text
sequencelengths 3
270
| source
stringclasses 1
value |
---|---|
[
[
"Amorphous solid"
],
[
"Introduction",
"In condensed matter physics and materials science, an '''amorphous solid''' (or '''non-crystalline solid''') is a solid that lacks the long-range order that is characteristic of a crystal.",
"The terms \"glass\" and \"glassy solid\" are sometimes used synonymously with amorphous solid; however, these terms refer specifically to amorphous materials that undergo a glass transition.",
"Examples of amorphous solids include glasses, metallic glasses, and certain types of plastics and polymers."
],
[
"Etymology",
"The term comes from the Greek ''a'' (\"without\"), and ''morphé'' (\"shape, form\")."
],
[
"Structure",
"Crystalline vs. amorphous solidAmorphous materials have an internal structure consisting of interconnected structural blocks that can be similar to the basic structural units found in the corresponding crystalline phase of the same compound.",
"Unlike in crystalline materials, however, no long-range order exists.",
"Amorphous materials therefore cannot be defined by a finite unit cell.",
"Statistical methods, such as the atomic density function and radial distribution function, are more useful in describing the structure of amorphous solids.Glass is a commonly encountered example of amorphous solids.Although amorphous materials lack long range order, they exhibit localized order on small length scales.",
"Localized order in amorphous materials can be categorized as short or medium range order.",
"By convention, short range order extends only to the nearest neighbor shell, typically only 1-2 atomic spacings.",
"Medium range order is then defined as the structural organization extending beyond the short range order, usually by 1-2 nm."
],
[
"Fundamental properties of amorphous solids",
"=== Glass transition at high temperatures ===The freezing from liquid state to amorphous solid - glass transition - is considered one of the very important and unsolved problems of physics.=== Universal low-temperature properties of amorphous solids ===At very low temperatures (below 1-10 K), large family of amorphous solids have various similar low-temperature properties.Although there are various theoretical models, neither glass transition nor low-temperature properties of glassy solids are well understood on the fundamental physics level.Amorphous solids is an important area of condensed matter physics aiming to understand these substances at high temperatures of glass transition and at low temperatures towards absolute zero.",
"From 1970s, low-temperature properties of amorphous solids were studied experimentally in great detail.",
"For all of these substances, specific heat has a (nearly) linear dependence as a function of temperature, and thermal conductivity has nearly quadratic temperature dependence.",
"These properties are conventionally called '''anomalous''' being very different from properties of crystalline solids.On the phenomenological level, many of these properties were described by a collection of tunneling two-level systems.Nevertheless, the microscopic theory of these properties is still missing after more than 50 years of the research.Remarkably, a '''dimensionless''' quantity of internal friction is nearly universal in these materials.",
"This quantity is a dimensionless ratio (up to a numerical constant) of the phonon wavelength to the phonon mean free path.",
"Since the theory of tunneling two-level states (TLSs) does not address the origin of the density of TLSs, this theory cannot explain the universality of internal friction, which in turn is proportional to the density of scattering TLSs.",
"The theoretical significance of this important and unsolved problem was highlighted by Anthony Leggett."
],
[
"Nano-structured materials",
"Amorphous materials will have some degree of short-range order at the atomic-length scale due to the nature of intermolecular chemical bonding.",
"Furthermore, in very small crystals, short-range order encompasses a large fraction of the atoms; nevertheless, relaxation at the surface, along with interfacial effects, distorts the atomic positions and decreases structural order.",
"Even the most advanced structural characterization techniques, such as X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy, have difficulty distinguishing amorphous and crystalline structures at short-length scales."
],
[
"Characterization of amorphous solids",
"Due to the lack of long-range order, standard crystallographic techniques are often inadequate in determining the structure of amorphous solids.",
"A variety of electron, X-ray, and computation-based techniques have been used to characterize amorphous materials.",
"Multi-modal analysis is very common for amorphous materials.=== X-ray and neutron diffraction ===Unlike crystalline materials which exhibit strong Bragg diffraction, the diffraction patterns of amorphous materials are characterized by broad and diffuse peaks.",
"As a result, detailed analysis and complementary techniques are required to extract real space structural information from the diffraction patterns of amorphous materials.",
"It is useful to obtain diffraction data from both X-ray and neutron sources as they have different scattering properties and provide complementary data.",
"Pair distribution function analysis can be performed on diffraction data to determine the probability of finding a pair of atoms separated by a certain distance.",
"Another type of analysis that is done with diffraction data of amorphous materials is radial distribution function analysis, which measures the number of atoms found at varying radial distances away from an arbitrary reference atom.",
"From these techniques, the local order of an amorphous material can be elucidated.=== X-ray absorption fine-structure spectroscopy ===X-ray absorption fine-structure spectroscopy is an atomic scale probe making it useful for studying materials lacking in long range order.",
"Spectra obtained using this method provide information on the oxidation state, coordination number, and species surrounding the atom in question as well as the distances at which they are found.=== Atomic electron tomography ===The atomic electron tomography technique is performed in transmission electron microscopes capable of reaching sub-Angstrom resolution.",
"A collection of 2D images taken at numerous different tilt angles is acquired from the sample in question, and then used to reconstruct a 3D image.",
"After image acquisition, a significant amount of processing must be done to correct for issues such as drift, noise, and scan distortion.",
"High quality analysis and processing using atomic electron tomography results in a 3D reconstruction of an amorphous material detailing the atomic positions of the different species that are present.=== Fluctuation electron microscopy ===Fluctuation electron microscopy is another transmission electron microscopy based technique that is sensitive to the medium range order of amorphous materials.",
"Structural fluctuations arising from different forms of medium range order can be detected with this method.",
"Fluctuation electron microscopy experiments can be done in conventional or scanning transmission electron microscope mode.=== Computational techniques ===Simulation and modeling techniques are often combined with experimental methods to characterize structures of amorphous materials.",
"Commonly used computational techniques include density functional theory, molecular dynamics, and reverse Monte Carlo."
],
[
"Uses and observations",
"===Amorphous thin films===Amorphous phases are important constituents of thin films.",
"Thin films are solid layers of a few nanometres to tens of micrometres thickness that are deposited onto a substrate.",
"So-called structure zone models were developed to describe the microstructure of thin films as a function of the homologous temperature (''Th''), which is the ratio of deposition temperature to melting temperature.Russian-language version: ''Fiz.",
"Metal Metalloved'' (1969) '''28''': 653-660.According to these models, a necessary condition for the occurrence of amorphous phases is that (''Th'') has to be smaller than 0.3.The deposition temperature must be below 30% of the melting temperature.===Superconductivity===Amorphous metals have low toughness, but high strengthRegarding their applications, amorphous metallic layers played an important role in the discovery of superconductivity in amorphous metals made by Buckel and Hilsch.",
"The superconductivity of amorphous metals, including amorphous metallic thin films, is now understood to be due to phonon-mediated Cooper pairing.",
"The role of structural disorder can be rationalized based on the strong-coupling Eliashberg theory of superconductivity.=== Thermal protection ===Amorphous solids typically exhibit higher localization of heat carriers compared to crystalline, giving rise to low thermal conductivity.",
"Products for thermal protection, such as thermal barrier coatings and insulation, rely on materials with ultralow thermal conductivity.===Technological uses===Today, optical coatings made from TiO2, SiO2, Ta2O5 etc.",
"(and combinations of these) in most cases consist of amorphous phases of these compounds.",
"Much research is carried out into thin amorphous films as a gas separating membrane layer.",
"The technologically most important thin amorphous film is probably represented by a few nm thin SiO2 layers serving as isolator above the conducting channel of a metal-oxide semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET).",
"Also, hydrogenated amorphous silicon (Si:H) is of technical significance for thin-film solar cells.===Pharmaceutical use===In the pharmaceutical industry, some amorphous drugs have been shown to offer higher bioavailability than their crystalline counterparts as a result of the higher solubility of the amorphous phase.",
"However, certain compounds can undergo precipitation in their amorphous form ''in vivo'', and can then decrease mutual bioavailability if administered together.===In soils===Amorphous materials in soil strongly influence bulk density, aggregate stability, plasticity, and water holding capacity of soils.",
"The low bulk density and high void ratios are mostly due to glass shards and other porous minerals not becoming compacted.",
"Andisol soils contain the highest amounts of amorphous materials."
],
[
"Phase",
"The occurrence of amorphous phases turned out to be a phenomenon of particular interest for the studying of thin-film growth.",
"The growth of polycrystalline films is often used and preceded by an initial amorphous layer, the thickness of which may amount to only a few nm.",
"The most investigated example is represented by the unoriented molecules of thin polycrystalline silicon films.",
"Wedge-shaped polycrystals were identified by transmission electron microscopy to grow out of the amorphous phase only after the latter has exceeded a certain thickness, the precise value of which depends on deposition temperature, background pressure, and various other process parameters.",
"The phenomenon has been interpreted in the framework of Ostwald's rule of stages that predicts the formation of phases to proceed with increasing condensation time towards increasing stability."
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"*******"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"A Wizard of Earthsea"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''''A Wizard of Earthsea''''' is a fantasy novel written by American author Ursula K. Le Guin and first published by the small press Parnassus in 1968.It is regarded as a classic of children's literature and of fantasy, within which it is widely influential.",
"The story is set in the fictional archipelago of Earthsea and centers on a young mage named Ged, born in a village on the island of Gont.",
"He displays great power while still a boy and joins a school of wizardry, where his prickly nature drives him into conflict with a fellow student.",
"During a magical duel, Ged's spell goes awry and releases a shadow creature that attacks him.",
"The novel follows Ged's journey as he seeks to be free of the creature.The book has often been described as a bildungsroman, or coming-of-age story, as it explores Ged's process of learning to cope with power and come to terms with death.",
"The novel also carries Taoist themes about a fundamental balance in the universe of Earthsea, which wizards are supposed to maintain, closely tied to the idea that language and names have power to affect the material world and alter this balance.",
"The structure of the story is similar to that of a traditional epic, although critics have also described it as subverting this genre in many ways, such as by making the protagonist dark-skinned in contrast to more typical white-skinned heroes.",
"''A Wizard of Earthsea'' received highly positive reviews, initially as a work for children and later among a general audience.",
"It won the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award in 1969 and was one of the final recipients of the Lewis Carroll Shelf Award in 1979.Margaret Atwood called it one of the \"wellsprings\" of fantasy literature.",
"Le Guin wrote five subsequent books that are collectively referred to as the Earthsea Cycle, together with ''A Wizard of Earthsea'': ''The Tombs of Atuan'' (1971), ''The Farthest Shore'' (1972), ''Tehanu'' (1990), ''The Other Wind'' (2001), and ''Tales from Earthsea'' (2001).",
"George Slusser described the series as a \"work of high style and imagination\", while Amanda Craig said that ''A Wizard of Earthsea'' was \"the most thrilling, wise, and beautiful children's novel ever\"."
],
[
"Background",
"Le Guin giving a reading in 2008Early concepts for the Earthsea setting were developed in two short stories, \"The Rule of Names\" (1964) and \"The Word of Unbinding\" (1964), both published in ''Fantastic''.",
"The stories were later collected in Le Guin's anthology ''The Wind's Twelve Quarters'' (1975).",
"Earthsea was also used as the setting for a story she wrote in 1965 or 1966, which was never published.",
"In 1967, Herman Schein (the publisher of Parnassus Press and the husband of Ruth Robbins, the illustrator of the book) asked Le Guin to try writing a book \"for older kids\", giving her complete freedom over the subject and the approach.",
"She had no previous experience specifically with the genre of young adult literature, which rose in prominence during the late 1960s.",
"Drawing from her short stories, she began work on ''A Wizard of Earthsea''.",
"She has said that the book was in part a response to the image of wizards as ancient and wise, and to wondering where they come from.",
"She later said that she chose the medium of fantasy, and the theme of coming of age, with her intended adolescent audience in mind.The short stories published in 1964 introduced the world of Earthsea and important concepts in it, such as Le Guin's treatment of magic.",
"\"The Rule of Names\" also introduced Yevaud, a dragon who features briefly in ''A Wizard of Earthsea''.",
"Her depiction of Earthsea was influenced by her familiarity with Native American legends as well as Norse mythology.",
"Her knowledge of myths and legends, as well as her familial interest in anthropology, have been described by scholar Donna White as allowing her to create \"entire cultures\" for the islands of Earthsea.",
"The influence of Norse lore in particular can be seen in the characters of the Kargs, who are blonde and blue-eyed, and worship two gods who are brothers.",
"The influence of Taoist thought on Le Guin's writing is also visible in the idea of a cosmic \"balance\"."
],
[
"Book",
"===Setting===Earthsea itself is an archipelago, or group of islands.",
"In the fictional history of this world, the islands were raised from the ocean by a being called Segoy.",
"The world is inhabited by both humans and dragons, and most or all humans have some innate magical gift, some are more gifted sorcerers or wizards.",
"The world is shown as being based on a delicate balance, which most of its inhabitants are aware of, but which is disrupted by somebody in each of the original trilogy of novels.",
"Earthsea is pre-industrial and has diverse cultures within the widespread archipelago.",
"Most of the characters are of the Hardic peoples, who are dark-skinned, and who populate most of the islands.",
"Four large eastern islands are inhabited by the white-skinned Kargish people, who despise magic and see the Hardic folk as evil sorcerers: the Kargs, in turn, are viewed by the Hardic people as barbarians.",
"The far western regions of the archipelago are the realm of the dragons.=== Plot summary ===The novel follows a young boy called Duny, nicknamed \"Sparrowhawk\", born on the island of Gont.",
"Discovering that the boy has great innate power, his aunt, a witch, teaches him the little magic she knows.",
"When his village is attacked by Kargish raiders, Duny summons a fog to conceal the village and its inhabitants, enabling the residents to drive off the Kargs.",
"Hearing of this, the powerful mage Ogion takes him as an apprentice, and later gives him his \"true name\"—Ged.",
"Ogion tries to teach Ged about the \"equilibrium\", the concept that magic can upset the natural order of the world if used improperly.",
"In an attempt to impress a girl, however, Ged searches Ogion's spell books and inadvertently summons a strange shadow, which has to be banished by Ogion.",
"Sensing Ged's eagerness to act and impatience with his slow teaching methods, Ogion asks if he would rather go to the renowned school for wizards on the island of Roke.",
"Ged loves Ogion, but decides to go to the school.",
"At the school, Ged meets Jasper, and is immediately on bad terms with him.",
"He is befriended by an older student named Vetch, but generally remains aloof from anyone else.",
"Ged's skills inspire admiration from teachers and students alike.",
"He finds a small creature—an otak, named Hoag, and keeps it as a pet.",
"During a festival Jasper acts condescendingly towards Ged, provoking the latter's proud nature.",
"Ged challenges him to a duel of magic, and casts a powerful spell intended to raise the spirit of a legendary dead woman.",
"The spell goes awry and instead releases a shadow creature, which attacks him and scars his face.",
"The Archmage Nemmerle drives the shadow away, but at the cost of his life.Ged spends many months healing before resuming his studies.",
"The new Archmage, Gensher, describes the shadow as an ancient evil that wishes to possess Ged, and warns him that the creature has no name.",
"Ged eventually graduates and receives his wizard's staff.",
"He then takes up residence in the Ninety Isles, providing the poor villagers protection from the dragons that have seized and taken up residence on the nearby island of Pendor, but discovers that he is still being sought by the shadow.",
"Knowing that he cannot guard against both threats at the same time, he sails to Pendor and gambles his life on a guess of the adult dragon's true name.",
"When he is proved right, the dragon offers to tell him the name of the shadow, but Ged instead extracts a promise that the dragon and his offspring will never threaten the archipelago.Chased by the shadow, Ged flees to Osskil, having heard of the stone of the Terrenon.",
"He is attacked by the shadow, and barely escapes into the Court of Terrenon.",
"Serret, the lady of the castle, and the same girl that Ged had tried to impress, shows him the stone, and urges Ged to speak to it, claiming it can give him limitless knowledge and power.",
"Recognizing that the stone harbors one of the Old Powers—ancient, powerful, malevolent beings—Ged refuses.",
"He flees and is pursued by the stone's minions, but transforms into a swift falcon and escapes.",
"He loses his otak.",
"Ged flies back to Ogion on Gont.",
"Unlike Gensher, Ogion insists that all creatures have a name and advises Ged to confront the shadow.",
"Ogion is proved right; when Ged seeks out the shadow, it flees from him.",
"Ged pursues it in a small sailboat, until it lures him into a fog where the boat is wrecked on a reef.",
"Ged recovers with the help of an elderly couple marooned on a small island since they were children; the woman gives Ged part of a broken bracelet as a gift.",
"Ged patches his boat and resumes his pursuit of the creature into the East Reach.",
"On the island of Iffish, he meets his friend Vetch, who insists on joining him.",
"They journey east far beyond the last known lands before they finally come upon the shadow.",
"Naming it with his own name, Ged merges with it and joyfully tells Vetch he is healed and whole.=== Illustrations ===Illustration by Ruth Robbins for Chapter 10The first edition of the book, published in 1968, was illustrated by Ruth Robbins.",
"The cover illustration was in color, and the interior of the book contained a map of the archipelago of Earthsea.",
"In addition, each chapter had a black-and-white illustration by Robbins, similar to a woodcut image.",
"The images represented topics from each chapter; for instance, the very first image depicted the island of Gont, while the illustration for the chapter \"The Dragon of Pendor\" pictured a flying dragon.",
"The image shown here depicts Ged sailing in his boat ''Lookfar'', and was used in the 10th chapter, \"The Open Sea\", in which Ged and Vetch travel from Iffish eastward past all known lands to confront the shadow creature.===Publication===''A Wizard of Earthsea'' was first published in 1968 by Parnassus Press in Berkeley, a year before ''The Left Hand of Darkness'', Le Guin's watershed work.",
"It was a personal landmark for Le Guin, as it represented her first attempt at writing for children; she had written only a handful of other novels and short stories prior to its publication.",
"The book was also her first attempt at writing fantasy, rather than science-fiction.",
"''A Wizard of Earthsea'' was the first of Le Guin's books to receive widespread critical attention, and has been described as her best known work, as part of the Earthsea series.",
"The book has been released in numerous editions, including an illustrated Folio Society edition released in 2015.It was also translated into a number of other languages.",
"An omnibus edition of all of Le Guin's Earthsea works was released on the 50th anniversary of the publication of ''A Wizard of Earthsea'' in 2018.Le Guin originally intended for ''A Wizard of Earthsea'' to be a standalone novel, but decided to write a sequel after considering the loose ends in the first book, and ''The Tombs of Atuan'' was released in 1971.",
"''The Farthest Shore'' was written as a third volume after further consideration, and was published in 1972.",
"''The Tombs of Atuan'' tells of the story of Ged's attempt to make whole the ring of Erreth Akbe, half of which is buried in the tombs of Atuan in the Kargish lands, from where he must steal it.",
"There, he meets the child priestess Tenar, on whom the book focuses.",
"In ''The Farthest Shore'', Ged, who has become Archmage, tries to combat a dwindling of magic across Earthsea, accompanied by Arren, a young prince.",
"The first three books are together seen as the \"original trilogy\"; in each of these, Ged is shown as trying to heal some imbalance in the world.",
"They were followed by ''Tehanu'' (1990), ''Tales from Earthsea'' (2001), and ''The Other Wind'' (2001), which are sometimes referred to as the \"second trilogy\"."
