovanni di Paolo Rucellai was born on 26 December 1403 to Paolo Rucellai and Caterina di Filippo Pandolfini, one of three children born in the 40 months of their marriage before the early death of Paolo Rucellai. As a young man, Giovanni di Paolo entered the banking house of Palla di Noferi Strozzi and at the age of about 25 married his daughter Iacopa di Palla Strozzi. The couple had two sons and five daughters. Rucellai remained loyal to Strozzi after the banishment of the latter to Padova by Cosimo de' Medici in November 1434, and for about 27 years he took no part in public life. However he ", "score": "1.61921" }, { "id": "27768541", "title": "Biblioteca Marucelliana", "text": " The Marucelliana Library or Biblioteca Marucelliana, is a public library, founded by the mid-18th century, and located on Via Camillo Cavour # 43, in Florence, region of Tuscany, Italy.", "score": "1.6170619" }, { "id": "16050085", "title": "Girolamo Ruscelli", "text": " Girolamo Ruscelli (1518–1566) was an Italian Mathematician and Cartographer active in Venice during the early 16th century. He was also an alchemist, writing pseudonymously as Alessio Piemontese. ", "score": "1.6125623" }, { "id": "16358922", "title": "Giovanni Stefano Carbonelli", "text": " Giovanni Stefano Carbonelli was born in the Italian port city of Leghorn to Pietro Carboneu (alternatively Carboneo or Carbonell) and Teresa Cocchi. His year of birth is uncertain, with dates varying from 1690/1691 to 1699/1700. His father was a Frenchman who had immigrated from Aix-en-Provence, while his mother was a local Leghorner. Not much is known of his early musical education; he was reputedly a pupil of Arcangelo Corelli, although there is little documentary evidence to support this. In 1711 and 1712, he was one of the violinists in the local ensemble during the celebrations of the Feast of Santa Croce in Lucca (13-14 September); on these occasions his name was recorded as \"Gio: Stefano Carbonèo\". In ", "score": "1.600709" }, { "id": "30982923", "title": "Germana Marucelli", "text": " Born in Settignano, Florence into a family of craftsmen, after the primary school at 11 years old Marucelli started working as an apprentice in her uncle's atelier, Chiostri. In 1925 she left Chiostri to work in another Florentine atelier, and in 1932 she was appointed director of Gastaldi tailoring in Genoa. In 1938 Marucelli moved to Milan, where in via Borgospesso she opened her first atelier. During the war she was forced to abandon the atelier and to move in Stresa, guest of her friend and loyal customer Flora d’Elys. During the war years she conceived a new type of fashion, characterized by hourglass silhouettes, thus anticipating the New Look by Christian Dior. After the war, she came back to Milan and created the \"Giovedì di Germana Marucelli\" (i.e. \"Thursdays by ", "score": "1.5972772" }, { "id": "1904934", "title": "Nicholas Laucella", "text": " Nicholas Laucella was born Nicola Laucella in the town of Nusco, in the Avellino province of Italy just outside Naples. He emigrated to the United States with his family in 1895 and settled in Corona, Queens, New York. His early studies on the flute began in Italy and continued for an additional eight years after his arrival in America. During this time he also pursued professional studies in music theory, harmony, and musical composition. Laucella's primary mentor on the flute was the German soloist Carl Wehner, who served as the principal flute at the New York Philharmonic from 1892 until 1900 and as a solo flautist at the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra (1885–1886).", "score": "1.5941098" }, { "id": "7381332", "title": "Stefano D'Amico", "text": " Stefano D'Amico was born in Turin in 1996. At the age of 6 he moved to Cisternino, a small town in Apulia by the sea. He started studying piano when he was 11 and only a year later he entered ‘N. Rota’ Conservatoire, in Monopoli. He continued his studies with Francesco Buccarella. Some months later he wrote his first piano composition ‘Ora che noi’, which was performed at the year-end show and much appreciated. He then wrote other melodies which made him known to other musicians. In 2011 he became the keyboardist of an Apulian band with which he started to perform live and won a competition for new groups. At the beginning of 2020, while composing 'Luce soffusa', he came up with the idea of the album 'Tribute to the Earth'. it wants to pay homage to the beauty of our planet, and raise awareness on important issues such as pollution and climate change. Stefano is indeed a convinced environmentalist and since 2018 he has taken part into social campaigns to help sensitize people to environmental issues. As he declared, Philip Glass has been his biggest inspiration since his early studies.", "score": "1.583357" }, { "id": "11452526", "title": "Giovanni di Paolo Rucellai", "text": " Giovanni di Paolo Rucellai (1403–1481) was a member of a wealthy family of wool merchants in Renaissance Florence, in Tuscany, Italy. He held political posts under Cosimo and Lorenzo de' Medici, but is principally remembered for building Palazzo Rucellai, for his patronage of the S. Sepolcro chapel and of the marble façade of the church of Santa Maria Novella, and as author of the Zibaldone. He was the father of Bernardo Rucellai (1448–1514) and grandfather of Giovanni di Bernardo Rucellai (1475–1525).", "score": "1.583274" }, { "id": "11753672", "title": "Stefano Bollani", "text": " Born in Milan to Roberto Bollani, from Lombardy, and a Venetian mother from Rovigo, Maddalena, he has a sister named Manuela born in Alba, Piedmont. He grew up in Florence where he began his studies in the Conservatorio Luigi Cherubini at the age of 6 and where he graduated in 1993 under the supervision of Maestro Antonio Caggiula. At 15 he had already started to perform professionally. After a short experience touring as a pop artist and after playing in the pop-rock band La Forma, since the mid-nineties he established himself in the jazz scene.", "score": "1.5805957" }, { "id": "10593338", "title": "Giovanni Battista Arnaud", "text": " Giovanni Battista Arnaud was born January 12, 1853, in Valgrana, Cuneo province, Italy. At the Accademia Albertina de Torino he learns with the great teachers Andrea Gastaldi and Enrico Gamba. Most of his work as painter and \"frescante\" takes place in Italy, France and England, where his talent and artistic level is well recognized and appreciated throughout his extensive and varied artistic production. In Italy he participates at the Cuneo Art Exhibition of 1898. He carries out various works of fresco painting in several of Piedmont churches, such as the Maria Vergine Parish Church in Roccavione, the Church of San Giovanni Battista ", "score": "1.5804591" } ]
In what city was Matt Hamilton born?