],
[
"Reception",
"===As children's literature===Initial recognition for the book was from children's-book critics, among whom it garnered acclaim.",
"''A Wizard of Earthsea'' received an even more positive response in the United Kingdom when it was released there in 1971, which, according to White, reflected the greater admiration of British critics for children's fantasy.",
"In her 1975 annotated collection ''Fantasy for Children'', British critic Naomi Lewis described it in the following terms: \"It is not the easiest book for casual browsing, but readers who take the step will find themselves in one of the most important works of fantasy of our time.\"",
"Similarly, literary scholar Margaret Esmonde wrote in 1981 that \"Le Guin has ... enriched children's literature with what may be its finest high fantasy\", while a review in ''The Guardian'' by author and journalist Amanda Craig said it was \"The most thrilling, wise and beautiful children's novel ever, written in prose as taut and clean as a ship's sail.",
"\"In discussing the book for a gathering of children's librarians Eleanor Cameron praised the world building in the story, saying \"it is as if Le Guin herself has lived on the archipelago.\"",
"Author David Mitchell called the titular character Ged a \"superb creation\", and argued that he was a more relatable wizard than those featured in prominent works of fantasy at the time.",
"According to him, characters such as Gandalf were \"variants on the archetype of Merlin, a Caucasian scholarly aristocrat amongst sorcerers\" with little room to grow, whereas Ged developed as a character through his story.",
"Mitchell also praised the other characters in the story, who he said seemed to have a \"fully thought-out inner life\" despite being fleeting presences.",
"The 1995 ''Encyclopedia of Science Fiction'' said that the Earthsea books had been considered the finest science fiction books for children in the post-World War II period.===As fantasy===Commentators have noted that the Earthsea novels in general received less critical attention because they were considered children's books.",
"Le Guin herself took exception to this treatment of children's literature, describing it as \"adult chauvinist piggery\".",
"In 1976, literary scholar George Slusser criticized the \"silly publication classification designating the original series as 'children's literature.",
"Barbara Bucknall stated that \"Le Guin was not writing for young children when she wrote these fantasies, nor yet for adults.",
"She was writing for 'older kids.'",
"But in fact she can be read, like Tolkien, by ten-year-olds and by adults.",
"These stories are ageless because they deal with problems that confront us at any age.\"",
"Only in later years did ''A Wizard of Earthsea'' receive attention from a more general audience.",
"Literary scholar Tom Shippey was among the first to treat ''A Wizard of Earthsea'' as serious literature, assuming in his analysis of the volume that it belonged alongside works by C. S. Lewis and Fyodor Dostoevsky, among others.",
"Margaret Atwood said that she saw the book as \"a fantasy book for adults\", and added that the book could be categorized as either young adult fiction or as fantasy, but since it dealt with themes such as \"life and mortality and who are we as human beings\", it could be read and enjoyed by anybody older than twelve.",
"The ''Encyclopedia of Science Fiction'' echoed this view, saying the series's appeal went \"far beyond\" the young adults for whom it was written.",
"It went on to praise the book as \"austere but vivid\", and said the series was more thoughtful than the ''Narnia'' books by C. S. Lewis.In his 1980 history of fantasy, Brian Attebery called the Earthsea trilogy \"the most challenging and richest American fantasy to date\".",
"Slusser described the Earthsea cycle as a \"work of high style and imagination\", and the original trilogy of books a product of \"genuine epic vision\".",
"In 1974, critic Robert Scholes compared Le Guin's work favorably to that of C. S. Lewis, saying, \"Where C. S. Lewis worked out a specifically Christian set of values, Ursula LeGuin works not with a theology but with an ecology, a cosmology, a reverence for the universe as a self-regulating structure.\"",
"He added that Le Guin's three Earthsea novels were themselves a sufficient legacy for anybody to leave.",
"In 2014, David Pringle called it \"a beautiful story—poetic, thrilling, and profound\".===Accolades===''A Wizard of Earthsea'' won or contributed to several notable awards for Le Guin.",
"It won the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award in 1969, and was one of the last winners of the Lewis Carroll Shelf Award ten years later.",
"In 1984 it won the or the \"Golden Sepulka\" in Poland.",
"In 2000 Le Guin was given the Margaret A. Edwards Award by the American Library Association for young adult literature.",
"The award cited six of her works, including the first four Earthsea volumes, ''The Left Hand of Darkness'', and ''The Beginning Place''.",
"A 1987 poll in ''Locus'' ranked ''A Wizard of Earthsea'' third among \"All-Time Best Fantasy Novels\", while in 2014 Pringle listed it at number 39 in his list of the 100 best novels in modern fantasy.===Influence===The book has been seen as widely influential within the genre of fantasy.",
"Margaret Atwood has called ''A Wizard of Earthsea'' one of the \"wellsprings\" of fantasy literature.",
"The book has been compared to major works of high fantasy such as J. R. R. Tolkien's ''The Lord of the Rings'' and L. Frank Baum's ''The Wonderful Wizard of Oz''.",
"The notion that names can exert power is also present in Hayao Miyazaki's 2001 film ''Spirited Away''; critics have suggested that that idea originated with Le Guin's Earthsea series.",
"Novelist David Mitchell, author of books such as ''Cloud Atlas'', described ''A Wizard of Earthsea'' as having a strong influence on him, and said that he felt a desire to \"wield words with the same power as Ursula Le Guin\".Modern writers have credited ''A Wizard of Earthsea'' for introducing the idea of a \"wizard school\", which would later be made famous by the ''Harry Potter'' series of books, and with popularizing the trope of a boy wizard, also present in ''Harry Potter''.",
"Reviewers have also commented that the basic premise of ''A Wizard of Earthsea'', that of a talented boy going to a wizard's school and making an enemy with whom he has a close connection, is also the premise of ''Harry Potter''.",
"Ged also receives a scar from the shadow, which hurts whenever the shadow is near him, just as Harry Potter's scar from Voldemort.",
"Commenting on the similarity, Le Guin said that she did not feel that J. K. Rowling \"ripped her off\", but that Rowling's books received too much praise for supposed originality, and that Rowling \"could have been more gracious about her predecessors.",
"My incredulity was at the critics who found the first book wonderfully original.",
"She has many virtues, but originality isn't one of them.",
"That hurt.\""
],
[
"Themes",
"===Coming of age===''A Wizard of Earthsea'' focuses on Ged's adolescence and coming of age, and along with the other two works of the original Earthsea trilogy forms a part of Le Guin's dynamic portrayal of the process of growing old.",
"The three novels together follow Ged from youth to old age, and each of them also follow the coming of age of a different character.",
"The novel is frequently described as a ''Bildungsroman''.",
"Scholar Mike Cadden stated that the book is a convincing tale \"to a reader as young and possibly as headstrong as Ged, and therefore sympathetic to him\".",
"Ged's coming of age is also intertwined with the physical journey he undertakes through the novel.Ged is depicted as proud and yet unsure of himself in multiple situations: early in his apprenticeship he believes Ogion to be mocking him, and later, at Roke, feels put upon by Jasper.",
"In both cases, he believes that others do not appreciate his greatness, and Le Guin's sympathetic narration does not immediately contradict this belief.",
"Cadden writes that Le Guin allows young readers to sympathize with Ged, and only gradually realize that there is a price to be paid for his actions, as he learns to discipline his magical powers.",
"Similarly, as Ged begins his apprenticeship with Ogion, he imagines that he will be taught mysterious aspects of wizardry, and has visions of transforming himself into other creatures, but gradually comes to see that Ogion's important lessons are those about his own self.The passage at the end of the novel, wherein Ged finally accepts the shadow as a part of himself and is thus released from its terror, has been pointed to by reviewers as a rite of passage.",
"Jeanne Walker, for example, wrote that the rite of passage at the end was an analogue for the entire plot of ''A Wizard of Earthsea'', and that the plot itself plays the role of a rite of passage for an adolescent reader.",
"Walker goes on to say, \"The entire action of A Wizard of Earthsea ... portrays the hero's slow realization of what it means to be an individual in society and a self in relation to higher powers.",
"Many readers and critics have commented on similarities between Ged's process of growing up and ideas in Jungian psychology.",
"The young Ged has a scary encounter with a shadow creature, which he later realizes is the dark side of himself.",
"It is only after he recognizes and merges with the shadow that he becomes a whole person.",
"Le Guin said that she had never read Jung before writing the Earthsea novels.Le Guin described coming of age as the main theme of the book, and wrote in a 1973 essay that she chose that theme since she was writing for an adolescent audience.",
"She stated that \"Coming of age ... is a process that took me many years; I finished it, so far as I ever will, at about age thirty-one; and so I feel rather deeply about it.",
"So do most adolescents.",
"It's their main occupation, in fact.\"",
"She also said that fantasy was best suited as a medium for describing coming of age, because exploring the subconscious was difficult using the language of \"rational daily life\".",
"The coming of age that Le Guin focused on included not just psychological development, but moral changes as well.",
"Ged needs to recognize the balance between his power and his responsibility to use it well, a recognition which comes as he travels to the stone of Terrenon and sees the temptation that that power represents.===Equilibrium and Taoist themes===The world of Earthsea is depicted as being based on a delicate balance, which most of its inhabitants are aware of, but which is disrupted by somebody in each of the original trilogy of novels.",
"This includes an equilibrium between land and sea (implicit in the name Earthsea), and between people and their natural environment.",
"In addition to physical equilibrium, there is a larger cosmic equilibrium, which everybody is aware of, and which wizards are tasked with maintaining.",
"Describing this aspect of Earthsea, Elizabeth Cummins wrote, \"The principle of balanced powers, the recognition that every act affects self, society, world, and cosmos, is both a physical and a moral principle of Le Guin's fantasy world.\"",
"The concept of balance is related to the novel's other major theme of coming of age, as Ged's knowledge of the consequences of his own actions for good or ill is necessary for him to understand how the balance is maintained.",
"While at the school of Roke, the Master Hand tells him: The influence of Taoism on Le Guin's writing is evident through much of the book, especially in her depiction of the \"balance\".",
"At the end of the novel, Ged may be seen to embody the Taoist way of life, as he has learned not to act unless absolutely necessary.",
"He has also learned that seeming opposites, like light and dark or good and evil, are actually interdependent.",
"Light and dark themselves are recurring images within the story.",
"Reviewers have identified this belief as evidence of a conservative ideology within the story, shared with much of fantasy.",
"In emphasizing concerns over balance and equilibrium, scholars have argued, Le Guin essentially justifies the status quo, which wizards strive to maintain.",
"This tendency is in contrast to Le Guin's science fiction writing, in which change is shown to have value.The nature of human evil forms a significant related theme through ''A Wizard of Earthsea'' as well as the other Earthsea novels.",
"As with other works by Le Guin, evil is shown as a misunderstanding of the balance of life.",
"Ged is born with great power in him, but the pride that he takes in his power leads to his downfall; he tries to demonstrate his strength by bringing a spirit back from the dead, and in performing this act against the laws of nature, releases the shadow that attacks him.",
"Slusser suggests that although he is provoked into performing dangerous spells first by the girl on Gont and then by Jasper, this provocation exists in Ged's mind.",
"He is shown as unwilling to look within himself and see the pride that drives him to do what he does.",
"When he accepts the shadow into himself, he also finally accepts responsibility for his own actions, and by accepting his own mortality he is able to free himself.",
"His companion Vetch describes the moment by saying Thus, although there are several dark powers in Earthsea (like the dragon, and the stone of Terrenon) the true evil was not one of these powers, or even death, but Ged's actions that went against the balance of nature.",
"This is contrary to conventional Western and Christian storytelling, in which light and darkness are often considered opposites, and are seen as symbolizing good and evil, which are constantly in conflict.",
"On two different occasions, Ged is tempted to try to defy death and evil, but eventually learns that neither can be eliminated: instead, he chooses not to serve evil, and stops denying death.===True names===In Le Guin's fictional universe, to know the true name of an object or a person is to have power over it.",
"Each child is given a true name when they reach puberty, a name which they share only with close friends.",
"Several of the dragons in the later Earthsea novels, like Orm Embar and Kalessin, are shown as living openly with their names, which do not give anybody power over them.",
"In ''A Wizard of Earthsea'', however, Ged is shown to have power over Yevaud.",
"Cadden writes that this is because Yevaud still has attachment to riches and material possessions, and is thus bound by the power of his name.",
"Wizards exert their influence over the equilibrium through the use of names, thus linking this theme to Le Guin's depiction of a cosmic balance.",
"According to Cummins, this is Le Guin's way of demonstrating the power of language in shaping reality.",
"Since language is the tool we use for communicating about the environment, she argues that it also allows humans to affect the environment, and the wizards' power to use names symbolizes this.",
"Cummins went on to draw an analogy between the wizards' use of names to change things with the creative use of words in fictional writing.",
"Shippey wrote that Earthsea magic seems to work through what he called the \"Rumpelstiltskin theory\", in which names have power.",
"He argued that this portrayal was part of Le Guin's effort to emphasize the power of words over objects, which, according to Shippey, was in contrast to the ideology of other writers, such as James Frazer in ''The Golden Bough''.",
"Esmonde argued that each of the first three Earthsea books hinged on an act of trust.",
"In ''A Wizard of Earthsea'', Vetch trusts Ged with his true name when the latter is at his lowest ebb emotionally, thus giving Ged complete power over him.",
"Ged later offers Tenar the same gift in ''The Tombs of Atuan'', thereby allowing her to learn trust."
],
[
"Style and structure",
"===Language and mood===''A Wizard of Earthsea'' and other novels of the Earthsea cycle differ notably from Le Guin's early Hainish cycle works, although they were written at a similar time.",
"George Slusser described the Earthsea works as providing a counterweight to the \"excessive pessimism\" of the Hainish novels.",
"He saw the former as depicting individual action in a favorable light, in contrast to works such as \"Vaster than Empires and More Slow\".",
"The ''Encyclopedia of Science Fiction'' said the book was pervaded by a \"grave joyfulness\".",
"In discussing the style of her fantasy works, Le Guin herself said that in fantasy it was necessary to be clear and direct with language, because there is no known framework for the reader's mind to rest upon.The story often appears to assume that readers are familiar with the geography and history of Earthsea, a technique which allowed Le Guin to avoid exposition: a reviewer wrote that this method \"gives Le Guin's world the mysterious depths of Tolkien's, but without his tiresome back-stories and versifying\".",
"In keeping with the notion of an epic, the narration switches from looking ahead into Ged's future and looking back into the past of Earthsea.",
"At the same time, Slusser described the mood of the novel as \"strange and dreamlike\", fluctuating between objective reality and the thoughts in Ged's mind; some of Ged's adversaries are real, while others are phantoms.",
"This narrative technique, which Cadden characterizes as \"free indirect discourse\", makes the narrator of the book seem sympathetic to the protagonist, and does not distance his thoughts from the reader.===Myth and epic===''A Wizard of Earthsea'' has strong elements of an epic; for instance, Ged's place in Earthsea history is described at the very beginning of the book in the following terms: \"some say the greatest, and surely the greatest voyager, was the man called Sparrowhawk, who in his day became both dragonlord and Archmage.\"",
"The story also begins with words from the Earthsea song \"The Creation of Éa\", which forms a ritualistic beginning to the book.",
"The teller of the story then goes on to say that it is from Ged's youth, thereby establishing context for the rest of the book.",
"In comparison with the protagonists of many of Le Guin's other works, Ged is superficially a typical hero, a mage who sets out on a quest.",
"Reviewers have compared ''A Wizard of Earthsea'' to epics such as ''Beowulf''.",
"Scholar Virginia White argued that the story followed a structure common to epics in which the protagonist begins an adventure, faces trials along the way, and eventually returns in triumph.",
"White went on to suggest that this structure can be seen in the series as a whole, as well as in the individual volumes.Le Guin subverted many of the tropes typical to such \"monomyths\"; the protagonists of her story were all dark-skinned, in comparison to the white-skinned heroes more traditionally used; the Kargish antagonists, in contrast, were white-skinned, a switching of race roles that has been remarked upon by multiple critics.",
"Critics have also cited her use of characters from multiple class backgrounds as a choice subversive to conventional Western fantasy.",
"At the same time, reviewers questioned Le Guin's treatment of gender in ''A Wizard of Earthsea'', and the original trilogy as a whole.",
"Le Guin, who later became known as a feminist, chose to restrict the use of magic to men and boys in the first volume of Earthsea.",
"Initial critical reactions to ''A Wizard of Earthsea'' saw Ged's gender as incidental.",
"In contrast, ''The Tombs of Atuan'' saw Le Guin intentionally tell a female coming-of-age story, which was nonetheless described as perpetuating a male-dominated model of Earthsea.",
"''Tehanu'' (1990), published as the fourth volume of ''Earthsea'' 18 years after the third, has been described both by Le Guin and her commentators as a feminist re-imagining of the series, in which the power and status of the chief characters are reversed, and the patriarchal social structure questioned.",
"Commenting in 1993, Le Guin wrote that she could not continue Earthsea after 1972 until she had \"wrestled with the angels of the feminist consciousness\".Several critics have argued that by combining elements of epic, ''Bildungsroman'', and young adult fiction, Le Guin succeeded in blurring the boundaries of conventional genres.",
"In a 1975 commentary Francis Molson argued that the series should be referred to as \"ethical fantasy\", a term which acknowledged that the story did not always follow the tropes of heroic fantasy, and the moral questions that it raised.",
"The term did not become popular.",
"A similar argument was made by children's literature critic Cordelia Sherman in 1985; she argued that ''A Wizard of Earthsea'' and the rest of the series sought \"to teach children by dramatic example what it means to be a good adult\"."
],
[
"Adaptations",
"A condensed, illustrated version of the first chapter was printed by World Book in the third volume of ''Childcraft'' in 1989.Multiple audio versions of the book have been released.",
"BBC Radio produced a radioplay version in 1996 narrated by Judi Dench, and a six-part series adapting the Earthsea novels in 2015, broadcast on Radio 4 Extra.",
"In 2011, the work was produced as an unabridged recording performed by Robert Inglis.Two screen adaptations of the story have also been produced.",
"An original mini-series titled ''Legend of Earthsea'' was broadcast in 2004 on the Sci Fi Channel.",
"It is based very loosely on ''A Wizard of Earthsea'' and ''The Tombs of Atuan''.",
"In an article published in ''Salon'', Le Guin expressed strong displeasure at the result.",
"She stated that by casting a \"petulant white kid\" as Ged (who has red-brown skin in the book) the series \"whitewashed Earthsea\", and had ignored her choice to write the story of a non-white character, a choice she said was central to the book.",
"This sentiment was shared by a review in ''The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Fantasy'', which said that ''Legend of Earthsea'' \"totally missed the point\" of Le Guin's novels, \"ripping out all the subtlety, nuance and beauty of the books and inserting boring cliches, painful stereotypes and a very unwelcome 'epic' war in their place\".Studio Ghibli released an adaptation of the series in 2006 titled ''Tales from Earthsea''.",
"The film very loosely combines elements of the first, third, and fourth books into a new story.",
"Le Guin commented with displeasure on the film-making process, saying that she had acquiesced to the adaptation believing Hayao Miyazaki would be producing the film himself, which was eventually not the case.",
"Le Guin praised the imagery of the film, but disliked the use of violence.",
"She also expressed dissatisfaction with the portrayal of morality, and in particular the use of a villain who could be slain as a means of resolving conflict, which she said was antithetical to the message of the book.",
"The film received generally mixed responses."
],
[
"References",
"=== Bibliography ===* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* * * * *"
],
[
"External links",
"*"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Alex Lifeson"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Aleksandar Živojinović''' (born 27 August 1953), known professionally as '''Alex Lifeson''' (), is a Canadian musician, best known as the guitarist for the rock band Rush.",
"In 1968, Lifeson co-founded a band that would later become Rush, with drummer John Rutsey and bassist and lead vocalist Jeff Jones.",
"Jones was replaced by Geddy Lee a month later, and Rutsey was replaced by Neil Peart in 1974, after which the lineup remained unchanged until the band's dissolution in 2018.Lifeson was the only member of Rush who stayed in the band throughout its entire existence, and he and Lee were the only members to appear on all of the band's albums.With Rush, Lifeson played electric and acoustic guitar, as well as other various string instruments such as mandola, mandolin, and bouzouki.",
"He also performed backing vocals in live performances as well as the studio albums ''Rush'' (1974), ''Presto'' (1989) and ''Roll the Bones'' (1991) and occasionally played keyboards and bass pedal synthesizers.",
"Like the other members of Rush, Lifeson performed real-time on-stage triggering of sampled instruments.",
"Along with his bandmates Geddy Lee and Neil Peart, Lifeson was made an Officer of the Order of Canada on 9 May 1996.The trio was the first rock band to be so honoured as a group.",
"In 2013, he was inducted with Rush into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.",
"Lifeson was ranked 98th on ''Rolling Stone'''s list of the 100 greatest guitarists of all time and third (after Eddie Van Halen and Brian May) in a ''Guitar World'' readers' poll listing the 100 greatest guitarists.The bulk of Lifeson's work in music has been with Rush, although Lifeson has contributed to a body of work outside the band as well, including a solo album titled ''Victor'' (1996).",
"Aside from music, Lifeson has been a painter, a licensed aircraft pilot, an actor, and the former part-owner of a Toronto bar and a restaurant called The Orbit Room, which closed in 2020."
],
[
"Biography",
"===Early life===Lifeson was born Aleksandar Živojinović (Serbian: Александар Живојиновић) in Fernie, British Columbia.",
"His parents, Nenad and Melanija Živojinović, were Serb immigrants from Yugoslavia.",
"He was raised in Toronto.",
"His stage surname of \"Lifeson\" is a calque of his birth surname Živojinović, which can be literally translated into English as \"son of life\".",
"His formal musical education began on the viola, but he abandoned it in favor of the guitar at the age of 12.Lifeson recalls what inspired him to play guitar in a 2008 interview:His first guitar was a Christmas gift from his father, a six-string Kent classical acoustic which was later replaced by an electric Japanese model.",
"During his adolescent years, he was influenced primarily by the likes of Jimi Hendrix, Pete Townshend, Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, Steve Hackett, and Allan Holdsworth; he explained in 2011 that \"Clapton's solos seemed a little easier and more approachable.",
"I remember sitting at my record player and moving the needle back and forth to get the solo in 'Spoonful.'",
"But there was nothing I could do with Hendrix.\"",
"In 1963, Lifeson met future Rush drummer John Rutsey in school.",
"Both interested in music, they decided to form a band.",
"Lifeson was primarily a self-taught guitarist with the only formal instruction coming from a high school friend in 1971 who taught classical guitar lessons.",
"This training lasted for roughly a year and a half.When Lifeson was 17, he had an argument with his parents about his future; he wanted to drop out of high school to pursue his dream of becoming a professional guitarist.",
"A video of the argument was part of a 1973 Canadian documentary, ''Come on Children,'' about the struggles of 10 adolescents.",
"The argument was also included in two documentaries about Rush, ''Beyond the Lighted Stage'' (2010) and ''Time Stand Still'' (2016).Lifeson's first girlfriend, Charlene, gave birth to their eldest son, Justin, in October 1970.The couple married in 1975, and their second son, Adrian, was born two years later.",
"Adrian is also involved in music, and performed on \"At the End\" and \"The Big Dance\" from Lifeson's 1996 solo project, ''Victor''.===Rush===Lifeson during the 2010–2011 Time Machine Tour, Ahoy, Rotterdam, the Netherlands (27 May 2011).Lifeson's neighbour John Rutsey began experimenting on a rented drum kit.",
"In 1968, Lifeson and Rutsey formed The Projection, which disbanded a few months later.",
"In August 1968, following the recruitment of original bassist and vocalist Jeff Jones, Lifeson and Rutsey founded Rush.",
"Geddy Lee, a high school friend of Lifeson, assumed Jones's role soon after.Instrumentally, Lifeson is renowned for his signature riffing, electronic effects and processing, unorthodox chord structures, and the copious arsenal of equipment he has used over the years.Rush was on hiatus for several years starting in 1997 owing to personal tragedies in Neil Peart's life, and Lifeson had not picked up a guitar for at least a year following those events.",
"However, after some work in his home studio and on various side projects, Lifeson returned to the studio with Rush to begin work on 2002's ''Vapor Trails''.",
"''Vapor Trails'' is the first Rush album since the 1970s to lack keyboards—as such, Lifeson used over 50 different guitars in what Shawn Hammond of ''Guitar Player'' called \"his most rabid and experimental playing ever.\"",
"Geddy Lee was amenable to leaving keyboards off the album due in part to Lifeson's ongoing concern about their use.",
"Lifeson's approach to the guitar tracks for the album eschewed traditional riffs and solos in favour of \"tonality and harmonic quality.",
"\"During live performances, he used foot pedals to cue various synthesizer, guitar, and backing vocal effects as he played.===''Victor''===While the bulk of Lifeson's work in music has been with Rush, his first major outside work was his solo project, ''Victor'', released in 1996.",
"''Victor'' was attributed as a self-titled work (i.e.",
"''Victor'' is attributed as the ''artist'' as well as the ''album title'').",
"This was done deliberately as an alternative to issuing the album explicitly under Lifeson's name.",
"The title track is from the W. H. Auden poem, also entitled \"Victor\".",
"Both son Adrian and wife Charlene also contributed to the album.===Side projects===Lifeson has also contributed to a body of work outside his involvement with the band in the form of instrumental contributions to other musical outfits.",
"He made a guest appearance on the 1985 Platinum Blonde album ''Alien Shores'' performing guitar solos on the songs \"Crying Over You\" and \"Holy Water\".",
"Later, in 1990, he appeared on Lawrence Gowan's album ''Lost Brotherhood'' to play guitar.",
"In 1995, he guested on two tracks on Tom Cochrane's ''Ragged Ass Road'' album and then in 1996 on I Mother Earth's \"Like a Girl\" from the ''Scenery and Fish'' album.",
"In 1997, he appeared on the ''Merry Axemas: A Guitar Christmas'' album.",
"Lifeson played \"The Little Drummer Boy\" which was released as track 9 on the album.",
"In 2006, Lifeson founded the Big Dirty Band, which he created for the purpose of providing original soundtrack material for ''Trailer Park Boys: The Movie''.",
"Lifeson jammed regularly with the Dexters (the Orbit Room house band from 1994 to 2004).",
"Lifeson made a guest appearance on the 2007 album ''Fear of a Blank Planet'' by UK progressive rock band Porcupine Tree, contributing a solo during the song \"Anesthetize\".",
"He also appeared on the 2008 album ''Fly Paper'' by Detroit progressive rockers Tiles.",
"He plays on the track \"Sacred and Mundane\".",
"Outside band related endeavours, Lifeson composed the theme for the first season of the science-fiction TV series ''Andromeda''.",
"He also produced three songs from the album ''Away from the Sun'' by 3 Doors Down.",
"He was executive producer and contributor to the 2014 album \"Come to Life\" by Keram Malicki-Sanchez - playing guitar on the songs \"Mary Magdalene\", \"Moving Dark Circles\" and \"The Devil Knows Me Well,\" and later on Keram's subsequent singles \"Artificial Intelligence,\" (2019), \"That Light,\" (2020) and \"Rukh.\"",
"(2021).",
"Alex Lifeson is featured on Marco Minnemann's 2017 release ''Borrego'', on which he played guitars on three songs and co-wrote the track \"On That Note\".",
"In 2018, he played lead guitar on Fu Manchu's 18-minute mostly instrumental track \"Il Mostro Atomico\" from the group's ''Clone of the Universe'' album.",
"In 2019 he was featured on the song \"Charmed\" from the Don Felder solo album American Rock 'n' Roll.On 15 June 2021, Lifeson released two new instrumental songs, \"Kabul Blues\" and \"Spy House\" on his website alexlifeson.com.",
"The songs were released as a self titled project.",
"Andy Curran played bass on both songs, and drums on \"Spy House\" were done by David Quinton Steinberg.===Envy of None===The first single, \"Liar\", from Envy of None's debut album was released on 12 January 2022.Envy of None consists of Lifeson, Curran, singer Maiah Wynne, and producer and engineer Alfio Annibalini.",
"Envy of None's self-titled debut album, which includes \"Liar,\" \"Kabul Blues,\" and \"Spy House,\" was released on 8 April.===Television and film appearances===Lifeson made his film debut as himself under his birth name in the 1973 Canadian documentary film ''Come on Children''.He has appeared in several installments of the Canadian mockumentary franchise ''Trailer Park Boys''.",
"In 2003, he was featured in an episode titled \"Closer to the Heart\", playing a partly fictional version of himself.",
"In the episode, he is kidnapped by Ricky and held as punishment for his inability (or refusal) to provide the main characters with free tickets to a Rush concert.",
"In the end of the episode, Alex reconciles with the characters, and performs a duet of \"Closer to the Heart\" with Bubbles at the trailer park.",
"In 2006, Lifeson appeared in ''Trailer Park Boys: The Movie'' as a traffic cop in the opening scene and in 2009 he appeared in their follow up movie, ''Trailer Park Boys: Countdown to Liquor Day'', as an undercover vice cop in drag.",
"In 2017, Lifeson appeared in an episode of the spin-off series ''Trailer Park Boys: Out of the Park: USA'' titled \"Memphis.\"",
"He also voiced Big Chunk in the first season of ''Trailer Park Boys: The Animated Series''.In 2008, Lifeson and the rest of Rush played \"Tom Sawyer\" at the end of an episode of ''The Colbert Report''.",
"According to Colbert, this was their first appearance on American television as a band in 33 years.In 2009, he and the rest of the band appeared as themselves in the comedy ''I Love You, Man''.Lifeson appears as the border guard in the 2009 movie ''Suck''.Lifeson and bandmate Geddy Lee appeared in the series '' Chicago Fire'', season 4, episode 6, called \"2112\", which first aired on 17 November 2015.The role of Dr. Funtime in ''The Drunk and On Drugs Happy Funtime Hour'' was originally written with Lifeson in mind, but due to scheduling conflicts the role was given to Maury Chaykin instead.===Book forewords===Lifeson has penned forewords to four books: ''Behind the Stage Door'' by Rich Engler in 2013; ''Shredders!",
": The Oral History Of Speed Guitar (And More)'' by Greg Prato in 2017; ''Geddy Lee's Big Beautiful Book of Bass'' by Geddy Lee in 2018; and ''Domenic Troiano: His Life and Music'' by Mark Doble and Frank Troiano in 2021."
],
[
"Legal issues",
"On New Year's Eve 2003, Lifeson, his son and his daughter-in-law were arrested at the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Naples, Florida.",
"Lifeson, after intervening in an altercation between his son and police, was accused of assaulting a sheriff's deputy in what was described as a drunken brawl.",
"In addition to suffering a broken nose at the hands of the officers, Lifeson was tased six times.",
"His son was also tased repeatedly.On 21 April 2005, Lifeson and his son agreed to a plea deal with the local prosecutor for the State's Attorney office to avoid jail time by pleading no contest to a first-degree misdemeanor charge of resisting arrest without violence.",
"As part of the plea agreement, Lifeson and his son were each sentenced to 12 months of probation with the adjudication of that probation suspended.",
"Lifeson acknowledged his subsequent legal action against both the Ritz-Carlton and the Collier County Sheriff's Office for \"their incredibly discourteous, arrogant and aggressive behaviour of which I had never experienced in 30 years of travel\".",
"Although both actions were initially dismissed in April 2007, legal claims against the Ritz-Carlton were reinstated upon appeal and they were settled out of court on a confidential basis in August 2008.In his journal-based book ''Roadshow: Landscape with Drums – A Concert Tour by Motorcycle'', Peart relates the band's perspective on the events of that New Year's Eve."
],
[
"Guitar equipment",
"Lifeson playing his Gibson Les Paul in the 'Heritage Cherry Sunburst'.",
"This guitar has been modified to incorporate a Floyd Rose tremolo.===Early Rush (1970s)===In Rush's early career, Lifeson used a Gibson ES-335 for the first tour, and in 1976 bought a 1974 Gibson Les Paul; he used those two guitars until the late 1970s.",
"He had a Fender Stratocaster with a Bill Lawrence humbucker and Floyd Rose vibrato bridge as backup \"and for a different sound.\"",
"For the ''A Farewell to Kings'' sessions, Lifeson began using a Gibson EDS-1275 for the song \"Xanadu\" and his main guitar became a white Gibson ES-355.During this period Lifeson used Hiwatt amplifiers.",
"He played a twelve-string Gibson B-45 on songs like \"Closer to the Heart.",
"\"===1980s and 1990s===From 1980 to 1986, Lifeson used four identically modified Stratocasters, all of them equipped with the Floyd Rose bridge.",
"As a joke, he called these Hentor Sportscasters – a made-up name inspired by Peter Henderson's name, who was the producer of ''Grace Under Pressure''.",
"He would start using them again twenty years later.",
"He also played a Gibson Howard Roberts Fusion and an Ovation Adamas acoustic/electric guitar.",
"By 1987, Lifeson switched to Signature guitar despite describing them as \"awful to play—very uncomfortable--...had a particular sound I liked.\"",
"Lifeson primarily used PRS guitars in the later-half of the 1990 Presto tour, and again during the recording of ''Roll The Bones'' in 1990/1991.He would continue to play PRS for the next sixteen years through the recording and touring of ''Counterparts'', ''Test for Echo'' and ''Vapor Trails'' as well as the R30 tour.",
"During this period, he also played several Fender Telecasters.===2000s onward: Return to Gibson guitars===In 2011, Lifeson said that for the past few years he \"used Gibson almost exclusively.",
"There's nothing like having a low-slung Les Paul over my shoulder.",
"\"====Gibson \"Alex Lifeson Axcess\"====In early 2011, Gibson introduced the \"Alex Lifeson Axcess\", a guitar specially designed for him.",
"These are custom made Les Pauls with Floyd Rose tremolo systems and piezoacoustic pick-ups.",
"He used these two custom Les Pauls on the Time Machine Tour.",
"These guitars are also available through Gibson, in a viceroy Brown or Crimson colour.",
"Lifeson used these two guitars heavily on the tour.For the 2012-13 \"Clockwork Angels\" tour, Gibson built an Alex Lifeson Axcess model in black which became Lifeson's primary guitar for much of the show.",
"For all acoustic work, he played one of his Axcess guitars using the piezo pick-ups; no acoustic guitars were used at all in the Clockwork Angels show.====Gibson R40 Signature Les Paul Axcess====Gibson introduced an Alex Lifeson R40 Les Paul Axcess signature guitar in June 2015.This is a limited edition with 50 guitars signed and played by Lifeson, and another 250 available without the signature.====Gibson Custom Alex Lifeson Signature ES Les Paul semi-hollow====At the 2017 Winter NAMM Show, Gibson representative Mike Voltz introduced an Antique White Gibson Custom Alex Lifeson Signature ES Les Paul semi-hollow guitar, a hybrid of a Les Paul Custom & an ES 335, with only 200 made.",
"Mike also introduced the Antique White as a new color from Gibson for this Custom (note: Gibson names this color as 'Classic White' on their web site which may be an error due to other Gibson reps labeling it as Antique White).",
"Alex played this Custom on the last Rush tour.===Amplification===In 2005, Hughes & Kettner introduced an Alex Lifeson signature series amplifier; Lifeson donates his royalties from the sale of these signature models to UNICEF.===Effects===For effects, Lifeson is known to use chorus, phase shifting, delay and flanging.",
"Throughout his career, he has used well-known pedals such as the Echoplex delay pedal, Electro-Harmonix Electric Mistress flanger, the BOSS CE-1 chorus and the Dunlop crybaby wah, among others.Lifeson and his guitar technician Scott Appleton have discussed in interviews Lifeson's use of Fractal Audio's Axe-FX, Apple Inc.'s MainStage, and Native Instruments' Guitar Rig."
],
[
"Other instruments played",
"===Stringed instruments===In addition to acoustic and electric guitars, Lifeson has also played mandola, mandolin and bouzouki on some Rush studio albums, including ''Test for Echo'', ''Vapor Trails'' and ''Snakes & Arrows''.",
"For his ''Victor'' project and ''Little Drummer Boy'' for the ''Merry Axemas'' album, he also played bass and programmed synthesizers.===Electronic instruments===During live Rush performances, Lifeson used MIDI controllers that enabled him to use his free hands and feet to trigger sounds from digital samplers and synthesizers, without taking his hands off his guitar.",
"(Prior to this, Lifeson used Moog Taurus Bass Pedals before they were replaced by Korg MIDI pedals in the 1980s.)",
"Lifeson and his bandmates shared a desire to accurately depict songs from their albums when playing live performances.",
"Toward this goal, beginning in the late 1980s the band equipped their live performances with a capacious rack of samplers.",
"The band members used these samplers in real-time to recreate the sounds of non-traditional instruments, accompaniments, vocal harmonies, and other sound \"events\" that are familiarly heard on the studio versions of the songs.",
"In live performances, the band members shared duties throughout most songs, with each member triggering certain sounds with his available limbs, while playing his primary instrument(s)."
],
[
"Influence",
"Many guitarists have cited Lifeson as an influence, such as Paul Gilbert of Mr. Big, John Petrucci of Dream Theater, Steven Wilson of Porcupine Tree, Jim Martin of Faith No More, Denis \"Piggy\" D'Amour of Voivod, Parris Mayhew formerly of Cro-Mags, and John Wesley.James Hetfield from Metallica named Lifeson one of the best rhythm guitarists of all time.",
"Marillion guitarist Steve Rothery has expressed his admiration for Lifeson's \"dexterity\" as a live performer and described Rush as a \"fantastic live band\".",
"Jazz guitarist Kurt Rosenwinkel, after citing him as an influence, praised his \"incredible sound and imagination\"."