[ "Hemel Hempstead", "Hemel" ]
place of birth
Matt Hamilton (racing driver)
5,117,100
94
[ { "id": "30682441", "title": "Mark Hamilton (baseball)", "text": " Mark Alan Hamilton (born July 29, 1984) is an American former professional baseball first baseman. He was selected in the 2006 Major League Baseball draft by the St. Louis Cardinals. Hamilton made his Major League Baseball debut for the Cardinals in 2010, and remained in the organization through 2012. When his playing career ended in 2014, Hamilton pursued his medical degree. He is now a resident at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in Interventional Radiology.", "score": "1.6324756" }, { "id": "2605225", "title": "Todd Hamilton", "text": " Hamilton was born in the small west-central Illinois city of Galesburg. He grew up in an even smaller town, Oquawka, in Henderson County on the Mississippi River. He attended Union High School in Biggsville, Illinois and the University of Oklahoma, where he played collegiately.", "score": "1.6273315" }, { "id": "2540516", "title": "Ryan Hamilton (comedian)", "text": " Hamilton was born in 1976 in Ashton, Idaho, a small potato farming community. He attended BYU-Idaho, receiving an associate degree in journalism and public relations. He then transferred to Brigham Young University and earned a bachelor's degree in public relations.", "score": "1.6097388" }, { "id": "7494236", "title": "Ruffin Hamilton", "text": " Hamilton was born on March 2, 1971 in Detroit, Michigan.", "score": "1.5955107" }, { "id": "5300085", "title": "Andy Hamilton", "text": " Hamilton was born in Fulham, southwest London. He was educated at Westminster City School which was then a voluntary aided grammar school and later read English at Downing College, Cambridge, where he was a member of the Cambridge University Light Entertainment Society (CULES).", "score": "1.5891213" }, { "id": null, "title": "Matt Hamilton (curler)", "text": "Matt Hamilton (curler)\n\nMatthew James Hamilton (born February 19, 1989) is an American curler from McFarland, Wisconsin. He is a World Junior Champion, World Men's bronze medalist, and Olympic gold medalist. Hamilton currently plays second for the Duluth, Minnesota-based John Shuster team.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Matt Hamilton (racing driver)", "text": "Matt Hamilton (racing driver)\n\nMatthew Hamilton (born 2 February 1990 in Hemel Hempstead) is a British auto racing driver. He is best known for competing in the British Touring Car Championship.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Becca Hamilton", "text": "Becca Hamilton\n\nRebecca Lynn Hamilton (born July 12, 1990) is an American curler from McFarland, Wisconsin. She is a two-time national women's champion, a two-time national junior champion, and a two-time Olympian. At the 2018 PyeongChang Olympics, she competed in mixed doubles curling with her brother, Matt, along with playing with the women's curling team. During the 2022 Beijing Olympics, she was again on the women's curling team.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Matt Dallas", "text": "Matt Dallas\n\nMatthew Joseph Dallas (born October 21, 1982) is an American actor, best known for playing the title character on the ABC Family series \"Kyle XY\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Matt Hamilton", "text": "Matt Hamilton\n\nMatt Hamilton or Matthew Hamilton may refer to:\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "30682442", "title": "Mark Hamilton (baseball)", "text": " Hamilton was born on July 29, 1984, in Baltimore, Maryland. His father, Stanley Hamilton, was a doctor who served as the head of pathology and laboratory medicine at MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas. He attended Tulane University where he played college baseball for the Tulane Green Wave baseball team. In 2004 and 2005, he played collegiate summer baseball with the Falmouth Commodores of the Cape Cod Baseball League. In 2006, Hamilton was a first team All-American at Tulane despite a thumb injury which forced him to miss much of the 2005 season.", "score": "1.5860546" }, { "id": "3153614", "title": "Joseph Hamilton (goalball)", "text": " Joseph \"Joe\" Hamilton (born June 9, 1978) is an American goalball player. When Hamilton was a baby, he had a corneal transplant in his left eye after contracting rubella virus in the womb which restored his partial sight. He was left totally blind at the age of 12 after a snowboarding accident and two years later, he was introduced to goalball aged 14.", "score": "1.5662158" }, { "id": "3932892", "title": "Ben Hamilton", "text": " Hamilton was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the son of former Minnesota Vikings offensive lineman Wes Hamilton. He attended Wayzata High School in Plymouth, Minnesota, and was all-state selection in football. He graduated in 1996.", "score": "1.5647271" }, { "id": "31846971", "title": "Mark Hamilton (guitarist)", "text": " Mark Hamilton was born in Truro, Cornwall, England and lived in Newquay, Cornwall for the first few years of his life. His family then moved to Alton, Hampshire where at the age of 16 he taught himself to play guitar. His first real taste of playing in bands was on The University of Exeter band scene, where he won the award for best guitarist two years running at the Battle of the Bands competition. He graduated from Exeter University with a Law Degree, a qualification he has never used as he has played guitar professionally since graduating. He has lived much of his adult life in Oxford and has also been involved in the Oxford music scene. Mark also has a Diploma in Contemporary Music (with Honours) from the Academy of Contemporary Music (Guildford).", "score": "1.5633293" }, { "id": "13862740", "title": "Tom Hamilton (electronic musician)", "text": " Hamilton grew up in Orange County, California, and moved to Los Angeles as a teen. Thomas got his first break in commercial music when two of his songs debuted on television. The MTV television series Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County used his track Alive. The E! Entertainment Television series Paradise City also used one of Hamilton's songs. He initially signed a development deal with J Records, but the label did not release any of his music. Hamilton is signed to the Indie Pop Records label, based in Los Angeles. His contemporaries on the label include Dev, Marty James, Bobby Brackins, The Cataracs, and Yuna. Hamilton recently released an EP produced by The Cataracs, after their collaboration on the Billboard Hot 100 #1 hit Like a G6. His previous collaborations with The Cataracs included Mr. Sexual and God Knows. Hamilton has worked with Swedish producer Alex Kronlund, who wrote for and produced Robin and Britney Spears. He continues to write and record with