],
[
"Awards and honours",
"* \"Best Rock Talent\" by ''Guitar for the Practicing Musician'' in 1983* \"Best Rock Guitarist\" by ''Guitar Player Magazine'' in 1984 and May 2008* Runner-up for \"Best Rock Guitarist\" in ''Guitar Player'' in 1982, 1983, 1985, 1986* Inducted into the Guitar for the Practicing Musician Hall of Fame, 1991* 1996 – Officer of the Order of Canada, along with bandmates Geddy Lee and Neil Peart* 2007 – Main belt asteroid \"(19155) Lifeson\" named after Alex Lifeson* \"Best Article\" for \"Different Strings\" in ''Guitar Player'' (September 2007 issue).",
"* Most Ferociously Brilliant Guitar Album (''Snakes & Arrows'') – ''Guitar Player Magazine'', May 2008* 2013 – With Rush, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee"
],
[
"Discography",
"=== With Rush ====== Solo ===YearTitleAlias1996''Victor''Victor === With Envy of None ===Following Rush's dissolution in 2018 and Neil Peart's death in 2020, Lifeson formed the supergroup Envy of None with himself on guitar, mandola and banjo, Alfio Annibalini on guitar and keyboards, Andy Curran on bass, guitar and backing vocals and Maiah Wynne on lead vocals and keyboards.YearTitleType2022''Envy of None''AlbumLiarSingleEnemy/You'll Be Sorry=== Collaborations ===YearTitleCollaboratorNotes2002''Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda'' Matthew McCauleyReleased on GNP Crescendo2019''Lovers Calling'' (single)Marco MinnemannFeaturing Lifeson on guitar, Minnemann on drums, Mohini Dey on bass and Maiah Wynne on vocals=== Appearances ===YearTitleArtistNotes1980''Universal Juveniles''Max WebsterOn the track Battle Scar, Lifeson along with fellow Rush band members, Geddy Lee and Neil Peart play their respective instruments with Lee performing co-lead vocals.1985''Alien Shores''Platinum BlondeFeatures Lifeson's guitar solos on two tracks including \"Crying Over You\" single.1988''Serious Business''GreenwayAlbum by fellow Canadian Brian Greenway (of bands April Wine, Mashmakhan and the Dudes), featuring Lifeson on guitar on the first track and single \"In The Danger Zone\"1989/1990''Smoke On The Water''Rock Aid ArmeniaCharity single re-recording song by British rock band Deep Purple organised by frontman Ian Gillan, Lifeson played alongside many other musicians including members of Deep Purple, Pink Floyd, Yes, Queen, Iron Maiden, Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin and ELP.1990''Lost Brotherhood''GowanLifeson plays guitar on this album by fellow Canadian Lawrence Gowan of Styx and also on the albums self titled single.1995''Hip To The Tip - Live At The Orbit Room''The DextersAlbum by Canadian band The Dexters (house band of The Orbit Room, a bar in Toronto), the band featured Lifeson (under the pseudonym \"Alex Dexter\") and other members where called Lou, on Hammond B3, Peter on bass, Bernie on guitar and Mike on drums (all members were under the surname \"Dexter.",
"\")''Ragged Ass Road''Tom CochraneLifeson is credited with guitar and guitar solo on this album by fellow Canadian musician, Tom Cochrane.",
"A frequent collaborator with Cochrane is early Rush bassist and vocalist Jeff Jones.1996''Scenery And Fish''I Mother EarthLifeson played additional guitars on one track on this album by Canadian rock band I Mother Earth.1997''Merry Axemas: A Guitar Christmas''Various Lifeson played a version of \"The Little Drummer Boy\" on this Christmas oriented tribute album organised by fellow guitarist Steve Vai, also featured guitarists Joe Satriani, Joe Perry, Steve Morse, Jeff Beck and Eric Johnson.2006''Born4''Jakalope Lifeson (credited as Alex Liefson under Jakalope 2) is credited as a performer on this album by Canadian group Jakalope and also co-wrote one track.",
"''Have You Seen Lucky?",
"''John KastnerLifeson is credited on this album by fellow Canadian John Kastner, Kastner is most famous for being a former member of hardcore punk band Asexuals.",
"''Better Days''EdwinLifeson plays guitar on two track on this album by alternative rock singer Edwin, who also participated in Lifeson's solo project Victor 10 years prior.2007''Fear Of A Blank Planet''Porcupine TreeLifeson plays a guitar solo on the first movement of one track of this album by English progressive rock band Porcupine Tree.",
"His solo would later be re-imagined and performed by touring guitarist John Wesley in live shows.",
"The album also features a contribution by King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp.2008''Fly Paper''TilesLifeson plays various guitars on one track on this album by American prog rock band Tiles, including assorted textures, lead guitar, rhythm guitar and 12-string acoustic guitar.",
"The album also features artwork and design from frequent Rush collaborator Hugh Syme.2014''Disconnect''John WesleyLifeson plays guitar on one track on this album by American guitarist John Wesley, Wesley had performed with Lifeson on the previously mentioned song by Porcupine tree (when Lifeson contributed guitar and Wesley contributed backing vocals).",
"''Come to Life''Keram Lifeson is credited, alongside 4 other guitarists, with electric guitar on this album by Keram (full name Keram Malicki-Sánchez), who is a member of band Blue Dog Pict.2016''RES 9''Rik Emmett & RESolution9 Lifeson is features on two tracks on this album by Rk Emmett of the Canadian rock band Triumph, one track on his own and on another with Dream Theatre frontman and fellow Canadian James LaBrie.2017''Borrego''Marco Minnemann Lifeson is featured on guitars on this album by German rock drummer and musician Marco Minnemann, who has performed with Steven Wilson, U.K. and Jordan Rudess, Lifeson plays guitars on 3 tracks (including one bonus track), as well as writing one, Lifeson is credited with acoustic guitar, guitar reverse and FX and guitar solos.2018''Clone Of The Universe''Fu Manchu Lifeson is credited with additional guitars on one track on this album by America stoner rock band Fu Manchu.",
"''Walking In The Wild Land''Jim McCartyLifeson is credited with lead guitar on one track on Yardbirds member Jim McCarty.",
"The album also features keyboards from Rush collaborator Hugh Syme.",
"''A Holiday Greeting From West End Phoenix''VariousChristmas release featuring vocals from Lifeson and Lee.2019''My Sister''Marco MinnemannLifeson is credited as a special guest on this album by German drummer Marco Minnemann, he is credited with writing and with electric and acoustic guitars on two tracks and additional guitars on one.",
"''Nobody Told Me''John MayallLifeson is credited (along with a variety on other guitarist, including, Joe Bonamassa, Todd Rundgren and Steven Van Zandt) on this album by legendary blues and rock singer and musician John Mayall.",
"He plays guitar on one track.",
"''American Rock 'N' Roll''Don Felder Lifeson is credited with rhythm acoustic and solo electric on one track on this album by former Eagles lead guitarist Don Felder.",
"The album also features Chad Smith, Slash, Mick Fleetwood and Joe Satriani.",
"''Atheists And Believers''The Mute GodsLifeson is credited with 12-string guitar, ambient guitar and mandolin on this album by The Mute Gods, a progressive rock project formed of Nick Beggs (bass, chapman stick, guitar keyboads and vocals known for performing with Steve Hackett and Steven Wilson), Roger King (keyboards and guitar, known for performing with Steve Hackett) and Marco Minnemann (drums and guitar)2020''II''McStine & MinnemannLifeson performs on this album by musicians Randy McStine (guitar, bass, keyboards, vocals) and Marco Minnemann (drums, perucussion, guitar, keyboards and bass).",
"He performs guitar on the final track.",
"''Eternity Now''Big Sugar Lifeson performs guitar on the first and self titled track on this album by Canadian rock band Big Sugar.2021''The Atlas Underground Flood''Tom MorelloLifeson plays guitar as well as writing (alongside Kirk Hammett of Metallica) on one track on this album by Rage Against the Machine member Tom Morello."
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* Official website* Audio-Technica interview with Alex* Read 2002 CNN interview with Alex** Order of Canada citation* Lerxst Amplification* *"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"AZ"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''AZ''' (or similar) may refer to:"
],
[
"Companies and organizations",
"* Alkmaar Zaanstreek, formerly AZ '67, a Dutch Eredivisie football club** AZ (women), the affiliated women's football club (2007–2011)* AstraZeneca, a UK-based pharmaceutical company** Oxford–AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine, their COVID-19 vaccine (sometimes abbreviated as AZ)* AZ, IATA code of ITA Airways, the national airline of Italy* AZ, then-IATA code of Alitalia, a former Italian airline* Ministry of General Affairs (), a Dutch Government ministry"
],
[
"Music",
"* Authority Zero, an Arizona punk rock band* AZ (label), a French record label"
],
[
"People",
"* Az (people), Turkophone people from present-day Russia* AZ (rapper), a rapper from Brooklyn, New York* Azie Faison, known as AZ, a former drug dealer from New York"
],
[
"Places",
"* Arizona, a state in the United States whose postal abbreviation is \"AZ\"* Azerbaijan, a Eurasian country, designated by the 2-letter ISO 3166-1 country code"
],
[
"Other uses",
"* .az, the country code top level domain for the nation of Azerbaijan* ''Abendzeitung'', a newspaper based in Munich, Germany* AlphaZero, game-playing artificial intelligence* Assignment Zero, a crowdsourced journalism project* Azimuth, the horizontal component of a compass direction* Azerbaijani language, designated by the ISO 639-1 international-standard language-code \"az\"* Toyota AZ engine family* Azimuth, the horizontal component of a compass direction* A US Navy hull classification symbol: Lighter-than-air aircraft tender (AZ)"
],
[
"See also",
"* * * * A–Z (disambiguation)* AZ1 (disambiguation)* ZA (disambiguation)"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"ArgoUML"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''ArgoUML''' is an UML diagramming application written in Java and released under the open source Eclipse Public License.",
"By virtue of being a Java application, it is available on any platform supported by Java SE."
],
[
"History",
"ArgoUML was originally developed at UC Irvine by Jason E. Robbins, leading to his Ph.D.",
"It was an open source project hosted by Tigris.org and moved in 2019 to GitHub.",
"The ArgoUML project included more than 19,000 registered users and over 150 developers.In 2003, ArgoUML won the Software Development Magazine's annual Readers' Choice Award in the “Design and Analysis Tools” category.ArgoUML development has suffered from lack of manpower.",
"For example, ''Undo'' has been a perpetually requested feature since 2003 but has not been implemented yet."
],
[
"Features",
"According to the official feature list, ArgoUML is capable of the following: *All 9 UML 1.4 diagrams are supported.",
"*Closely follows the UML standard.",
"*Platform independent – Java 1.5+ and C++.",
"*Click and Go!",
"with Java Web Start (no setup required, starts from your web browser).",
"*Standard UML 1.4 Metamodel.",
"*XMI support.",
"*Export diagrams as GIF, PNG, PS, EPS, PGML and SVG.",
"*Available in ten languages: EN, EN-GB, DE, ES, IT, RU, FR, NB, PT, ZH.",
"*Advanced diagram editing and zoom.",
"*Built-in design critics provide unobtrusive review of design and suggestions for improvements.",
"*Extensible modules interface.",
"*OCL support.",
"*Forward engineering (code generation supports C++ and C#, Java, PHP 4, PHP 5, Ruby and, with less mature modules, Ada, Delphi and SQL).",
"*Reverse engineering / JAR/class file import."
],
[
"Weaknesses",
"*ArgoUML does not yet completely implement the UML standard.",
"* Partial undo feature (working for graphics edits )* Java Web Start launching may no longer work reliably.",
"See Java Web Start."
],
[
"See also",
"*List of UML tools*MetaCASE tool"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"*"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"File archiver"
],
[
"Introduction",
"A '''file archiver''' is a computer program that combines a number of files together into one archive file, or a series of archive files, for easier transportation or storage.",
"File archivers may employ lossless data compression in their archive formats to reduce the size of the archive.Basic archivers just take a list of files and concatenate their contents sequentially into archives.",
"The archive files need to store metadata, at least the names and lengths of the original files, if proper reconstruction is possible.",
"More advanced archivers store additional metadata, such as the original timestamps, file attributes or access control lists.The process of making an archive file is called ''archiving'' or ''packing''.",
"Reconstructing the original files from the archive is termed ''unarchiving'', ''unpacking'' or ''extracting''."
],
[
"History",
"An early archiver was the Multics command ''archive'', descended from the CTSS command of the same name, which was a basic archiver and performed no compression.",
"Multics also had a \"tape_archiver\" command, abbreviated ''ta'', which was perhaps the forerunner of the Unix command ''tar''."
],
[
"Unix archivers",
"The Unix tools ''ar'', ''tar'', and ''cpio'' act as archivers but not compressors.",
"Users of the Unix tools use additional compression tools, such as gzip, bzip2, or xz, to compress the archive file after packing or remove compression before unpacking the archive file.",
"The filename extensions are successively added at each step of this process.",
"For example, archiving a collection of files with ''tar'' and then compressing the resulting archive file with ''gzip'' results a file with .tar.gz extension.This approach has two goals:# It follows the Unix philosophy that each program should accomplish a single task to perfection, as opposed to attempting to accomplish everything with one tool.",
"As compression technology progresses, users may use different compression programs without having to modify or abandon their archiver.# The archives use solid compression.",
"When the files are combined, the compressor can exploit redundancy across several archived files and achieve better compression than a compressor that compresses each files individually.This approach, however, has disadvantages too:# Extracting or modifying one file is difficult.",
"Extracting one file requires decompressing an entire archive, which can be time- and space-consuming.",
"Modifying one means the file needs to be put back into archive and the archive recompressed again.",
"This operation requires additional time and disk space.# The archive becomes damage-prone.",
"If the area holding shared data for several files is damaged, all those files are lost.# It is impossible to take advantage of redundancy between files unless the compression window is larger than the size of an individual file.",
"For example, gzip uses DEFLATE, which typically operates with a 32768-byte window, whereas bzip2 uses a Burrows–Wheeler transform roughly 27 times bigger.",
"xz defaults to 8 MiB but supports significantly larger windows."
],
[
"Windows archivers",
"The built-in archiver of Microsoft Windows as well as third-party archiving software, such as WinRAR and 7-zip, often use a graphical user interface.",
"They also offer an optional command-line interface, while Windows itself does not.",
"Windows archivers perform both archiving and compression.",
"Solid compression may or may not be offered, depending on the product: Windows itself does not support it; WinRAR and 7-zip offer it as an option that can be turned on or off."
],
[
"See also",
"* Comparison of file archivers* Archive format* List of archive formats* Comparison of archive formats"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"*"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Artemis"
],
[
"Introduction",
"In ancient Greek religion and mythology, '''Artemis''' (; ) is the goddess of the hunt, the wilderness, wild animals, nature, vegetation, childbirth, care of children, and chastity.",
"In later times, she was identified with Selene, the personification of the Moon.",
"She was often said to roam the forests and mountains, attended by her entourage of nymphs.",
"The goddess Diana is her Roman equivalent.In Greek tradition, Artemis is the daughter of Zeus and Leto, and the twin sister of Apollo.",
"In most accounts, the twins are the products of an extramarital liaison.",
"For this, Zeus' wife Hera forbade Leto from giving birth anywhere on land.",
"Only the island of Delos gave refuge to Leto, allowing her to give birth to her children.",
"In most accounts, Artemis is born first and then proceeds to assist Leto in the birth of the second twin, Apollo.",
"Artemis was a kourotrophic (child-nurturing) deity, that is the patron and protector of young children, especially young girls.",
"Artemis was worshipped as one of the primary goddesses of childbirth and midwifery along with Eileithyia and Hera.",
"Artemis was also a patron of healing and disease, particularly among women and children, and believed to send both good health and illness upon women and children.",
"Artemis was one of the three major virgin goddesses alongside Athena and Hestia.",
"Artemis preferred to remain an unmarried maiden and was one of the three Greek goddesses over whom Aphrodite had no power.In myth and literature, Artemis is presented as a hunting goddess of the woods, surrounded by her chaste band of nymphs.",
"In the myth of Actaeon, when the young hunter sees her bathing naked, he is transformed into a deer by the angered goddess and is then devoured by his own hunting dogs, who do not recognize their master.",
"In the story of Callisto, the girl is driven away from Artemis' company after breaking her vow of virginity, having lain with and been impregnated by Zeus.",
"In the Epic tradition, Artemis halted the winds blowing the Greek ships during the Trojan War, stranding the Greek fleet in Aulis, after King Agamemnon, the leader of the expedition, shot and killed her sacred deer.",
"Artemis demanded the sacrifice of Iphigenia, Agamemnon's young daughter, as compensation for her slain deer.",
"In most versions, when Iphigenia is led to the altar to be offered as a sacrifice, Artemis pities her and takes her away, leaving a deer in her place.",
"In the war that followed, Artemis supported the Trojans against the Greeks, and challenged Hera into battle.Artemis was one of the most widely venerated of the Ancient Greek deities; her worship spread throughout ancient Greece, with her multiple temples, altars, shrines, and local veneration found everywhere in the ancient world.",
"Her great temple at Ephesus was one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, before it was burnt to the ground.",
"Artemis' symbols included a bow and arrow, a quiver, and hunting knives, and the deer and the cypress were sacred to her.",
"Diana, her Roman equivalent, was especially worshipped on the Aventine Hill in Rome, near Lake Nemi in the Alban Hills, and in Campania."
],
[
"Etymology",
" Artémis (Diane), the huntress.",
"Roman copy of a Greek statue, 2nd century.",
"Galleria dei Candelabri - Vatican MuseumsThe name \"Artemis\" (''n.",
"'', ''f.'')",
"is of unknown or uncertain etymology, although various sources have been proposed.",
"R. S. P. Beekes suggested that the ''e''/''i'' interchange points to a Pre-Greek origin.",
"Artemis was venerated in Lydia as ''Artimus''.",
"Georgios Babiniotis, while accepting that the etymology is unknown, also states that the name is already attested in Mycenean Greek and is possibly of pre-Greek origin.The name may be related to Greek ''árktos'' \"bear\" (from PIE *''h₂ŕ̥tḱos''), supported by the bear cult the goddess had in Attica (Brauronia) and the Neolithic remains at the Arkoudiotissa Cave, as well as the story of Callisto, which was originally about Artemis (Arcadian epithet ''kallisto''); this cult was a survival of very old totemic and shamanistic rituals and formed part of a larger bear cult found further afield in other Indo-European cultures (e.g., Gaulish Artio).",
"It is believed that a precursor of Artemis was worshipped in Minoan Crete as the goddess of mountains and hunting, Britomartis.",
"While connection with Anatolian names has been suggested, the earliest attested forms of the name Artemis are the Mycenaean Greek , ''a-te-mi-to'' /Artemitos/ (gen.) and , ''a-ti-mi-te'' /Artimitei/ (dat.",
"), written in Linear B at Pylos.According to J. T. Jablonski, the name is also Phrygian and could be \"compared with the royal appellation ''Artemas'' of Xenophon.",
"Charles Anthon argued that the primitive root of the name is probably of Persian origin from *''arta'', *''art'', *''arte'', all meaning \"great, excellent, holy\", thus Artemis \"becomes identical with the great mother of Nature, even as she was worshipped at Ephesus\".",
"Anton Goebel \"suggests the root στρατ or ῥατ, \"to shake\", and makes Artemis mean the thrower of the dart or the shooter\".Ancient Greek writers, by way of folk etymology, and some modern scholars, have linked Artemis (Doric ''Artamis'') to , ''artamos'', i.e.",
"\"butcher\" or, like Plato did in ''Cratylus'', to , ''artemḗs'', i.e.",
"\"safe\", \"unharmed\", \"uninjured\", \"pure\", \"the stainless maiden\".",
"A. J.",
"Van Windekens tried to explain both and Artemis from , ''atremḗs'', meaning \"unmoved, calm; stable, firm\" via metathesis."
],
[
"Description",
"Parian pottery, 675–600 BCE .",
"Hypothetical restoration (only some parts have been preserved).",
"Archaeological Museum of Mykonos.Artemis is presented as a goddess who delights in hunting and punishes harshly those who cross her.",
"Artemis' wrath is proverbial, and represents the hostility of wild nature to humans.",
"Homer calls her , \"the mistress of animals\", a title associated with representations in art going back as far as the Bronze Age, showing a woman between a pair of animals.",
"Artemis carries with her certain functions and characteristics of a Minoan form whose history was lost in the myths.Artemis was one of the most popular goddesses in Ancient Greece.",
"The most frequent name of a month in the Greek calendars was ''Artemision'' in Ionic, territories ''Artemisios'' or ''Artamitios'' in the Doric and Aeolic territories and in Macedonia.",
"Also ''Elaphios'' in Elis, Elaphebolion in Athens, Iasos, Apollonia of Chalkidice and Munichion in Attica.",
"In the calendars of Aetolia, Phocis and Gytheion there was the month Laphrios and in Thebes, Corcyra, and Byzantion the month Eucleios.",
"The goddess was venerated in festivals during spring.In some cults she retains the theriomorphic form of a Pre-Greek goddess who was conceived with the shape of a bear (άρκτος ''árktos'': bear).",
"Kallisto in Arcadia is a hypostasis of Artemis with the shape of a bear, and her cults at Brauron and at Piraeus (Munichia) are remarkable for the ''arkteia'' where virgin girls before marriage were disguised as she-bears.The ancient Greeks called ''potnia theron'' the representation of the goddess between animals; on a Greek vase from ''circa'' 570 BCE, a winged Artemis stands between a spotted panther and a deer.",
"\"Potnia theron\" is very close to the daimons and this differentiates her from the other Greek divinities.",
"This is the reason that Artemis was later identified with Hecate, since the daimons were tutelary deities.",
"Hecate was the goddess of crossroads and she was the queen of the witches.Minoan seal from Knossos.",
"A goddess flanked by two lionesses, probably the \"Mother of the Mountains\", in the presence of her consort or the dedicant.Laphria is the Pre-Greek \"mistress of the animals\" at Delphi and Patras.",
"There was a custom to throw animals alive into the annual fire of the fest.",
"The festival at Patras was introduced from Calydon and this relates Artemis to the Greek heroine Atalanta who symbolizes freedom and independence.",
"Other epithets that relate Artemis to the animals are Amarynthia and ''Kolainis''.In the Homeric poems Artemis is mainly the goddess of hunting, because it was the most important sport in Mycenean Greece.",
"An almost formulaic epithet used in the Iliad and Odyssey to describe her is ''iocheaira'', \"she who shoots arrows\", often translated as \"she who delights in arrows\" or \"she who showers arrows\".",
"She is called Artemis ''Chrysilakatos'', of the golden shafts, or ''Chrysinios'', of the golden reins, as a goddess of hunting in her chariot.",
"The ''Homeric Hymn 27 to Artemis'' paints this picture of the goddess:According to the beliefs of the first Greeks in Arcadia Artemis is the first nymph, a goddess of free nature.",
"She is an independent free woman, and she doesn't need any partner.",
"She is hunting surrounded by her nymphs.",
"This idea of freedom and women's skill is expressed in many Greek myths.Bowdoin Painter.",
"Louvre, ParisIn Peloponnese the temples of Artemis were built near springs, rivers and marshes.",
"Artemis was closely related to the waters and especially to Poseidon, the god of the waters.",
"Her common epithets are ''Limnnaia'', ''Limnatis'' (relation to waters) and ''Potamia'' and Alphaea (relation to rivers).",
"In some cults she is the healer goddess of women with the surnames ''Lousia'' and ''Thermia''.Artemis is the leader of the nymphs (Hegemone) and she is hunting surrounded by them.",
"The nymphs appear during the festival of the marriage, and they are appealed by the pregnant women.",
"Artemis became goddess of marriage and childbirth.",
"She was worshipped with the surname Eucleia in several cities.",
"Women consecrated clothes to Artemis for a happy childbirth and she had the epithets ''Lochia'' and ''Lecho''.The Dorians interpreted Artemis mainly as goddess of vegetation who was worshipped in an orgiastic cult with lascivious dances, with the common epithets Orthia, ''Korythalia'' and ''Dereatis''.",
"The female dancers wore masks and were famous in antiquity.",
"The goddess of vegetation was also related to the tree-cult with temples near the holy trees and the surnames Apanchomene, Caryatis and ''Cedreatis''.According to Greek beliefs the image of a god or a goddess gave signs or tokens and had divine and magic powers.",
"With these conceptions she was worshipped as ''Tauria'' (the Tauric, goddess), Aricina (Italy) and ''Anaitis'' (Lydia).",
"In the bucolic (pastoral) songs the image of the goddess was discovered in bundles of leaves or dry sticks and she had the surnames ''Lygodesma'' and ''Phakelitis''.Scene from sacrifice in honour of Artemis-Diana who is accompanied by a deer.",
"Fresco from the triclinium of the house of Vettii in Pompeii Italy, between 62 CE and 79 CE (Destruction of Pompeii).In the European folklore, a wild hunter is chasing an elfish woman who falls in the water.",
"In the Greek myths the hunter is chasing a female deer (doe) and both disappear into the waters.",
"In relation to these myths Artemis was worshipped as ''Saronia'' and Stymphalia .",
"The myth of a goddess who is chased and then falls in the sea is related to the cults of Aphaea and Diktynna.Artemis carrying torches was identified with Hecate and she had the surnames ''Phosphoros'' and ''Selasphoros ''.",
"In Athens and Tegea, she was worshipped as Artemis ''Kalliste'', \"the most beautiful\".",
"Sometimes the goddess had the name of an Amazon like ''Lyceia'' (with a helmet of a wolf-skin) and Molpadia.",
"The female warriors Amazons embody the idea of freedom and women's independence.In spite of her status as a virgin who avoided potential lovers, there are multiple references to Artemis' beauty and erotic aspect; in the ''Odyssey'', Odysseus compares Nausicaa to Artemis in terms of appearance when trying to win her favor, Libanius, when praising the city of Antioch, wrote that Ptolemy was smitten by the beauty of (the statue of) Artemis; whereas her mother Leto often took pride in her daughter's beauty.",
"She has several stories surrounding her where men such as Actaeon, Orion, and Alpheus tried to couple with her forcibly, only to be thwarted or killed.",
"Ancient poets note Artemis' height and imposing stature, as she stands taller and more impressive than all the nymphs accompanying her."
],
[
"Epithets and functions",
"Artemis with bow and arrow in front of an altar.",
"Attic red-figure lekythos, ca.",
"475 BCE, from Selinunte, Sicily.",
"Antonino Salinas Regional Archaeological Museum, PalermoArtemis is rooted to the less developed personality of the Mycenean goddess of nature.",
"The goddess of nature was concerned with birth and vegetation and had certain chthonic aspects.",
"The Mycenean goddess was related to the Minoan mistress of the animals, who can be traced later in local cults, however we don't know to what extent we can differentiate the Minoan from the Mycenean religion.",
"Artemis carries with her certain functions and characteristics of a Minoan form whose history was lost in the myths.",
"According to the beliefs of the first Greeks in Arcadia, Artemis is the first nymph, a divinity of free nature.",
"She was a great goddess and her temples were built near springs marshes and rivers where the nymphs live, and they are appealed by the pregnant women.",
"In Greek religion we must see less tractable elements which have nothing to do with the Olympians, but come from an old, less organized world–exorcisms, rituals to raise crops, gods and goddesses conceived not quite in human shape.",
"Some cults of Artemis retained the pre-Greek features which were consecrated by immemorial practices and connected with daily tasks.",
"Artemis shows sometimes the wild and darker side of her character and can bring immediate death with her arrows, however she embodies the idea of \"the free nature\" which was introduced by the first Greeks.",
"The Dorians came later in the area, probably from Epirus and the goddess of nature was mostly interpreted as a vegetation goddess who was related to the ecstatic Minoan tree-cult.",
"She was worshipped in orgiastic cults with lascivious and sometimes obscene dances, which have pure Greek elements introduced by the Dorians.",
"The feminine (sometimes male) dancers wore usually masks, and they were famous in the antiquity.",
"The great popularity of Artemis corresponds to the Greek belief in freedom and she is mainly the goddess of women in a patriarchal society.",
"The goddess of free nature is an independent woman and doesn't need a partner.",
"Artemis is frequently depicted carrying a torch and she was occasionally identified with Hecate.",
"Like other Greek deities, she had a number of other names applied to her, reflecting the variety of roles, duties, and aspects ascribed to the goddess.Statue of Artemis, marble.",
"Pergamon Museum, Berlin'''Aeginaea''', probably huntress of chamois or the wielder of the javelin, at Sparta However the word may mean \"from the island Aegina\", that relates Artemis with '''Aphaia''' (Britomartis).",
"'''Aetole''', of Aetolia at Nafpaktos.",
"A marble statue represented the goddess in the attitude of one hurling a javelin.",
"'''Agoraea''', guardian of popular assemblies in Athens.",
"She was considered to be the protector of the assemblies of the people in the agora.",
"At Olympia the cult of \"Artemis Agoraea\" was related to the cult of Despoinai.",
"(The double named goddesses Demeter and Persephone).",
"'''Agrotera''', the huntress of wild wood, in the Iliad and many cults.",
"It was believed that she first hunted at Agrae of Athens after her arrival from Delos.",
"There was a custom of making a \"slaughter sacrifice\", to the goddess before a battle.",
"The deer always accompanies the goddess of hunting.",
"Her epithet Agraea is similar with ''Agrotera''.",
"'''Alphaea,''' in the district of Elis.",
"The goddess had an annual festival at Olympia and a temple at Letrinoi near the river Alpheus.",
"At the festival of Letrinoi, the girls were dancing wearing masks.",
"In the legend, Alphaea and her nymphs covered their faces with mud and the river god Alpheus, who was in love with her, could not distinguish her from the others.",
"This explains, somehow, the clay masks at Sparta.Artemis on her two hind-drawn chariot, Boeotian red-figure kylix, 450–425 BCE, by the Painter of Great Athens.",
"Louvre, Paris.",
")'''Amarynthia,''' or '''Amarysia,''' with a famous temple at Amarynthus near Eretria.",
"The goddess was related to the animals, however she was also a healer goddess of women.",
"She is identified with '''Kolainis'''.",
"'''Amphipyros''', with fire at each end, a rare epithet of Artemis as bearing a torch in either hand.",
"Sophocles calls her, \"Elaphebolos, (deer slayer) Amphipyros\", reminding the annual fire of the festival Laphria The adjective refers also to the twin fires of the two peaks of the Mount Parnassus above Delphi (Phaedriades).",
"'''Anaitis,''' in Lydia.",
"The fame of '''Tauria''' (the Tauric goddess) was very high, and the Lydians claimed that the image of the goddess was among them.",
"It was considered that the image had divine powers.",
"The Athenians believed that the image became booty to the Persians and was carried from Brauron to Susa.",
"'''Angelos''', messenger, envoy, title of Artemis at Syracuse in Sicily.",
"'''Apanchomene''', the strangled goddess, at Caphyae in Arcadia.",
"She was a vegetation goddess related to the ecstatic tree cult.",
"The Minoan tree goddesses Helene, Dentritis, and Ariadne were also hanged.",
"This epithet is related to the old traditions where icons and puppets of a vegetation goddess would be hung on a tree.",
"It was believed that the plane tree near the spring at Caphyae, was planted by Menelaus, the husband of Helen of Troy.",
"The tree was called \"Menelais\".",
"The previous name of the goddess was most likely '''Kondyleatis'''.",
"'''Aphaea,''' or '''Apha''', unseen or disappeared, a goddess at Aegina and a rare epithet of Artemis.",
"Aphaea is identified with Britomartis.",
"In the legend Britomartis (the sweet young woman) escaped from Minos, who fell in love with her.",
"She travelled to Aegina on a wooden boat and then she disappeared.",
"The myth indicates an identity in nature with '''Diktynna'''.Sacrifice of Iphigenia.",
"Antique fresco from Pompei, probably a copy of a painting by Timanthes.",
"Agamemnon (right) and Clytemnestra crying (left).",
"In the sky appears the fawn which will replace her.",
"National Archaeological Museum, Naples'''Aricina''', derived from the town Aricia in Latium, or from Aricia, the wife of the Roman forest god Virbius (Hippolytus).",
"The goddess was related with Artemis '''Tauria''' (the Tauric Artemis).",
"Her statue was considered the same with the statue that Orestes brought from Tauris.",
"Near the sanctuary of the goddess there was a combat between slaves who had run away from their masters and the prize was the priesthood of Artemis.",
"'''Ariste,''' the best, a goddess of the women.",
"Pausanias describes xoana of \"Ariste\" and \"Kalliste\" in the way to the academy of Athens and he believes that the names are surnames of the goddess Artemis, who is depicted carrying a torch.",
"Kalliste is not related to '''Kalliste''' of Arcadia.Aristobule, the best advisor, at Athens.",
"The politician and general Themistocles built a temple of Artemis Aristobule near his house in the deme of Melite, in which he dedicated his own statue.",
"'''Astrateias''', she that stops an invasion, at Pyrrichos in Laconia.",
"A wooden image (xoanon), was dedicated to the goddess, because she stopped the invasion of the Amazons in this area.",
"Another xoanon represented \"Apollo Amazonios\".Artemis Bendis (with her Thracian cap), Apollo, Hermes and a young warrior.",
"Apulian red-figure bell-shaped krater, ca.",
"380–370 BCE by the Bendis Painter.",
"Louvre, Paris'''Basileie,''' at Thrace and Paeonia.",
"The women offered wheat stalks to the goddess.",
"In this cult, which reached Athens, Artemis is relative to the Thracian goddess Bendis.",
"'''Brauronia''', worshipped at Brauron in Attica.",
"Her cult is remarkable for the \"arkteia\", young girls who dressed with short saffron-yellow chitons and imitated bears (she-bears: arktoi).",
"In the Acropolis of Athens, the Athenian girls before puberty should serve the goddess as \"arktoi\".",
"Artemis was the goddess of marriage and childbirth.",
"The name of the small \"bears\" indicate the theriomorphic form of Artemis in an old pre-Greek cult.",
"In the cult of Baubronia, the myth of the sacrifice of Iphigenia was represented in the ritual.",
"'''Boulaia''', of the council, in Athens.",
"'''Boulephoros''', counselling, advising, at Miletus, probably a Greek form of the mother-goddess.",
"'''Caryatis''', the lady of the nut-tree, at Caryae on the borders between Laconia and Arcadia.",
"Artemis was strongly related to the nymphs, and young girls were dancing the dance ''Caryatis''.",
"The dancers of Caryai were famous in antiquity.",
"In a legend, Carya, the female lover of Dionysos was transformed into a nut tree and the dancers into nuts.",
"The city is considered to be the place of the origin of the bucolic (pastoral) songs.",
"'''Cedreatis''', near Orchomenus in Arcadia.",
"A xoanon was mounted on the holy cedar (kedros).",
"'''Chesias''', from the name of a river at Samos.Heracles throwing the Erymanthian Boar on Eurystheus, who, frightened, hides in a jar.",
"Goddesses Artemis (left) and Athena (right).",
"Attic Amphora 500-515 BCE by Rycroft Painter.",
"National Archaeological Museum (Madrid)'''Chitonia''', wearing a loose tunic, at Syracuse in Sicily, as goddess of hunting.",
"The festival was distinguished by a peculiar dance and by a music on the flute.",
"'''Chrisilakatos''', of the golden arrow, in Homer's Iliad as a powerful goddess of hunting.",
"In the Odyssey, she descends from a peak and travels along the ridges of Mount Erymanthos, that was sacred to the \"Mistress of the animals\".",
"In a legend, when the old goddess became wrathful, she would send the terrible Erymanthian boar to lay waste to fields.",
"Artemis can bring an immediate death with her arrows.",
"In the Iliad, Hera stresses the wild and darker side of her character and she accuses her of being \"a lioness between women\".",
"'''Chrisinios''', of the golden reins, as a goddess of hunting in her chariot.",
"In the Iliad, in her wrath, she kills the daughter of Bellerophon.",
"'''Coryphaea''', of the peak, at Epidaurus in Argolis.On the top of the mountain Coryphum there was a sanctuary of the goddess.",
"The famous lyric poet Telesilla mentions \"Artemis Coryphaea\" in an ode.",
"'''Cnagia''', near Sparta in Laconia.",
"In a legend the native Cnageus was sold as a slave in Crete.",
"He escaped to his country taking with him the virgin priestess of the goddess Artemis.",
"The priestess carried with her from Crete the statue of the goddess, who was named Cnagia.",
"'''Cynthia''', as goddess of the moon, from her birthplace on Mount Cynthos at Delos.",
"Selene, the Greek personification of the moon, and the Roman Diana were also sometimes called Cynthia.",
"'''Daphnaea''', as goddess of vegetation.",
"Her name is most likely derived from the \"laurel-branch\" which was used as \"May-branch\", or an allusion to her statue being made of laurel-wood (daphne) Strabo refers to her annual festival at Olympia.",
"'''Delia''', the feminine form of Apollo Delios'''Delphinia''', the feminine form of Apollo ''Delphinios'' (literally derived from Delphi).",
"'''Dereatis''', at Sparta near Taygetos.",
"Dancers were performing the obscene dance \"kallabis\".",
"'''Diktynna''', from Mount Dikti, who is identified with the Minoan goddess Britomartis.",
"Her name is derived from the mountain Dikti in Crete.",
"A folk etymology derives her name from the word \"diktyon\" (net).",
"In the legend Britomartis (the sweet young woman) was hunting together with Artemis who loved her desperately.",
"She escaped from Minos, who fell in love with her, by jumping into the sea and falling into a net of fishes.Apollo and Artemis.",