Indie Pop and has recently joined forces musically with Caroline D'Amore, the actress and model. Hamilton is currently writing new music with producer-songwriter Freddy Wexler.", "score": "1.5631988" }, { "id": "7015849", "title": "Josh Hamilton", "text": " Hamilton, of majority Scottish heritage, was born and raised in Raleigh, North Carolina, playing little league baseball alongside former South Carolina and Oakland Athletics catcher Landon Powell. Hamilton attended Athens Drive High School in Raleigh where he starred as both a pitcher and outfielder. As a high school senior, Hamilton ran the 60-yard dash in 6.7 seconds and was clocked at 97 mph on the mound. After hitting .529 in 25 games with 13 home runs, 20 stolen bases, 35 runs batted in (RBIs), and 34 runs scored, Hamilton was widely considered one of the top two prospects for the 1999 MLB draft, along with Josh Beckett, ", "score": "1.5600138" }, { "id": "27490166", "title": "Page Hamilton", "text": " Hamilton was born in Portland, Oregon, and raised in Medford, Oregon. He studied guitar at the University of Oregon before moving to New York to study jazz guitar at the Manhattan School of Music. While there he played in avant-garde composer Glenn Branca's guitar orchestra, performing the composer's Symphony No.6 (Devil Choirs at the Gates of Heaven), and joined noise rock band Band of Susans, performing on their Love Agenda album and Peel Sessions, before finally forming his own group, Helmet.", "score": "1.5573661" }, { "id": "25648177", "title": "Tyler Hamilton (footballer)", "text": " Hamilton joined Hull City at the age of eight and signed a scholarship in July 2016. On 22 August 2017, he made his debut in a 2–0 EFL Cup defeat to Doncaster Rovers. On 28 February 2018, Hamilton signed a two-year contract with the club.", "score": "1.5569298" }, { "id": "29172856", "title": "Justin Hamilton (basketball, born 1990)", "text": " Hamilton is of Croatian ancestry on his mother side, who is from Zagreb, Croatia. Hamilton spent 1 year of his life in Croatia, attending the elementary school \"Pantovčak\" in Zagreb.", "score": "1.5546974" }, { "id": "32807653", "title": "Hamilton, Victoria", "text": " Mark Orval, a former Australian rules footballer, also known as #angry dad. ; Liam Picken, born August 1986 is an Australian Rules football player. Picken began playing for Western Bulldogs in 2009 and in 2016 he played in the Bulldogs' premiership team. ; Xavier Samuel, actor, born 1983 in Hamilton. ; Clive Shields, medical practitioner and politician, born 1879. ; Jan Smithwick, Australian basketball player was born in Hamilton in 1952. ; Melissa Tapper, born 1990, an Australian table tennis player, the first Australian athlete to qualify for the Summer Olympics and Summer Paralympics. ; Howard Taylor, artist ; Sir Winton Turnbull, an auctioneer and a politician, born 1899. ; Phil Walsh, a VFL/AFL footballer and coach, was born and raised in Hamilton. ; Emma Kearney AFLW and Women’s Big Bash League player ", "score": "1.551832" }, { "id": "15247572", "title": "Matt Rinard", "text": " Matt Rinard is an American born artist living in New Orleans, Louisiana. Born in Meridian, Mississippi on October 24, 1964 he is the son of an Admiral in the United States Navy. By the time he was 16 he had moved to six different states. He attended N.O.C.C.A. New Orleans Center for Creative Arts in 1980 and abandoned the school in 1981 to attend Holy Cross High School in the Lower Ninth Ward. He received a bachelor's degree from Florida State University in Graphic Design in 1987 and continued his artistic endeavors at the New Orleans Academy of Fine Arts from 1990 to 2003 ", "score": "1.55097" }, { "id": "26766859", "title": "DaeSean Hamilton", "text": " Hamilton was born in Okinawa, Japan to his parents Johnie and Madgeline Hamilton, both U.S. Marines. The family eventually moved back to the United States and settled in Quantico, Virginia, when Hamilton was in fourth grade. Growing up, Hamilton took a role in raising his brother, Darius, who has nonverbal autism as his mother had breast cancer and his father was serving in the Marine Corps. Hamilton taught Darius many important tasks like how to tie his shoes and brush his teeth. During eighth-grade, Hamilton used his elective period to help Darius in his special-needs class. Hamilton has a \"DKH\" tattoo on his arm, which are his brother's initials. He started playing football in recreational leagues including Pop Warner.", "score": "1.5507014" }, { "id": "10064622", "title": "Roy Hamilton", "text": " Roy Hamilton was born in Leesburg, Georgia where he began singing in church choirs at the age of six. In the summer of 1943, when Hamilton was fourteen, the family migrated north to Jersey City, New Jersey in search of a better life. There, he sang with the Central Baptist Church Choir, New Jersey's most famous African American church choir. At Lincoln High School, he studied commercial art and was gifted enough to place his paintings with a number of New York City galleries. In February 1947, seventeen-year-old Hamilton took his first big step into secular music, winning a talent contest at the Apollo Theater. But nothing came of it. \"I couldn't get a break,\" Hamilton recalled. \"I really had nothing different to offer. They were seeking blues ", "score": "1.5501165" }, { "id": "27626787", "title": "Matthew Porterfield", "text": " Porterfield was born in Baltimore, Maryland, and had formal training at the Tisch School of the Arts, New York University. He teaches screenwriting and production in the Film and Media Studies Program at Johns Hopkins University. His low-budget debut feature, Hamilton, made on 16 mm film with a cast of non-professional actors from Baltimore, proved a \"minor miracle\", wrote Richard Brody in The New Yorker. The magazine went on to tag the film as \"the most original, moving and an accomplished American independent film in recent years\". Considered a sleeper hit, Porterfield's Putty Hill again reverted to his hometown as the film revolves around a small working class community in Baltimore city. The film was critically acclaimed for combining documentary and narrative traditions into ", "score": "1.5495026" }, { "id": "27938551", "title": "Matt Jones (actor)", "text": " Jones was born in Sacramento, California and grew up in Pomona, California, one of ten children between his mother and stepfather. He eventually moved to Claremont, and graduated from Claremont High School in 2000. During this time he started Ultimate Improv in Westwood, before auditioning for Boom Chicago in Amsterdam, where he would go on to perform for three years. Due to the rigorous touring schedule of Boom, he frequently lost his voice, which eventually became permanently raspy.", "score": "1.5476748" } ]
In what city was William Perry Hay born?