"Tondo of an Attic red-figure cup, ''circa'' 470 BCE, by the Briseis Painter.Louvre, Paris'''Eileithyia''', goddess of childbirth in Boeotia and other local cults especially in Crete and Laconia.",
"During the Bronze Age, in the cave of Amnisos, she was related to the annual birth of the divine child.",
"In the Minoan myth the child was abandoned by his mother and then he was nurtured by the powers of nature.",
"'''Elaphia''', goddess of hunting (deer).",
"Strabo refers to her annual festival at Olympia.",
"'''Elaphebolos''', shooter of deer, with the festival \"Elaphebolia\" at Phocis and Athens, and the name of a month in several local cults.",
"Sophocles calls Artemis \"Elaphebolos, '''Amphipyros\"''', carrying a torch in each hand.",
"This was used during the annual fire of the festival of Laphria at Delphi.",
"'''Ephesia''', at the city Ephesus of Minor Asia.",
"The city was a great center of the cult of the goddess, with a magnificent temple, ('''Artemision''').",
"Ephesia belongs to the series of the Anatolian goddesses (Great mother, or mountain-mother).",
"However she is not a mother-goddess, but the goddess of free nature.",
"In the Homeric Ionic sphere she is the goddess of hunting.",
"'''Eucleia''', as a goddess of marriage in Boeotia, Locris and other cities.",
"Epheboi and girls who wanted to marry should make a preliminary sacrifice in honour of the goddess.",
"\"Eukleios\" was the name of a month in several cities and \"Eucleia\" was the name of a festival at Delphi.",
"In Athens Peitho, Harmonia and Eucleia can create a good marriage.",
"The bride would sacrifice to the virgin goddess Artemis.",
"'''Eupraxis''', fine acting.",
"On a relief from Sicily the goddess is depicted holding a torch in one hand and an offering on the other.",
"The torch was used for the ignition of the fire on the altar.The Niobid Krater.",
"Apollo and Artemis kill the children of Niobe, 460-450 BCE by the Niobid Painter.",
"Louvre, Paris'''Eurynome''', wide ruling, at Phigalia in Arcadia.",
"Her wooden image (xoanon) was bound with a roller golden chain.",
"The xoanon depicted a woman's upper body and the lower body of a fish.",
"Pausanias identifies her as one of the Oceanids daughters of Oceanus and Tethys'''Hagemo''', or '''Hegemone''', leader, as the leader of the nymphs.",
"Artemis was playing and dancing with the nymphs who lived near springs, waters and forests and she was hunting surrounded by them.",
"The nymphs joined the festival of the marriage and then they returned to their original form.",
"The pregnant women appealed to the nymphs for help.",
"In Greek popular culture the commandress of the Neraiden (fairies) is called \"Great lady\", \"Lady Kalo\" or \"Queen of the mountains\".",
"'''Heleia''', related to the marsh or meadow in Arcadia, Messenia and Kos.",
"'''Hemeresia''', the soothing goddess worshipped at well Lusoi'''Heurippa''', horse finder, at Pheneus in Arcadia.",
"Her sanctuary was near the bronze statue of Poseidon Hippios (horse).",
"In a legend, Odysseus lost his mares and travelled throughout Greece to find them.",
"He found his mares at Pheneus, where he founded the temple of \"Artemis Heurippa\".",
"'''Hymnia''', at Orchomenos in Boeotia.",
"She was a goddess of dance and songs, especially of female choruses.",
"The priestesses of Artemis Hymnia couldn't have a normal life like the other women.",
"They were at first virgins and were to remain celibate in the priesthood.",
"They could not use the same baths and they were not allowed to enter the house of a private man.",
"'''Iakinthotrophos''', nurse of Hyacinthos at Knidos.",
"Hyacinthos was a god of vegetation with Minoan origin.",
"After his birth he was abandoned by his mother and then he was nurtured by Artemis who represents the first power of nature.",
"'''Imbrasia''', from the name of a river at Samos.",
"'''Iocheaira''', shooter of arrows by Homer (archer queen), as goddess of hunting.",
"She has a wild character and Hera advises her to kill animals in the forest, instead of fighting with her superiors.",
"Apollo and Artemis kill with their arrows the children of Niobe because she offended her mother Leto.",
"In the European and Greek popular religion the arrow-shots from invisible beings can bring diseases and death.Left to right: Artemis, Apollo with his lyre, Leto and Ares.",
"Attic amphora ca.",
"510 BC, by Psiax Painter.",
"National Archaeological Museum (Madrid)'''Issora''', or '''Isora''', at Sparta, with the surname '''Limnaia''' or '''Pitanitis'''.",
"Issorium was a part of a great summit which advances into the level of Eurotas a Pausanias identifies her with the Minoan Britomartis.",
"'''Kalliste''', the most beautiful, another form of Artemis with the shape of a bear at Tricoloni near Megalopolis a mountainous area full of wild beasts.",
"Kallisto the attendant of Artemis, bore Arcas the patriarch of the Arcaden.",
"In a legend Kallisto was transformed into a bear and in another myth Artemis shot her.",
"Kallisto is a hypostasis of Artemis with a theriomorphic form from a pre-Greek cult.",
"''''Keladeini''', echoing chasing (noisy) in Homer's Iliad because she hunts wild boars and deer surrounded by her nymphs.",
"''''Kithone''', as a goddess of childbirth at Millet.",
"Her name is probably derived from the custom of clothes consecration to the goddess, for a happy childbirth.",
"'''Kolainis''', related with the animals at Euboea and Attica.",
"At Eretria she had a major temple and she was called '''Amarysia'''.",
"The goddess became a healer goddess of women.",
"'''Kolias''', in a cult of women.",
"Men were excluded because the fertility of the earth was related to motherhood.",
"Aristophanes mentions Kolias and ''Genetyllis'' who are accused for lack of restraint.",
"Their cult had a very emotional character.",
"'''Kondyleatis''', named after the village Kondylea, where she had a grove and a temple.",
"In a legend some boys tied a rope around the image of the goddess and said that Artemis was hanged.",
"The boys were killed by the inhabitants and this caused a divine punishment.",
"All the women brought dead children in the world, until the boys were honourably buried.",
"An annual sacrifice was instituted to the divine spirits of the boys.",
"Kondyleatis was most likely the original name of Artemis '''Apanchomeni'''.",
"'''Kordaka''', in Elis.",
"Τhe dancers performed the obscene dance ''kordaka'', which is considered the origin of the dance of the old comedy.",
"The dance is famous for its nudge and hilarity and gave the name to the goddess.",
"'''Korythalia''', derived from ''Korythale'', probably the \"laurel May-branch\", as a goddess of vegetation at Sparta.",
"The epheboi and the girls who entered the marriage age placed the ''Korythale'' in front of the door of the house.",
"In the cult the female dancers (famous in the antiquity) performed boisterous dances and were called ''Korythalistriai''.",
"In Italy, the male dancers wore wooden masks and they were called ''kyrritoi'' (pushing with the horns).",
"'''Kourotrophos''', protector of young boys.",
"During the Apaturia the front hair of young girls and young boys (koureion) were offered to the goddess.",
"'''Laphria''', the mistress of the animals (Pre-Greek name) in many cults, especially in central Greece, Phocis and Patras.",
"\"Laphria\" was the name of the festival.",
"The characteristic rite was the annual fire and there was a custom to throw animals alive in the flames during the fest.",
"The cult of \"Laphria\" at Patras was transferred from the city Calydon of Aetolia In a legend during the Calydonian boar hunt the fierce-huntress Atalanta was the first who wounded the boar.",
"Atalanta was a Greek heroine, symbolizing the free nature and independence '''Lecho''', protector of a woman in childbed, or of one who has just given birth.",
"'''Leukophryene''', derived from the city Leucophrys in Magnesia of Ionia.",
"The original form of the cult of the goddess is unknown, however it seems that once the character of the goddess was similar with her character in Peloponnese.",
"'''Limnaia''', of the marsh, at Sparta, with a swimming place ''Limnaion''.",
"(λίμνη: lake).",
"'''Limnatis''', of the marsh and the lake, at Patras, Ancient Messene and many local cults.",
"During the festival, the Messenian young ladies were violated.",
"Cymbals have been found around the temple, indicating that the festival was celebrated with dances.",
"'''Lochia''', as goddess of childbirth and midwifery.",
"Women consecrated clothes to the goddess for a happy childbirth.",
"Other less common epithets of Artemis as goddess of childbirth are '''Eulochia''' and '''Geneteira'''.",
"'''Lousia''', bather or purifier, as a healer goddess at Lusoi in Arcadia, where Melampus healed the Proitiden.",
"'''Lyaia''', at Syracuse in Sicily.",
"(Spartan colony).",
"There is a clear influence from the cult of Artemis '''Caryatis''' in Laconia.",
"The Sicilian songs were transformed songs from the Laconic bucolic (pastoral) songs at Caryai.Heracles breaking off the golden antler of the Ceryneian Hind, while Athena (left) and Artemis (right) look on.",
"Black-figure amphora, ca.",
"540–530 BC, from Vulci.",
"British Museum, London.",
"'''Lyceia''', of the wolf or with a helmet of a wolf skin, at Troezen in Argolis.",
"It was believed that her temple was built by the hunter Hippolytus who abstained from sex and marriage.",
"Lyceia was probably a surname of Artemis among the Amazons from whom Hippolytus descended from his mother.",
"(Hippolyta).",
"'''Lycoatis''', with a bronze statue at the city Lycoa in Arcadia.",
"The city was near the foot of the mountain Mainalo, which was sacred to, Pan.",
"On the south slope the Mantineians fetched the bones of Arcas, the son of Kallisto.('''Kalliste''').",
"Archaic representation of the goddess Artemis Orthia.",
"Ivory relief plate of a bronze fibula.",
"The goddess holds waterbirds and wears a traditional hair style.",
"From her sactuary at Sparta, 660 BC.",
"National Archaeological Museum of Athens'''Lygodesma''', willow bound, at Sparta (another name of '''Orthia''').",
"In a legend her image was discovered in a thicket of willows.",
"standing upright (orthia).",
"'''Melissa''', bee or beauty of nature, as a moon goddess.",
"In Neoplatonic philosophy melissa is any pure being of souls coming to birth.",
"The goddess took suffering away from mothers giving birth.",
"It was Melissa who drew souls coming to birth.",
"'''Molpadia''', singer of divine songs, a rare epithet of Artemis as a goddess of dances and songs and leader of the nymphs.",
"In a legend Molpadia was an Amazon.",
"During the Attic war she killed Antiope to save her by the Athenian king Theseus, but she was killed by Theseus.",
"'''Munichia''', in a cult at Piraeus, related to the ''arkteia'' of '''Brauronian''' Artemis.",
"According to legend, if someone killed a bear, he should be punished by sacrificing his daughter in the sanctuary.",
"Embaros disguised his daughter by dressing her like a bear (arktos), and hid her in the adyton.",
"He placed a goat on the altar and he sacrificed the goat instead of his daughter.",
"'''Mysia''', with a temple on the road from Sparta to Arcadia near the \"Tomb of the Horse\".",
"'''Oenoatis''', derived from the city Oenoe in Argolis.",
"Above the town there was the mountain Artemisium, with the temple of the goddess on the summit.",
"In a Greek legend the mountain was the place where Heracles chased and captured the terrible Ceryneian Hind, an enormous female deer with golden antlers and hooves of bronze.",
"The deer was sacred to Artemis.",
"'''Orthia''', upright, with a famous festival at Sparta.",
"Her cult was introduced by the Dorians.",
"She was worshipped as a goddess of vegetation in an orgiastic cult with boisterous cyclic dances.Among the offerings, there were terracotta masks representing grotesque faces and it seems that animal-masks were also used.",
"In literature there was a great fight for taking the pieces of cheese that were offered to the goddess.",
"The whipping of the epheboi near the altar was a ritual of initiation, preparing them for their future life as soldiers.",
"During this ritual the altar was full of blood.Votive relief with a dedication to Artemis Phosphorus.",
"An exhibit of Varna Archaeological Museum'''Paidotrophos''', protector of children at Corone in Messenia.",
"During a festival of '''Korythalia''' the wet-nurses brought the infants in the sanctuary of the goddess, to get her protection.",
"'''Peitho''', Persuasion, at the city Argos in Argolis.",
"Her sanctuary was in the market place.",
"In Pelopponnese Peitho is related to Artemis.",
"In Athens Peitho is the consensual force in civilized society and emphasizes civic armony.",
"'''Pergaia''', who was worshipped at Pamphylia of Ionia.",
"A famous annual festival was celebrated in honor of Artemis in the city Perga.",
"Filial cults existed in Pisidia, north of Pamphylia.",
"'''Pheraia''', from the city Pherai, at Argos, Athens and Sicyon.",
"It was believed that the image of the goddess was brought from the city Pherai of Thessaly.",
"This conception relates Artemis with the distinctly Thessalian goddess Enodia.",
"Enodia had similar functions with Hecate and she carried the common epithet \"Pheraia\".",
"'''Phakelitis''', of the bundle, at Tyndaris in Sicily.",
"In the local legend the image of the goddess was found in a bundle of dry sticks.",
"'''Phoebe''', bright, as a moon goddess sister of Phoebus.",
"The epithet Phoebe is also given to the moon goddess Selene.'''",
"Phosphoros''', carrier of light.",
"In Ancient Messene she is carrying a torch as a moon-goddess and she is identified with Hecate.",
"Artemis (potnia theron) on amphora of Naxos, Delos, 700-675 BC, Archaelogical Museum of Myconos'''Polo,''' in Thasos, with inscriptions and statues from the Hellenistic and Roman period.",
"The name is probably related to \"parthenos\" (virgin).",
"'''Potamia''', of the river, at Ortygia in Sicily.",
"In a legend Arethusa, was a chaste nymph and tried to escape from the river god Alpheus who fell in love with her.",
"She was transformed by Artemis into a stream, traversed underground and appeared at Ortygia, thus providing water for the city.",
"Ovid calls Arethusa, \"Alfeias\" ('''Alfaea''') (of the river god).",
"'''Potnia Theron''', mistress of the animals.",
"The origin of her cult is Pre-Greek and the term is used by Homer for the goddess of hunting.",
"Potnia was the name of the Mycenean goddess of nature.",
"In the earliest Minoan conceptions the \"Master of the animals\" is depicted between lions and daimons (Minoan Genius).",
"Sometimes \"potnia theron\" is depicted with the head of a Gorgon, who is her distant ancestor.",
"She is the only Greek goddess who stands close to the daimons and she has a wild side which differentiates her from other Greek gods.",
"In the Greek legends when the goddess was offended she would send terrible animals like the Erymanthian boar and Calydonian boar to laid waste the farmer's land, or voracious birds like the Stymphalian birds to attack farms and humans.",
"In Arcadia and during the festival of Laphria, there is evidence of barbaric animal sacrifices.'''",
"Pythia''', as a goddess worshipped at Delphi.Hecate or Artemis is depicted with a bow, twin flaming torches and a large dog.",
"Archaic Attic black figure kylix, attributed to Kleibolos Painter.",
"Museum of the University of Tübingen, Baden'''Saronia''', of Saron, at Troezen across the Saronic gulf.",
"In a legend the king Saron was chasing a doe that dashed into the sea.",
"He followed the doe in the waters and he was drowned in the waves of the sea.",
"He gave his name to the Saronic gulf.",
"'''Selasphoros''', carrier of light, flame, as a moon-goddess identified with Hecate, in the cult of Munichia at Piraeus.",
"'''Soteira''' (Kore Soteira), Kore saviour, at Phigalia.",
"In Arcadia the mistress of the animals is the first nymph closely related to the springs and the animals, in a surrounding of animal-headed daimons.",
"At Lycosura Artemis is depicted holding a snake and a torch and dressed with a deer skin, besides Demeter and Persephone.",
"It was said that she was not the daughter of Leto, but the daughter of Demeter.",
"'''Stymphalia''', of Stymphalus, a city in Arcadia.",
"In a legend the water of the river descended in a chasm which was clogged up and the water overflowed creating a big marsh on the plain.",
"A hunter was chasing a deer and both fell into the mud at the bottom of the chasm.",
"The next day the whole water of the marsh dried up and the land was cultivated.",
"The monstrous man eating Stymphalian birds that were killed by Heracles were considered birds of Artemis.",
"'''Tauria''', or '''Tauro''' (the Tauric goddess), from the Tauri or of the bull.",
"Euripides mentions the image of \"Artemis Tauria\".",
"It was believed that the image of the goddess had divine powers.",
"Her image was considered to have been carried from Tauris by Orestes and Iphigenia and was brought to Brauron, Sparta or Aricia.Coin from Tauric Chersonesus with Artemis, deer, bull, club and quiver.",
"ca 320-290 BC.",
"Diagora-, magistrate.",
"CHER, Artemis Parthenos left.",
"DIAGORA, Bull butting right; Christopher Markom Collection'''Tauropolos''', usually interpreted as hunting bull goddess.",
"Tauropolos was not original in Greece and she has similar functions with foreign goddesses, especially with the mythical bull-goddess.",
"The cult can be identified at Halae Araphenides in Attica.",
"At the end of the peculiar festival, a man was sacrificed.",
"He was killed in the ritual with a sword cutting his throat.",
"Strabo mentions that during the night-fest of Tauropolia a girl was raped.",
"'''Thermia''', as a healer goddess at Lousoi in Arcadia, where Melampus healed the Proitiden.",
"'''Toxia''', or '''Toxitis''', bowstring in torsion, as goddess of hunting in the island of Kos and at Gortyn.",
"She is the sister of \"Apollo Toxias\".",
"'''Triclaria''', at Patras.",
"Her cult was superimposed on the cult of Dionysos ''Aisemnetis''.",
"During the festival of the god the children were wearing garlands of corn-ears.",
"In a ritual they laid them aside to the goddess Artemis.",
"Triclaria was a priestess of Artemis who made love with her lover in the sanctuary.",
"They were punished to be sacrificed in the temple and each year the people should sacrifice a couple to the goddess.",
"Europylus came carrying a chest with the image of Dionysos who put an end to the killings.",
"'''Corythallia''', epithet of Artemis at Sparta.",
"During the Tithenidia festival the Spartan boys were carried into her temple in the city."
],
[
"Mythology",
"===Birth===Leto on the run with Artemis and Apollo, Roman statue circa 350-400 CEVarious conflicting accounts are given in Greek mythology regarding the birth of Artemis and Apollo, her twin brother.",
"In terms of parentage, though, all accounts agree that she was the daughter of Zeus and Leto and that she was the twin sister of Apollo.",
"In some sources, she is born at the same time as Apollo; but in others, earlier or later.Although traditionally stated to be twins, the author of ''The Homeric Hymn 3 to Apollo'' (the oldest extant account of Leto's wandering and birth of her children) is only concerned with the birth of Apollo, and sidelines Artemis; in fact in the Homeric Hymn they are not stated to be twins at all.It is a slightly later poet, Pindar, who speaks of a single pregnancy.",
"The two earliest poets, Homer and Hesiod, confirm Artemis and Apollo's status as full siblings born to the same mother and father, but neither explicitly makes them twins.According to Callimachus, Hera, who was angry with her husband Zeus for impregnating Leto, forbade her from giving birth on either ''terra firma'' (the mainland) or on an island, but the island of Delos disobeyed and allowed Leto to give birth there.",
"According to some, this rooted the once freely floating island to one place.According to the Homeric Hymn to Artemis, however, the island where she and her twin were born was Ortygia.",
"In ancient Cretan history, Leto was worshipped at Phaistos, and in Cretan mythology, Leto gave birth to Apollo and Artemis on the islands known today as Paximadia.A ''scholium'' of Servius on ''Aeneid'' iii.",
"72 accounts for the island's archaic name Ortygia by asserting that Zeus transformed Leto into a quail (''ortux'') to prevent Hera from finding out about his infidelity, and Kenneth McLeish suggested further that in quail form, Leto would have given birth with as few birth-pains as a mother quail suffers when she lays an egg.",
"Artemis (left) and Apollo try to get the Ceryneian Hind from Heracles.",
"Detail of an Attic black-figure amphora ca.",
"530-520 BC.",
"Louvre, Paris The myths also differ as to whether Artemis was born first, or Apollo.",
"Most stories depict Artemis as firstborn, becoming her mother's midwife upon the birth of her brother Apollo.",
"Servius, a late fourth/early fifth-century grammarian, wrote that Artemis was born first because at first it was night, whose instrument is the Moon, which Artemis represents, and then day, whose instrument is the Sun, which Apollo represents.",
"Pindar however writes that both twins shone like the Sun when they came into the bright light.After their troubling childbirth, Leto took the twin infants and crossed over to Lycia, in the southwest corner of Asia Minor, where she tried to drink from and bathe the babies in a spring she found there.",
"However, the local Lycian peasants tried to prevent the twins and their mother from making use of the water by stirring up the muddy bottom of the spring, so the three of them could not drink it.",
"Leto, in her anger that the impious Lycians had refused to offer hospitality to a fatigued mother and her thirsty infants, transformed them all into frogs, forever doomed to swim and hop around the spring.Leto with Zeus and their children, 420-410 BC, marble, Archaeological Museum of Brauron===Relations with men===The river god Alpheus was in love with Artemis, but as he realized he could do nothing to win her heart, he decided to capture her.",
"When Artemis and her companions at Letrenoi go to Alpheus, she becomes suspicious of his motives and covers her face with mud so he does not recognize her.",
"In another story, Alphaeus tries to rape Artemis' attendant Arethusa.",
"Artemis pities the girl and saves her, transforming her into a spring in the temple Artemis Alphaea in Letrini, where the goddess and her attendant drink.Bouphagos, son of the Titan Iapetus, sees Artemis and thinks about raping her.",
"Reading his sinful thoughts, Artemis strikes him down at Mount Pholoe.Daphnis was a young boy, a son of Hermes, who was accepted by and became a follower of the goddess Artemis; Daphnis would often accompany her in hunting and entertain her with his singing of pastoral songs and playing of the panpipes.Artemis taught a man, Scamandrius, how to be a great archer, and he excelled in the use of a bow and arrow with her guidance.Broteas was a famous hunter who refused to honour Artemis, and boasted that nothing could harm him, not even fire.",
"Artemis then drove him mad, causing him to walk into fire, ending his life.According to Antoninus Liberalis, Siproites was a Cretan who was metamorphized into a woman by Artemis, for, while hunting, seeing the goddess bathing.",
"Artemis changed a Calydonian man named Calydon, son of Ares and Astynome, into stone when he saw the goddess bathing naked.===Divine retribution=======Actaeon====Artemis drives a chariot drawn by a team of deer next to the dying Actaeon.",
"Attic red-figure volute crater, ca.",
"450–440 BCE by the Painter of the Wooly Satyrs.",
"Louvre, ParisMultiple versions of the Actaeon myth survive, though many are fragmentary.",
"The details vary but at the core, they involve the great hunter Actaeon whom Artemis turns into a stag for a transgression, and who is then killed by hunting dogs.",
"Usually, the dogs are his own, but no longer recognize their master.",
"Occasionally they are said to be the hounds of Artemis.Various tellings diverge in terms of the hunter's transgression: sometimes merely seeing the virgin goddess naked, sometimes boasting he is a better hunter than she, or even merely being a rival of Zeus for the affections of Semele.",
"Apollodorus, who records the Semele version, notes that the ones with Artemis are more common.According to Lamar Ronald Lacey's ''The Myth of Aktaion: Literary and Iconographic Studies'', the standard modern text on the work, the most likely original version of the myth portrays Actaeon as the hunting companion of the goddess who, seeing her naked in her sacred spring, attempts to force himself on her.",
"For this hubris, he is turned into a stag and devoured by his own hounds.",
"However, in some surviving versions, Actaeon is a stranger who happens upon Artemis.Diana and her nymph surprised by Actaeon.Mosaic, 2nd century CE Ruins of Volubilis, MoroccoA single line from Aeschylus's now lost play ''Toxotides'' (\"female archers\") is among the earlier attestations of Actaeon's myth, stating that \"the dogs destroyed their master utterly\", with no confirmation of Actaeon's metamorphosis or the god he offended (but it is heavily implied to be Artemis, due to the title).",
"Ancient artwork depicting the myth of Actaeon predate Aeschylus.",
"Euripides, coming in a bit later, wrote in the ''Bacchae'' that Actaeon was torn to shreds and perhaps devoured by his \"flesh-eating\" hunting dogs when he claimed to be a better hunter than Artemis.",
"Like Aeschylus, he does not mention Actaeon being deer-shaped when that happens.",
"Callimachus writes that Actaeon chanced upon Artemis bathing in the woods, and she caused him to be devoured by his own hounds for the sacrilege, and he makes no mention of transformation into a deer either.Diodorus Siculus wrote that Actaeon dedicated his prizes in hunting to Artemis, proposed marriage to her, and even tried to forcefully consummate said \"marriage\" inside the very sacred temple of the goddess; for this he was given the form \"of one of the animals which he was wont to hunt\", and then torn to shreds by his hunting dogs.",
"Diodorus also mentioned the alternative of Actaeon claiming to be a better hunter than the goddess of the hunt.",
"Hyginus also mentions Actaeon attempting to rape Artemis when he finds her bathing naked, and her transforming him into the doomed deer.Diana and Actaeon'' by Titian (1556–59), oil in canvas.",
"National Gallery and Scottish National Gallery, London and Edinburg.Apollodorus wrote that when Actaeon saw Artemis bathing, she turned him into a deer on the spot, and intentionally drove his dogs into a frenzy so that they would kill and devour him.",
"Afterward, Chiron built a sculpture of Actaeon to comfort his dogs in their grief, as they could not find their master no matter how much they looked for him.According to the Latin version of the story told by the Roman Ovid, Actaeon was a hunter who after returning home from a long day's hunting in the woods, he stumbled upon Artemis and her retinue of nymphs bathing in her sacred grotto.",
"The nymphs, panicking, rushed to cover Artemis' naked body with their own, as Artemis splashed some water on Actaeon, saying he was welcome to share with everyone the tale of seeing her without any clothes as long as he could share it at all.",
"Immediately, he was transformed into a deer, and in panic ran away.",
"But he did not go far, as he was hunted down and eventually caught and devoured by his own fifty hunting dogs, who could not recognize their own master.Pausanias says that Actaeon saw Artemis naked and that she threw a deerskin on him so that his hounds would kill him, in order to prevent him from marrying Semele.====Niobe====The story of Niobe, queen of Thebes and wife of Amphion, who blasphemously boasted of being superior to Leto.",
"This myth is very old; Homer knew of it and wrote that Niobe had given birth to twelve children, equally divided in six sons and six daughters (the Niobids).Other sources speak of fourteen children, seven sons, and seven daughters.",
"Niobe claimed of being a better mother than Leto, for having more children than Leto's own two, \"but the two, though they were only two, destroyed all those others.\"",
"Leto was not slow to catch up on that and grew angry at the queen's hubris.",
"She summoned her children and commanded them to avenge the slight against her.",
"A 1772 painting by Jacques-Louis David depicting Niobe attempting to shield her children from Artemis and Apollo.",
"Dallas Museum of Art, DallasSwiftly Apollo and Artemis descended on Thebes.",
"While the sons were hunting in the woods, Apollo crept up on them and slew all seven with his silver bow.",
"The dead bodies were brought to the palace.",
"Niobe wept for them, but did not relent, saying that even now she was better than Leto, for she still had seven children, her daughters.On cue, Artemis then started shooting the daughters one by one.",
"Right as Niobe begged for her youngest one to be spared, Artemis killed that last one.",
"Niobe cried bitter tears, and was turned into a rock.",
"Amphion, at the sight of his dead sons, killed himself.",
"The gods themselves entombed them.",
"In some versions, Apollo and Artemis spared a single son and daughter each, for they prayed to Leto for help; thus Niobe had as many children as Leto did, but no more.====Orion====Daniel Seiter's 1685 painting of Diana over Orion's dead body, before he is placed in the heavens.",
"Louvre, Paris Orion was Artemis' hunting companion; after giving up on trying to find Oenopion, Orion met Artemis and her mother Leto, and joined the goddess in hunting.",
"A great hunter himself, he bragged that he would kill every beast on earth.",
"Gaia, the earth, was not too pleased to hear that, and sent a giant scorpion to sting him.",
"Artemis then transferred him into the stars as the constellation Orion.",
"In one version Orion died after pushing Leto out of the scorpion's way.In another version, Orion tries to violate Opis, one of Artemis' followers from Hyperborea, and Artemis kills him.",
"In a version by Aratus, Orion grabs Artemis' robe and she kills him in self-defense.",
"Other writers have Artemis kill him for trying to rape her or one of her attendants.Istrus wrote a version in which Artemis fell in love with Orion, apparently the only time Artemis ever fell in love.",
"She meant to marry him, and no talk from her brother Apollo would change her mind.",
"Apollo then decided to trick Artemis, and while Orion was off swimming in the sea, he pointed at him (barely a spot in the horizon) and wagered that Artemis could not hit that small \"dot\".",
"Artemis, ever eager to prove she was the better archer, shot Orion, killing him.",
"She then placed him among the stars.In Homer's ''Iliad'', the goddess of the dawn Eos seduces Orion, angering the gods who did not approve of immortal goddesses taking mortal men for lovers, causing Artemis to shoot and kill him on the island of Ortygia.====Callisto====Artemis (seated and wearing a radiate crown), the beautiful nymph Callisto (left), Eros and other nymphs.",
"Antique fresco from Pompeii.",
"National Archaeological Museum, NaplesCallisto, the daughter of Lycaon, King of Arcadia,was one of Artemis' hunting attendants, and, as a companion of Artemis, took a vow of chastity.According to Hesiod in his lost poem ''Astronomia'', Zeus appeared to Callisto, and seduced her, resulting in her becoming pregnant.",
"Though she was able to hide her pregnancy for a time, she was soon found out while bathing.",
"Enraged, Artemis transformed Callisto into a bear, and in this form she gave birth to her son Arcas.",
"Both of them were then captured by shepherds and given to Lycaon, and Callisto thus lost her child.",
"Sometime later, Callisto \"thought fit to go into\" a forbidden sanctuary of Zeus, and was hunted by the Arcadians, her son among them.",
"When she was about to be killed, Zeus saved her by placing her in the heavens as a constellation of a bear.In his ''De Astronomica'', Hyginus, after recounting the version from Hesiod, presents several other alternative versions.",
"The first, which he attributes to Amphis, says that Zeus seduced Callisto by disguising himself as Artemis during a hunting session, and that when Artemis found out that Callisto was pregnant, she replied saying that it was the goddess's fault, causing Artemis to transform her into a bear.",
"This version also has both Callisto and Arcas placed in the heavens, as the constellations Ursa Major and Ursa Minor.Hyginus then presents another version in which, after Zeus lay with Callisto, it was Hera who transformed her into a bear.",
"Artemis later, while hunting, kills the bear, and \"later, on being recognized, Callisto was placed among the stars\".",
"Hyginus also gives another version, in which Hera tries to catch Zeus and Callisto in the act, causing Zeus to transform her into a bear.",
"Hera, finding the bear, points it out to Artemis, who is hunting; Zeus, in panic, places Callisto in the heavens as a constellation.",
"''Diana and Callisto'', c. 1556–1559, by Titian.",
"Scottish National Gallery, EdinburghOvid gives a somewhat different version: Zeus seduced Callisto once again disguised as Artemis, but she seems to realise that it is not the real Artemis, and she thus does not blame Artemis when, during bathing, she is found out.",
"Callisto is, rather than being transformed, simply ousted from the company of the huntresses, and she thus gives birth to Arcas as a human.",
"Only later is she transformed into a bear, this time by Hera.",
"When Arcas, fully grown, is out hunting, he nearly kills his mother, who is saved only by Zeus placing her in the heavens.In the ''Bibliotheca'', a version is presented in which Zeus raped Callisto, \"having assumed the likeness, as some say, of Artemis, or, as others say, of Apollo\".",
"He then turned her into a bear himself so as to hide the event from Hera.",
"Artemis then shot the bear, either upon the persuasion of Hera, or out of anger at Callisto for breaking her virginity.",
"Once Callisto was dead, Zeus made her into a constellation, took the child, named him Arcas, and gave him to Maia, who raised him.Pausanias, in his ''Description of Greece'', presents another version, in which, after Zeus seduced Callisto, Hera turned her into a bear, which Artemis killed to please Hera.",
"Hermes was then sent by Zeus to take Arcas, and Zeus himself placed Callisto in the heavens.===Minor myths===Phintias Painter.",
"Louvre, ParisWhen Zeus' gigantic son Tityos tried to rape Leto, she called out to her children for help, and both Artemis and Apollo were quick to respond by raining down their arrows on Tityos, killing him.Chione was a princess of Phokis.",
"She was beloved by two gods, Hermes and Apollo, and boasted that she was more beautiful than Artemis because she had made two gods fall in love with her at once.",
"Artemis was furious and killed Chione with an arrow, or struck her mute by shooting off her tongue.",
"However, some versions of this myth say Apollo and Hermes protected her from Artemis' wrath.Artemis saved the infant Atalanta from dying of exposure after her father abandoned her.",
"She sent a female bear to nurse the baby, who was then raised by hunters.",
"In some stories, Artemis later sent a bear to injure Atalanta because others claimed Atalanta was a superior hunter.",
"Among other adventures, Atalanta participated in the Calydonian boar hunt, which Artemis had sent to destroy Calydon because King Oeneus had forgotten her at the harvest sacrifices.In the hunt, Atalanta drew the first blood and was awarded the prize of the boar's hide.",
"She hung it in a sacred grove at Tegea as a dedication to Artemis.",
"Meleager was a hero of Aetolia.",
"King Oeneus ordered him to gather heroes from all over Greece to hunt the Calydonian boar.",
"After the death of Meleager, Artemis turns his grieving sisters, the Meleagrids, into guineafowl that Artemis favoured.In Nonnus' ''Dionysiaca'', Aura, the daughter of Lelantos and Periboia, was a companion of Artemis.",
"When out hunting one day with Artemis, she asserts that the goddess's voluptuous body and breasts are too womanly and sensual, and doubts her virginity, arguing that her own lithe body and man-like breasts are better than Artemis' and a true symbol of her own chastity.",
"In anger, Artemis asks Nemesis for help to avenge her dignity.",
"Nemesis agrees, telling Artemis that Aura's punishment will be to lose her virginity, since she dared question that of Artemis.Artemis (Diana) from the \"Rospigliosi type\", Roman copy of the 1st–2nd centuries CE after a Hellenistic original, Louvre Museum.Nemesis then arranges for Eros to make Dionysus fall in love with Aura.",
"Dionysus intoxicates Aura and rapes her as she lies unconscious, after which she becomes a deranged killer.",
"While pregnant, she tries to kill herself or cut open her belly, as Artemis mocks her over it.",
"When she bore twin sons, she ate one, while the other, Iacchus, was saved by Artemis.The twin sons of Poseidon and Iphimedeia, Otos and Ephialtes, grew enormously at a young age.",
"They were aggressive and skilled hunters who could not be killed except by each other.",
"The growth of the Aloadae never stopped, and they boasted that as soon as they could reach heaven, they would kidnap Artemis and Hera and take them as wives.",
"The gods were afraid of them, except for Artemis who captured a fine deer that jumped out between them.",
"In another version of the story, she changed herself into a doe and jumped between them.Giuseppe Mazzuoli, 1709.Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.The Aloadae threw their spears and so mistakenly killed one another.",
"In another version, Apollo sent the deer into the Aloadae's midst, causing their accidental killing of each other.",
"In another version, they start pilling up mountains to reach Mount Olympus in order to catch Hera and Artemis, but the gods spot them and attack.",
"When the twins had retreated the gods learnt that Ares had been captured.",
"The Aloadae, not sure about what to do with Ares, lock him up in a pot.",
"Artemis then turns into a deer and causes them to kill each other.In some versions of the story of Adonis, Artemis sent a wild boar to kill him as punishment for boasting that he was a better hunter than her.",
"In other versions, Artemis killed Adonis for revenge.",
"In later myths, Adonis is a favorite of Aphrodite, who was responsible for the death of Hippolytus, who had been a hunter of Artemis.",
"Therefore, Artemis killed Adonis to avenge Hippolytus's death.",
"In yet another version, Adonis was not killed by Artemis, but by Ares as punishment for being with Aphrodite.Polyphonte was a young woman who fled home in pursuit of a free, virginal life with Artemis, as opposed to the conventional life of marriage and children favoured by Aphrodite.",
"As a punishment, Aphrodite cursed her, causing her to mate and have children with a bear.",
"Artemis, seeing that, was disgusted and sent a horde of wild animals against her, causing Polyphonte to flee to her father's house.",
"Her resulting offspring, Agrius and Oreius, were wild cannibals who incurred the hatred of Zeus.",
"Ultimately the entire family was transformed into birds who became ill portents for mankind.Coronis was a princess from Thessaly who became the lover of Apollo and fell pregnant.",
"While Apollo was away, Coronis began an affair with a mortal man named Ischys.",
"When Apollo learnt of this, he sent Artemis to kill the pregnant Coronis, or Artemis had the initiative to kill Coronis on her own accord for the insult done against her brother.",
"The unborn child, Asclepius, was later removed from his dead mother's womb.When two of her hunting companions who had sworn to remain chaste and be devoted to her, Rhodopis and Euthynicus, fell in love with each other and broke their vows in a cavern, Artemis turned Rhodopis into a fountain inside that very cavern as punishment.",
"The two had fallen in love not on their own but only after Eros had struck them with his love arrows, commanded by his mother Aphrodite, who had taken offence in that Rhodopis and Euthynicus rejected love and marriage in favour of a chaste life.When the monstrous Typhon attacked Olympus, all the terrified gods transformed into various animals and fled to Egypt.",
"Artemis became a cat, as she was identified by the Greeks with the Egyptian feline goddess Bastet.When the queen of Kos Echemeia ceased to worship Artemis, she shot her with an arrow; Persephone then snatched the still-living Euthemia and brought her to the Underworld.===Trojan War===Artemis slaying a deer, from the courtyard of House III, 125–100 BCE, Archaeological Museum of Delos, Greece.Artemis may have been represented as a supporter of Troy because her brother Apollo was the patron god of the city, and she herself was widely worshipped in western Anatolia in historical times.",
"Artemis plays a significant role in the war; like Leto and Apollo, Artemis took the side of the Trojans.",
"In Iliad Artemis on her chariot with the golden reigns, kills the daughter of Bellerophon.",
"Bellorophone was a divine Greek hero who killed the monster Chimera.",
"At the beginning of the Greek's journey to Troy, Artemis punished Agamemnon after he killed a sacred stag in a sacred grove and boasted that he was a better hunter than the goddess.",
"''The Sacrifice of Iphigeneia'' (1653) by Sébastien Bourdon, Musée des Beaux-Arts d'Orléans.When the Greek fleet was preparing at Aulis to depart for Troy to commence the Trojan War, Artemis becalmed the winds.",
"The seer Calchas erroneously advised Agamemnon that the only way to appease Artemis was to sacrifice his daughter Iphigenia.",
"In some version of the myth, Artemis then snatched Iphigenia from the altar and substituted a deer; in others, Artemis allowed Iphigenia to be sacrificed.",
"In versions where Iphigenia survived, a number of different myths have been told about what happened after Artemis took her; either she was brought to Tauris and led the priests there, or she became Artemis' immortal companion.Aeneas was also helped by Artemis, Leto, and Apollo.",
"Apollo found him wounded by Diomedes and lifted him to heaven.",
"There, the three deities secretly healed him in a great chamber.During the ''theomachy'', Artemis found herself standing opposite of Hera, on which a scholium to the ''Iliad'' wrote that they represent the Moon versus the air around the Earth.",
"Artemis chided her brother Apollo for not fighting Poseidon and told him never to brag again; Apollo did not answer her.",
"An angry Hera berated Artemis for daring to fight her:How now art thou fain, thou bold and shameless thing, to stand forth against me?",
"No easy foe I tell thee, am I, that thou shouldst vie with me in might, albeit thou bearest the bow, since it was against women that Zeus made thee a lion, and granted thee to slay whomsoever of them thou wilt.",
"In good sooth it is better on the mountains to be slaying beasts and wild deer than to fight amain with those mightier than thou.",
"Howbeit if thou wilt, learn thou of war, that thou mayest know full well how much mightier am I, seeing thou matchest thy strength with mine.Hera then grabbed Artemis' hands by the wrists, and holding her in place, beat her with her own bow.",
"Crying, Artemis left her bow and arrows where they lay and ran to Olympus to cry at her father Zeus' knees, while her mother Leto picked up her bow and arrows and followed her weeping daughter."