[ "Eureka", "Eureka, Illinois" ]
place of birth
William Perry Hay
2,014,591
85
[ { "id": "32864668", "title": "William Perry Hay", "text": " William Perry Hay (born in Eureka, Illinois on December 8, 1871; died in 1947) was an American zoologist known for work on crayfish and reptiles. He was the son of Oliver Perry Hay.", "score": "1.8483182" }, { "id": "26224505", "title": "William H. Perry (Los Angeles)", "text": " Perry was born on October 7, 1832, in Newark, Ohio, the son of John and Ann Perry. He went to school and learned a cabinetmaker's trade in Newark. At the age of twenty-one he made his way with William Welles Hollister and a party of some fifty men and five women, with a collection of cattle, sheep and horses, from Council Bluffs, Iowa, to Los Angeles by way of Salt Lake City and San Bernardino. It was the first transcontinental sheep drive, taking a year to complete. He arrived in Los Angeles either in 1853 or February 1854. Perry later recounted that after his long trip he was \"worn out, dead broke and almost naked.\" He walked into a store and asked the merchant for \"the cheapest suit ", "score": "1.6562762" }, { "id": "30236964", "title": "Samuel Ross Hay", "text": " Samuel Ross Hay (1865 &ndash; 1944) was an American Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, elected in 1922. Born 15 October 1865 in Decaturville, Decatur County, Tennessee, he was the son of the Rev. William and Martha (England) Hay. His grandfather was an influential local preacher. The Hays moved to Texas about 1881. Samuel attended Centenary College, Southwestern University, and Southern College, Lakeland, Florida. He was licensed to preach in 1886, joining the North Texas Annual Conference of the M.E. Church, South in 1887. Prior to his election to the Episcopacy, Hay was a pastor and a presiding elder. He was elected Bishop 16 May 1922 and placed in charge of all American Southern Methodist Episcopal Mission work in China. Returning to the United States in 1924, he resided in several episcopal areas in the south and west of the country and assisted in the development of the Methodist Church in Mexico. On June 26, 1928, he offered the opening invocation at the 1928 Democratic National Convention in Houston. Hay died on 4 February 1944 in Houston, Texas.", "score": "1.6383294" }, { "id": "5333593", "title": "William Hay (Australian politician)", "text": " Hay was born in Banffshire, Scotland, educated at the University of Aberdeen and arrived in Sydney in 1838.", "score": "1.6315498" }, { "id": "13381875", "title": "Sam Hay", "text": " Sam Hay was an footballer who played inside-right for Thames Ironworks, the club that would later become West Ham United. He was born in Renfrewshire, Scotland, and played for Victoria, until being signed up by the Irons for the 1895–96 season, where he became a regular choice.", "score": "1.6256412" }, { "id": null, "title": "William Perry Hay", "text": "William Perry Hay\n\nWilliam Perry Hay (born in Eureka, Illinois on December 8, 1871; died in 1947) was an American zoologist known for work on crayfish and reptiles. He was the son of Oliver Perry Hay.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Oliver Perry Hay", "text": "Oliver Perry Hay\n\nOliver Perry Hay (May 22, 1846 – November 2, 1930) was an American herpetologist, ichthyologist, and paleontologist.\n\nHay was born in Jefferson County, Indiana, to Robert and Margaret Hay. In 1870, Hay graduated with a bachelor of arts from Eureka College in Illinois. He taught at the college as a sciences professor from 1870–1873. He married Mary E. Howsmon of Eureka, Illinois, in 1870. He was a professor at Oskaloosa College in Iowa from 1874–1876. He was a student at Yale University from 1876–1877. Seventeen years after earning his bachelors, he earned his PhD from Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana. From 1877–1879, he taught at Abingdon College just before it was incorporated into his alma mater, Eureka College. His longest professorship was at Butler University from 1879–1892. From 1894 to 1895, he worked at the Field Museum of Natural History as assistant curator of zoology, where despite his specialty in ichthyology, he worked in all nonornithological fields of zoology. In 1912, Hay was appointed as a research associate at the Carnegie Institution for Science, and was given office space at the United States National Museum. There, he did much work with the USNM's collections in vertebrate paleontology. He published extensively on fossil turtles and Pleistocene mammals. The catalogs that he constructed were a great aid in recording existing knowledge and became standard references. His papers from 1911 to 1930 are stored at the Smithsonian Institution.<ref name=\"cox\" />\n\nOliver and Mary had four children together. Their son, William Perry Hay, was also a zoologist.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "William C. Perry", "text": "William C. Perry\n\nWilliam C. Perry (March 11, 1900 – October 27, 1985) was an American attorney and jurist in Oregon. He was the 34th Chief Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court. He served in that role twice for a total of five years. Perry was appointed to the court by soon to be ex-governor Douglas McKay after McKay had already appointed him as a county circuit court judge. A native of Kansas, he also worked as a county prosecuting attorney and city attorney prior to joining the state's highest court.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "William Talman (actor)", "text": "William Talman (actor)\n\nWilliam Whitney Talman Jr., (February 4, 1915August 30, 1968) was an American television and movie actor, best known for playing Los Angeles District Attorney Hamilton Burger in the television series \"Perry Mason\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Anthony Wong (Hong Kong actor)", "text": "Anthony Wong (Hong Kong actor)\n\nAnthony Wong Chau-sang (born Anthony William Perry; 2 September 1961) is a Hong Kong film actor and singer. He has worked with many significant directors of Hong Kong cinema since his debut in 1985, including John Woo, Andrew Lau, Ringo Lam and Johnnie To, and is known for his intense portrayals of often-amoral characters. He has won the Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actor three times: for \"The Untold Story\" (1993), \"Beast Cops\" (1998) and \"Still Human\" (2018). \n\nHe is best known to international audiences for his roles as Triad gangster Johnny Wong in \"Hard Boiled\" (1992), police Superintendent Wong Chi-shing \"Infernal Affairs\" trilogy (2002-03) and General Yang in the Hollywood film \"\" (2008).", "score": null }, { "id": "30485156", "title": "Alexander Hay (mayor)", "text": " Hay was born in the neighborhood known as Scotch Hill. By age eleven, he worked in a glass house and learned the trade of cabinetry. The Roman Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh was created during Mayor Hay's term. Also, navigation on the Monongahela River was opened as far south as Brownsville during his administration. Hay's life of public service continued after his term as mayor. He commanded the Jackson Blues during the Mexican War. During the Civil War, he was captain of Company E. Pennsylvania Regiment. He was at the Battle of Yorktown. He and his son were the proprietors of a fine furniture business. Hay died in 1882 and is buried in the Allegheny Cemetery.", "score": "1.6242297" }, { "id": "27744576", "title": "Will Hay", "text": " Hay was born at 23 Durham Street in Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham. He was one of two sons and three daughters of William Robert Hay (1851–1920) and his wife, Elizabeth (1859–1910) (née Ebden). When Will Hay Jr. was less than a year old the family moved to Lowestoft in Suffolk. By his late teens, Hay had become fluent in Italian, French and German and secured employment as an interpreter.", "score": "1.6238626" }, { "id": "6004168", "title": "Frederick Rudolph Hay", "text": " Frederick Rudolph Hay (born 1784) was an engraver known for his landscape and architectural work. He was born in Edinburgh and studied under Robert Scott before moving in 1805 to London where he spent the rest of his career. His work was included in Britannia depicta.", "score": "1.6216342" }, { "id": "30485155", "title": "Alexander Hay (mayor)", "text": " Alexander Hay (April 8, 1806 &ndash; November 5, 1882) was Mayor of Pittsburgh, USA, from 1842 to 1845.", "score": "1.6179693" }, { "id": "26224504", "title": "William H. Perry (Los Angeles)", "text": " William Hayes Perry (1832–1906), known as W. H. Perry, was a 19th-century lumber merchant and financier in Los Angeles, California. He was known as \"a masterful man whose influence and backing has been felt for fifty years in the development of Southern California.\"", "score": "1.6090608" }, { "id": "6678552", "title": "William Hay (architect)", "text": " William Hay (17 May 1818 – 30 May 1888) was a Scottish architect who was actively working internationally from 1842 to 1887. A specialist in gothic architecture, he is primarily known for his work on several churches and cathedrals. His most famous structure is the Bermuda Cathedral in Hamilton, Bermuda which he designed in 1885. Construction of the cathedral began in 1886 and was completed seven years after Hay's death in 1905. He also designed some of the oldest buildings and structures in Toronto, Ontario, from 1853–1861, and was responsible for the restoration of St. Giles' Cathedral in Edinburgh from 1872–1884. His career exemplifies how the British Empire of the Victorian Era was united not only by military and political strength but also by professionals who took advantage of opportunities in its wide array of territories.", "score": "1.6061883" }, { "id": "14081565", "title": "Alexander Hay (songwriter)", "text": " Alexander Hay was born in Newcastle on 11 December 1826. After serving out his apprenticeship to a cabinet-maker, his restless nature came to the fore and he began a long period of roving. He first went to sea as a ship’s carpenter, followed by a spell in Liverpool as a tutor in a school, being connected with the press whilst in Liverpool, and later he turned up in London being involved in the construction of the Great Exhibition of 1862, and again, working as a journalist. He returned to Newcastle and became active in the community. He was involved in the local historical research into the location of graves of ", "score": "1.5906321" }, { "id": "27351319", "title": "William Hay (author)", "text": " William Gosse Hay (17 November 1875, Adelaide – 21 March 1945, Victor Harbor) was an Australian author and essayist.", "score": "1.5808733" }, { "id": "6678558", "title": "William Hay (architect)", "text": " Stirling in Halifax, Nova Scotia. They worked together through 1865 on the Halifax Club (1862), Alexander Keith's residence (1863), and a new Provincial Building designed for use as a post office, customs house, and railway department (built from 1863–1868, now the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia). He married his second wife, Jemima Huddleston (1838-1905) of Ryde, Isle of Wight, in 1864. The couple produced one daughter, Fanny, and settled in Edinburgh where Hay set up a new practice. In 1871 he was hired by Sir William Chambers, Lord Provost of Edinburgh, to oversee the restoration of St. Giles' Cathedral which took place from 1872-1884. In 1877 he formed a partnership with John Henderson's son George Henderson. The two men worked together until Hay became seriously ill in October 1887. He died eight months later at Rabbit Hall, Hamilton Street, Joppa at the age of 70.", "score": "1.5723169" }, { "id": "5333595", "title": "William Hay (Australian politician)", "text": " Hay died in the Melbourne suburb of Brighton on November 14, 1908.", "score": "1.5719228" }, { "id": "13607882", "title": "Mary Cecil Hay", "text": " Mary Hay was born in Shrewsbury to clockmaker Thomas William Hay (1791–1856) and Cecilia Carbin (1798–1888). There were seven children in the family, four boys and three girls, all baptised in a non-conformist independent church. The eldest boy, John (1821-1821) died in infancy. The next oldest son, Arthur Kenneth (1824–1839), committed suicide at the age of fifteen. The middle son, Walter Cecil Hay FRAM (1828–1905), became an organist and music teacher, whilst the youngest son, Thomas William (1836–1873), followed his father into the clock-making business. Mary and her two sisters, Francis Ann (1830–1884) and Susan Elizabeth, an artist (1840–1908) remained unmarried and continued to live at home with their mother. Mary's ", "score": "1.5684774" }, { "id": "27744575", "title": "Will Hay", "text": " William Thomson Hay (6 December 1888 – 18 April 1949) was an English comedian who wrote and acted in a schoolmaster sketch that was popular all over the world, and later transferred to the screen, where he also played other authority figures with comic failings. His film Oh, Mr. Porter! (1937), made by Gainsborough Pictures, is often cited as the supreme British-produced film-comedy, and in 1938 he was the third highest-grossing star in the UK. Many famous comedians have acknowledged him as a major influence. Hay was also a keen amateur astronomer.", "score": "1.5639932" }, { "id": "27351320", "title": "William Hay (author)", "text": " W. G. Hay was born at \"Linden\" in the eastern suburbs of Adelaide, the second son of Alexander Hay a wealthy merchant, pastoralist and politician, and his second wife Agnes Grant Hay, née Gosse. He was educated by a private tutor on his parents' cattle station, then at Melbourne Grammar School, subsequently at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he studied law. William Gosse Hay and Mary Violet Williams were married on 26 October 1901 at the chapel of St. Peter's College, where her late father, Rev. Francis Williams, had been head master. They lived until 1924 at Beaumont then moved to Victor ", "score": "1.5582199" }, { "id": "8672626", "title": "George Hay (artist)", "text": " Hay was born at Prospect Bank House in Leith (Edinburgh's harbour town) in 1831. He studied art under Robert Scott Lauder alongside William McTaggart, William Quiller Orchardson and Hugh Cameron. The latter became a close friend and they shared a studio at 12 Queen Street, Edinburgh from 1880. In 1865 he was living at 16 Picardy Place at the head of Leith Walk. He became an associate of the Royal Scottish Academy in 1869 and a full member in 1876. He was Secretary to the RSA from 1881 to 1907. He moved to 9 Castle Terrace in 1884 but moved a year later to a Victorian terraced house at 7 Ravelston Terrace in west Edinburgh, where he lived for the rest of his life.", "score": "1.5573754" }, { "id": "25103170", "title": "William Haywood (engineer)", "text": " William Haywood was born as the eldest of three children in Camberwell. His father was probably also called William Haywood. Nothing is known about his mother. In the census of 1871 he was no longer alone and living in Maida Vale. He died at 56 Hamilton Terrace, Maida Vale, on 13 April 1894.", "score": "1.5503204" } ]
In what city was John Robinson born?
[ "Mansfield", "Mansfield, Ohio" ]
place of birth
John Robinson (judge)
4,733,160
45
[ { "id": "6657708", "title": "John Z. Robinson", "text": " John Z. Robinson (born 25 May 1953 in Foxton, New Zealand) is a New Zealand painter, printmaker, and jeweller. He has lived in Dunedin, New Zealand since 1978.", "score": "1.6943994" }, { "id": "31348705", "title": "John Edward Robinson", "text": " Robinson was born in Cicero, Illinois, the third of five children of an alcoholic father and a disciplinarian mother. In 1957, he became an Eagle Scout and traveled to London with a group of Scouts who performed before Queen Elizabeth II. He enrolled at Quigley Preparatory Seminary in Chicago, a private boys school for aspiring priests, but dropped out after one year due to disciplinary issues. In 1961, he enrolled at Morton Junior College in Cicero to become a medical radiographer, but dropped out after two years. In 1964, he moved to Kansas City and married Nancy Jo Lynch, who gave birth to their first child, John Jr., in 1965, followed by a daughter, Kimberly, in 1967, and twins Christopher and Christine in 1971.", "score": "1.6690607" }, { "id": "1794461", "title": "John Perry Robinson", "text": " Robinson is believed to have been born in Surrey, England. His year of birth is uncertain (either 1810 or 1811). He married Mary Gaskell on 22 October 1836 at Derby. They had two children (Eliza (b. 1838) and Samuel (b. 1840) when they decided to emigrate to New Zealand. They arrived in Nelson on the Phoebe on 29 March 1843.", "score": "1.6388079" }, { "id": "26679438", "title": "Walter Robinson (artist)", "text": " Robinson was born in Wilmington, Delaware, and raised in Tulsa. He moved to New York to attend Columbia University in 1968. Subsequently, he graduated from the Whitney Independent Study Program in 1973. He lived in SoHo in the 1970s and the Lower East Side in the 1980s and '90s, and currently has a studio in Long Island City in Queens.", "score": "1.6162934" }, { "id": "14033156", "title": "J. W. Robinson (mayor)", "text": " Born in Owensboro, Kentucky, on July 18, 1860, to parents George H. and Caroline L. (Heard) Robinson, J. W. Robinson was the third of six sons. He was raised on his family's farm and educated in the public school system. After finishing his public school education, he then went on to a college in Carrollton and later attended the National Normal University in Lebanon, Ohio, where he graduated at twenty-one years of age, having completed a scientific course.", "score": "1.614413" }, { "id": null, "title": "John Robinson (American football coach)", "text": "John Robinson (American football coach)\n\nJohn Alexander Robinson (born July 25, 1935) is a former American football player and coach best known for his two stints as head coach of the University of Southern California (USC) football team (1976–1982, 1993–1997) and for his tenure as head coach of the NFL's Los Angeles Rams (1983–1991). Robinson's USC teams won four Rose Bowls and captured a share of the national championship in the 1978 season. Robinson is one of the few college football head coaches to have non-consecutive tenure at the same school. In 2009, he was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame. ", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Edward Robinson", "text": "John Edward Robinson\n\nJohn Edward Robinson (born December 27, 1943) is an American serial killer, con man, embezzler, kidnapper, and forger who was found guilty in 2003 for three murders committed in and around Kansas City, Kansas, receiving the death penalty for two of them. In 2005, he admitted responsibility for five homicides in Missouri as part of a plea bargain to receive multiple life sentences without possibility of parole and avoid more death sentences. Investigators suspect that more victims remain undiscovered.<ref name=\"ccf\"/>\n\nBecause he made contact with most of his post-1993 victims via online chatrooms, Robinson is sometimes referred to as \"the Internet's first serial killer\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Robinson (pastor)", "text": "John Robinson (pastor)\n\nJohn Robinson (1576–1625) was the pastor of the \"Pilgrim Fathers\" before they left on the \"Mayflower\". He became one of the early leaders of the English Separatists called Brownists, and is regarded (along with Robert Browne and Henry Barrow) as one of the founders of the Congregational Church.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Robinson (bishop of Woolwich)", "text": "John Robinson (bishop of Woolwich)\n\nJohn Arthur Thomas Robinson (16 May 1919 – 5 December 1983) was an English New Testament scholar, author and the Anglican Bishop of Woolwich. He was a lecturer at Trinity College, Cambridge, and later Dean of Trinity College until his death in 1983 from cancer. Robinson was considered a major force in New Testament studies and in shaping liberal Christian theology. Along with Harvard theologian Harvey Cox, he spearheaded the field of secular theology and, like William Barclay, he was a believer in universal salvation.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Robinson (drummer)", "text": "John Robinson (drummer)\n\nJohn Frederick Robinson (born December 29, 1954), known professionally as JR, is an American drummer and session musician who has been called \"one of the most recorded drummers in history\". He is known for his work with producer Quincy Jones, including Michael Jackson's multi-platinum \"Off the Wall\" album and the charity single \"We Are the World\".\n\n\"Rolling Stone\" listed JR in 2016 at number 81 in their list of the top 100 \"Greatest Drummers of All Time\". He was awarded one Grammy Award for the Rufus/Chaka Khan single \"Ain't Nobody\", but has played drums on more than 50 Grammy winners.<ref name=DMME/>\n\nJR plays in many different styles. His first fame came with the funk band Rufus, and he recorded dance/funk hits with the Pointer Sisters. In the pop and rock fields, his work stretches from the straight-up rock of John Fogerty, Bonnie Raitt and Peter Frampton, to the mainstream pop of Lady Gaga, Daft Punk, Wilson Phillips and Madonna. JR has backed many contemporary R&B singers including Whitney Houston, Lionel Richie and Anita Baker, as well as vocal pop/soft rock singers such as Barbra Streisand, Seal, Peter Cetera and Rod Stewart. He played on a string of pure country hits by George Strait, Clint Black and Toby Keith. In the 1990s, his film score assignments shifted into high gear, drumming for Hans Zimmer, Christophe Beck and James Newton Howard. And throughout JR's career he has collaborated with jazz artists ranging from Jeff Lorber to David Benoit to Sadao Watanabe. JR said he is \"a chameleon kind of drummer\".<ref name=DMME/>", "score": null }, { "id": "7664955", "title": "John Robinson (pastor)", "text": " Robinson was born at Sturton-Le-Steeple in Nottinghamshire, England, between March and September 1576, this range of dates deduced by comparing two records at Leiden (Leyden), Netherlands, that give his age at the time of the event. He entered Corpus Christi College at the University of Cambridge in April 1592. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1596. In May 1598 he was admitted a Fellow of his college and ordained a priest of the Church of England. This was followed one year later in 1599 by his Master of Arts degree. Following the attainment of his Master's degree, he obtained two positions at Corpus: Praelector Graecus, a lectureship in Greek, and Decanus, a post involving student oversight.", "score": "1.612436" }, { "id": "5760127", "title": "John Robinson (footballer, born 1971)", "text": " Robinson was born in Bulawayo, Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) to a Glasgow-born father and Rhodesian mother. His father's job later moved the family to Durban in South Africa before they settled in Sussex in order for Robinson to pursue his dream of playing professional football.", "score": "1.6080759" }, { "id": "25796276", "title": "John Robinson (Harwich MP)", "text": " Born on 15 July 1727, and baptised at St. Lawrence, Appleby, Westmorland, on 14 August 1727, he was the eldest son of Charles Robinson, an Appleby tradesman, who died on 19 June 1760, in his fifty-eighth year, having married, at Kirkby Thore on 19 May 1726, Hannah, daughter of Richard Deane of Appleby. He was educated until 17 at Appleby grammar school, and was then articled to his aunt's husband, Richard Wordsworth, of Sockbridge in Barton, Westmorland, clerk of the peace for the county, and grandfather of the poet William Wordsworth. He was admitted as attorney, practised law in Appleby, and became town clerk on 1 October 1750; he was mayor in 1761. On 2 February 1759 he ", "score": "1.6016634" }, { "id": "3651580", "title": "John Richard Robinson", "text": " Born on 2 November 1828 at Witham, Essex, he was the second son of eight children of Richard Robinson, a congregational minister. His wife Sarah was the daughter of John Dennant, also a congregational minister, of Halesworth, Suffolk. At eleven he entered the school for the sons of congregational ministers at Lewisham. Withdrawn from school on 26 June 1843, he was apprenticed to a firm of booksellers at Shepton Mallet. His first effort towards journalism was a descriptive account (in the Daily News 14 February 1846) of a meeting of Wiltshire labourers to protest against the Corn Laws. After reporting for the Bedford Mercury, he obtained a post on the Wiltshire Independent at Devizes, and sent regular reports of the local markets to ", "score": "1.5951397" }, { "id": "7664976", "title": "John Robinson (pastor)", "text": "1) John, born in Norwich, England and baptised there on 24 March 1606 [N.S.] in St. Peter Hungate parish church; matriculated at the University of Leiden, first on 17 April 1622 as a student of Fine Arts and again on 5 April 1633 as a student of Theology; in-between the latter two dates he graduated in May 1630 from the University of Caen in Normandy, France with a degree in Medicine; was married with children and in 1658 was living in Norwich, England. ; 2) Bridget, born in Norwich, England and baptised there on 25 January 1607 [N.S.] in St. Peter Hungate parish ", "score": "1.5911624" }, { "id": "25197596", "title": "Frederick Robinson (Wisconsin pharmacist)", "text": " Robinson was born on March 11, 1824, in Church Stretton, in the West Midlands region of England. He was the youngest of nine children and his father died when he was only two years old. At age 15 he became an apprentice to a druggist and learned under him for five years. In 1845, he emigrated by boat to America. He landed in New York City after a forty day trip and was soon employed at a drug store in that city. The following year, he moved to Chicago and took a job with Sidney Sawyer. Sawyer wanted to establish a drug store in the city of Southport in the Wisconsin Territory (present day Kenosha, Wisconsin) and sent ", "score": "1.5866598" }, { "id": "13904275", "title": "John Robinson (Natal politician)", "text": " Robinson was born in Hull, son of George Eyre Robinson, secretary of the Hull Savings Bank, and his wife Mary Ann; she was the daughter of George Cookman, a businessman and politician. He moved to Natal with his parents in 1850. Coming to a colony which was only seven years old, where there were as yet no secondary schools, he had little chance of education, apart from the stimulus of \"cultured parents\". Entering the office of the Natal Mercury, which his father started, he cherished leanings towards the life of a missionary, and then towards the law; but he finally accepted the career of journalism. In March 1860 he took over the ", "score": "1.5864589" }, { "id": "1610375", "title": "John Martin Robinson", "text": " John Martin Robinson FSA (born 1948) is a British architectural historian and officer of arms. He was born in Preston, Lancashire, and educated at Fort Augustus Abbey, a Benedictine school in Scotland, the University of St Andrews (graduating MA and awarded D.LITT in 2002) and then in 1970 arrived at Oriel College, Oxford, to prepare for a DPhil. The doctoral degree was awarded in 1974 for work on the architect Samuel Wyatt. He worked for the Greater London Council Historic Buildings Division from 1974 to 1986, where he worked inter alia as architectural editor of the Survey of London, and Historic Buildings Inspector for Westminster, and also revised the Statutory Lists of Historic Buildings ", "score": "1.5802462" }, { "id": "28949167", "title": "John Robinson (aviator)", "text": " John Charles Robinson (November 26, 1905 – March 27, 1954) was an American aviator and activist who was hailed as the \"Brown Condor\" for his service in the Imperial Ethiopian Air Force against Fascist Italy. Robinson pushed for equal opportunities for African-Americans during his early career, and was able to open his own eponymous aviation school in addition to initiating a program for black pilots at his college, the Tuskegee Institute. Robinson's achievements as an aviator were in stark contrast to the limited opportunities for most African-Americans in aviation careers, and were an important factor in reducing racially based prohibitions in the United States. Robinson is sometimes referred to as the \"Father of the Tuskegee Airmen\" for inspiring this all-black group of pilots who served in the United States Army Air Forces following the United States' entry into World War II.", "score": "1.580152" }, { "id": "14682411", "title": "John Robinson (US Marshal)", "text": " John Robinson was born in County Meath, Ireland on May 8, 1838, a son of Thomas Robinson and Mary (Flood) Robinson. His family immigrated to the United States in 1839, and Robinson was raised and educated in Shaftsbury and Bennington. Robinson became a farmer, worked as a foreman for the Henry Burden & Sons iron ore mines, and settled in Bennington.", "score": "1.5795159" }, { "id": "28966357", "title": "John Beverley Robinson", "text": " John Beverley Robinson (February 21, 1821 – June 19, 1896) was a Canadian politician, lawyer and businessman. He was mayor of Toronto and a provincial and federal member of parliament. He was the fifth Lieutenant Governor of Ontario between the years 1880&ndash;1887.", "score": "1.5774214" }, { "id": "28949168", "title": "John Robinson (aviator)", "text": " Robinson was born in 1903, in Carrabelle, Florida, and spent his early years in Gulfport, Mississippi. His birth father died when he was a baby, leaving him and his four-year-old sister, Bertha, with their mother Celeste Robinson, who then married Charles Cobb. Robinson was inspired by flight at an early age. According to one account, in 1910, Robinson was seven years old when he witnessed a float-equipped biplane flown by John Moisant in Gulfport, Mississippi.", "score": "1.5740442" }, { "id": "2145680", "title": "John Robinson (historian)", "text": " Born of poor parentage at Temple Sowerby, Westmorland on 4 January 1774, he was educated at Penrith grammar school and Christ's College, Cambridge, where he was admitted a sizar 1 January 1807. As a ten-year man he was a Cambridge graduate. His D.D. is presumed a Lambeth degree by Venn. Robinson was master of Ravenstonedale grammar school, Westmorland, from 1795 to 1818, perpetual curate of Ravenstonedale from 25 June 1813 to 1833, and rector from 31 July 1818 of Clifton, and from 12 August 1833 of Cliburn.", "score": "1.5723073" }, { "id": "27903507", "title": "John Robinson (American football coach)", "text": " Robinson was born in Chicago, moved to Provo, Utah at six, and then to Daly City, California at nine, where he attended Catholic parochial school with future Pro Football Hall of Famer John Madden, at Our Lady of Perpetual Help, graduating in 1950, and Junípero Serra High School graduating in 1954. He attended the University of Oregon, where he played end on Oregon's 1958 Rose Bowl team.", "score": "1.571552" }, { "id": "10982669", "title": "John Edward Robinson (bishop)", "text": " John was born in Gort, County Galway, Ireland (28 miles north of Limerick). His parentage was English, the son of James and Jane Robinson. John was fatherless at the age of six. He came to the U.S. in 1865. He married Retta Terry on 15 November 1876. They had the following children: Ruth E., Helen E., John F., Bessie E., Flora L. and Muriel E.", "score": "1.569665" } ]