],
[
"Worship",
"Temple of Artemis at Brauron.The stoa and the sacred spring from the SW.Artemis, the goddess of forests and hills, was worshipped throughout ancient Greece.",
"Her best known cults were on the island of Delos(her birthplace), in Attica at Brauron and Mounikhia (near Piraeus), and in Sparta.",
"She was often depicted in paintings and statues in a forest setting, carrying a bow and arrows and accompanied by a deer.The ancient Spartans used to sacrifice to her as one of their patron goddesses before starting a new military campaign.Athenian festivals in honor of Artemis included Elaphebolia, Mounikhia, Kharisteria, and Brauronia.",
"The festival of Artemis Orthia was observed in Sparta.Pre-pubescent and adolescent Athenian girls were sent to the sanctuary of Artemis at Brauron to serve the Goddess for one year.",
"During this time, the girls were known as ''arktoi'', or little she-bears.Roman Temple of Artemis'' in Jerash, Jordan, built during the reign of Antoninus Pius.A myth explaining this servitude states that a bear had formed the habit of regularly visiting the town of Brauron, and the people there fed it, so that, over time, the bear became tame.",
"A girl teased the bear, and, in some versions of the myth, it killed her, while, in other versions, it clawed out her eyes.",
"Either way, the girl's brothers killed the bear, and Artemis was enraged.",
"She demanded that young girls \"act the bear\" at her sanctuary in atonement for the bear's death.Artemis was worshipped as one of the primary goddesses of childbirth and midwifery along with Eileithyia.",
"Dedications of clothing to her sanctuaries after a successful birth was common in the Classical era.",
"Artemis could be a deity to be feared by pregnant women, as deaths during this time were attributed to her.",
"As childbirth and pregnancy was a very common and important event, there were numerous other deities associated with it, many localized to a particular geographic area, including but not limited to Aphrodite, Hera and Hekate.The site of the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus.",
"Its final form was one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.It was considered a good sign when Artemis appeared in the dreams of hunters and pregnant women, but a naked Artemis was seen as an ill omen.",
"According to Pseudo-Apollodorus, she assisted her mother in the delivery of her twin.",
"Older sources, such as Homeric Hymn to Delian Apollo (in Line 115), have the arrival of Eileithyia on Delos as the event that allows Leto to give birth to her children.",
"Contradictory is Hesiod's presentation of the myth in Theogony, where he states that Leto bore her children before Zeus' marriage to Hera with no commentary on any drama related to their birth.Despite her being primarily known as a goddess of hunting and the wilderness, she was also connected to dancing, music, and song like her brother Apollo; she is often seen singing and dancing with her nymphs, or leading the chorus of the Muses and the Graces at Delphi.",
"In Sparta, girls of marriageable age performed the ''partheneia'' (choral maiden songs) in her honor.",
"An ancient Greek proverb, written down by Aesop, went \"For where did Artemis ''not'' dance?",
"\", signifying the goddess' connection to dancing and festivity.During the Classical period in Athens, she was identified with Hekate.",
"Artemis also assimilated Caryatis (Carya).There was a women's cult at Cyzicus worshiping Artemis, which was called Dolon (Δόλων).===Festivals===Artemis was born on the sixth day of the month Thargelion (around May), which made it sacred for her, as her birthday.",
"On the seventh day of the same month was Apollo's birthday.",
"Artemis was worshipped in many festivals throughout Greece mainland and the islands, Asia Minor and south Italy.",
"Most of these festivals were celebrated during spring.",
"; AtticaBronze statue of Artemis (Piraeus Artemis), with a quiver at the back and the pose of the fingers which held a bow.",
"A classicistic work, 4th century BC attributed to Euphranor.",
"Archaeological Museum of Piraeus* Athens.",
"The festival Elaphebolia was celebrated on the sixth day of the month Elaphebolion (ninth month) .",
"The name is related to ''elaphos'' (deer) and Artemis is the Deer Huntress.",
"Cakes made from flour, honey, and sesame and in the shape of stags were offered to the goddess during the festival.",
"* Brauron.",
"The festival was remarkable for the ''arkteia'', where girls, aged between five and ten, were dressed in saffron robes and played at being bears, or \"act the bear\" to appease the goddess after she sent the plague when her bear was killed.",
"Another commentator says that girls had to ‘placate the goddess for their virginity (''parthenia''), so that they would not be the object of revenge from her.",
"* Piraeus.",
"The festival of Artemis Munichia was celebrated on the 6th or 16th day of the month Munichion (tenth month).",
"Young girls were dressed up as bears, as for the Brauronia.",
"In the temple have been found sherds grom the geometric period.",
"The festival commemorated the victory of the Greek fleet over the Persians at Salamis.",
"* Athens.",
"Artemis had a filial cult of Brauronia, near the Acropolis.",
"* Agrae, a district of Athens, with a temple of Artemis-Agrotera.",
"(huntress) On the 6th day of the month Boedromion , an armed procession would take a large numbe of goats to the temple.",
"They would all be sacrificed in honor of the victory at the Battle of Marathon.",
"The festival was called \"Charisteria\", also known as the Athenian \"Thanksgiving\".",
"* Myrrhinus, a deme near Merenda (Markopoulo).There was a cult of ''Kolainis''.",
"Kolainis is usually identified with Artemis Amarysia in Euboia.",
"Some rites and animal sacrifices were probably similar with the rites of Laphria.",
"*Athmonia, a deme near Marousi.",
"The festival of Artemis Amarysia, was no less splendid that the festival of Amarysia in Euboea.",
"*Halae Araphenides, a deme near Brauron.",
"The fest Tauropolia was celebrated in honour of Artemis Tauropolos.",
"During the festival a human sacrifice was represented in a ritual.",
"* Erchia a district of Athens.",
"The modern Athenian airport was built over the ruins of the deme.",
"A festival was celebrated on the 16th day of the month Metageitnion.",
"Sacrifices were offered to Artemis and Hekate.",
";Central Greece Artemis on her chariot drawn by two hinds.",
"Detail from an Attic red figure crater 460-440 BC.",
"Attributed to the Painter of the Wooly Satyrs.",
"Louvre, Paris.",
"* Hyampolis in Phocis.",
"During an attack of the Thessalians, the Phocians terrified gathered together in one spot their women, children, movable property, and also their clothes, gold and made a vast pyre.",
"The order was that if they would be defeated, all should be killed and would be thrown into the flames together with their property.",
"The Phocians achieved a great victory and each year they celebrated their victory in the festival Elaphebolia-Laphria in honour of Artemis.",
"All kinds of oferrings were burned in an annual fire, reminding the great pyre of the battle.",
"*Delphi in Phocis.",
"The festival Laphria was celebrated in the month ''Laphrios''.",
"The cult of Artemis ''Laphria'' was introduced by the priests of Delphi ''Lab(r)yaden'' who had probably Cretan origin.",
"Laphria is certainly the Pre-Greek \"Mistress of the animals\".",
"*Delphi in Phocis .",
"The festival ''Eucleia'' was celebrated in honour of Artemis.",
"According to the Labyaden-inscriptions the oferrings ''darata'' are determined by the specified ''gamela'' and ''pedēia''.",
"''Eucleia'' was a goddess of marriage.Mixing Vessel with Hermes, Apollo and Artemis.",
"Lucanian, 415-400 BC, attributed to the Palermo Painter.",
"J. Paul Getty Museum,California*Tithorea in Ancient Phocis.",
"It seems that the festival of Isis was a reform of the festival of Artemis Laphria.",
"*Erineos in Doris.",
"Festival of Artemis Laphria, indicated by the month ''Laphrios'' in the local calendar.",
"*Antikyra in Phocis.Cult of Artemis-Diktynaia, a popular goddess who was worshipped with great respect.",
"*Thebes in Boeotia.",
"Before marriage a premilinary sacrifice should be made by the bride and the groom to Artemis-Eucleia.",
"*Amarynthos in Euboia.",
"Festival of Artemis ''Amarysia''.",
"Animals were sacrificed with rites probably similar with the fest Laphria.",
"*Aulis in Boeotia.",
"In a festival all kinds of sacrificial animals were oferred to the goddess.",
"It seems that the festival was a reverberation of the rites of Laphria.",
"*Calydon in Aetolia.",
"Calydon is considered the origin of the cult of Artemis Laphria at Patras.",
"In the Aetolian calendar there was the month ''Laphrios''.",
"Near the city there was the temple of Apollo Laphrius;*Nafpaktos in Aetolia.",
"Cult of Artemis Laphria.*Acarnania.",
"Cult of Artemis-Agrotera (huntress) in a society of hunters.",
";PeloponneseApollo's return to Delos from Hyperboreans.",
"Artemis holding a deer welcomes Apollo.",
"Cycladic krater (7th cent.",
"BC) National Archaeological Museum, Athens.",
"*Patras in Achaea.",
"The great festival Laphria was celebrated in honour of Artemis.",
"The characteristic rite was the annual fire.",
"Birds, deers, sacrificial animals, young wolves and young bears were thrown alive in a great pyre.",
"''Laphria'' (Pre-Greek name) is the \"Mistress of Animals\".",
"Traditionally her cult was introduced from Calydon of Aetolia.*Patras.",
"The Ionians who lived in Ancient Achaea celebrated the annual festival of Artemis ''Triclaria''.",
"Pausanias mentions the legend of human sacrifices to the outraged goddess.",
"The new deity Dionysus, put an end to the sacrifices.*Corinth.",
"The festival ''Eucleia'' was celebrated in honor of Artemis.",
"*Aigeira in Achaea.",
"Festival of Artemis Agrotera (huntress).",
"When the Sicyonians attacked the city, the Aigeirians tied torches on all goats of the area and during night they set the torches alight.",
"The Sicyonians believed that Aigeira had a great army and they retreated.*Sparta.",
"Festival of Artemis-Orthia.",
"The goddess was associated with the female initiatory rite ''Partheneion''.",
"Women performed round dances.",
"In a legend Theseus stole Helene from the dancing floor of Orthia, during the round-dancing.",
"The significant prize of the competitions was an iron sickle (drepanē) indicating that ''Orthia'' was a goddess of vegetation.",
"*Sparta on the road to Amyklai.",
"Artemis-''Korythalia'' was a goddess of vegetation.",
"Women performed lascivious dances.",
"The fest was celebrated in round huts covered with leaves.",
"The nurses brought the infants in the temple of Korythalia during the fest ''Tithenedia''.Marble statue of Artemis-Diana in the Capitoline Museums*Messene near the borders with Laconia.",
"Festival of Artemis ''Limnatis'' (of the lake).",
"The festival was celebrated with cymbals and dances.",
"The goddess was worshipped by young women during the festivals of transition from childhood to adulthood.",
"*Dereion on Taygetos in Laconia.",
"Cult of Artemis -''Dereatis''.",
"The festival was celebrated with the hymns ''calavoutoi'' and with the obscene dance ''callabis''.",
"*Epidauros Limera in Laconia.",
"Cult of Artemis-''Limnatis''.",
"*Caryae on the borders between Laconia and Arcadia .",
"Festival of Artemis-''Caryatis'', a goddess of vegetation related to the tree-cult.",
"Each year women performed an exstatic dance called the ''caryatis''.",
"*Boiai in Laconia.",
"Cult of Artemis-''Soteira'' (savior), which was related to the myrtle tree.",
"When the inhabitants of the cities near the gulf were expelled, Artemis with the shape of a hare guided them to a myrtle tree where they built the new city.",
"*Gytheion in Laconia.",
"Cult of Artemis Laphria, in the month ''Laphrios''.",
"*Elis .",
"Pelops (Peloponnese: Pelop's island) had won the sovereignty of Pisa and his followers celebrated their victory near the temple of Artemis-''Kordaka''.",
"They danced the peculiar dance ''kordax''.Artemis hunting a stag, surrounded by Zeus (left), Nikê (top) and Apollo (right).",
"The goddess is wielding a torch .Attic red-figured pelike 370-350Bc From Campania, South Italy.",
"British Museum, London*Elis .",
"Festival of Artemis-''Elaphia'' in the month ''Elaphios'' (elaphos:deer).",
"Elaphia was a goddess of hunting.",
"*Letrinoi in Elis .",
"Festival of Artemis Alpheaia.",
"Girls wearing masks performed dances.",
"*Olympia in Elis.",
"Annual festival (panegeris) of Artemis ''Alpheaia'' .",
"*Olympia in Elis.",
"Annual festival of Artemis ''Elaphia''.",
"*Olympia in Elis.",
"Annual festival of Artemis ''Daphnaia'' (of the laurel-branch), as a goddess of vegetation.",
"*Hypsus in Arcadia near the borders of Laconia.",
"Annual festival of Artemis-Diktynna.",
"Her temple was built near the sea.",
"*Hypsus .",
"Annual fest of Artemis ''Daphnaia''.",
"(Of the laurel-branch).",
"*Stymphalus in Arcadia .",
"Festival of Artemis-''Stymphalia''.",
"The festival begun near the Katavothres where the water overflowed and created a big marsh.",
"*Orchomenus, in Arcadia.",
"A sanctuary was built for Artemis Hymnia where her festival was celebrated every year.",
"*Tegea in Arcadia, on the road to Laconia.",
"Cult of Artemis-''Limnatis'' (of the lake).",
"*Phigalia in Arcadia.",
"In a battle the Phigalians expelled the conquerors Spartans and recovered their city.",
"On the summit of the Acropolis they built the sanctuary of Artemis-''Soteira'' (Savior) and a statue of the goddess.",
"At the beginning of festivals, all their processions started from the sunctuary.",
"*Troizen in Argolis.",
"Festival of Artemis-''Saronia''.",
"Near the temple was the grave of the king Saron who was drowned into the sea.",
";Northern Greece*Aegae, in Macedonia.",
"Eucleia had a shrine with dedications in the agora of the city.",
"The goddess is associated with Artemis-Eucleia, the goddess of marriage who was widely worshipped in Boeotia.",
"*Apollonia of Chalcidice.",
"The festival Elaphebolia was celebrated in honor of Artemis in the month Elaphebolion;Greek islandsFrom left to right: Artemis holding an oinochoe, Apollo holding a laurel branch and a phiale, about to pour a libation on the altar.",
"Attic red-figure column-krater 450 BC.",
"National Archaeological Museum (Madrid) *Icaria.",
"The ''Tauropolion'', the temple of Artemis Tauropolos was built at Oinoe.",
"There was another smaller temenos that was sacred to Artemis-''Tauropolos ''on the coast of the island.*Cephalonia.",
"Cult of Artemis-Laphria who is related to the legend of Britomartis.*Corcyra.",
"Cult of Artemis-Laphria in the month ''Laphrios''.",
"; Asia Minor*Ephesus in Ionia.",
"The great festival Artemisia was celebreted in honor of Artemis.",
"The wealth and splendor of temple and city were taken as evidence of Artemis Ephesia's power.",
"Under Hellenic rule, and later, under Roman rule, the Ephesian ''Artemisia'' festival was increasingly promoted as a key element in the pan-Hellenic festival circuit .",
"*Perga in Ionia.",
"Famous festival of Artemis-Pergaia.",
"Under Roman rule Diana-Pergaia is identified with Selene.",
"*Iasos in Caria.",
"The festival Elaphebolia was celebrated in honor of Artemis in the month Elaphebolion*Byzantion.",
"Festival of Artemis-Eucleia in the month ''Eucleios''.",
";Magna Graecia* Syracuse in Sicily.",
"The festival of Artemis ''Chitonia'' wasdistinguished by a peculiar dance and by a music on the flute.",
"Chitonia (wearing a loose tunic) was a goddess of hunting.",
"* Syracuse in Sicily.",
"Festival of Artemis-''Lyaia''.",
"Men from the countryside came to the city in a rustic dress.",
"They carried a deer-antler on their head and held a shepherd's stab.",
"They sang satirical songs drinking wine.",
"The festival was the link between the comic performance and the countryside.",
"*Tauromenion in Sicily.",
"Festival of Artemis-Eucleia in the month ''Eucleios''.",
"* Festival of Artemis-''Korythalia''.",
"The male dancers wore wooden masks."
],
[
"Attributes",
"===Virginity===This bronze statue of Artemis in the Archaeological Museum of Piraeus (Athens) dates from the mid-fourth century BCE and was given to sculptor Euphranor.",
"Artemis Diadoumena.",
"Statuette of Artemis from Delos (1st cent.",
"B.C.)",
"at the National Archaeological Museum, Athens An important aspect of Artemis' persona and worship was her virginity, which may seem contradictory, given her role as a goddess associated with childbirth.",
"The idea of Artemis as a virgin goddess likely is related to her primary role as a huntress.",
"Hunters traditionally abstained from sex prior to the hunt as a form of ritual purity and out of a belief that the scent would scare off potential prey.",
"The ancient cultural context in which Artemis' worship emerged also held that virginity was a prerequisite to marriage, and that a married woman became subservient to her husband.In this light, Artemis' virginity is also related to her power and independence.",
"Rather than a form of asexuality, it is an attribute that signals Artemis as her own master, with power equal to that of male gods.",
"Her virginity also possibly represents a concentration of fertility that can be spread among her followers, in the manner of earlier mother-goddess figures.",
"However, some later Greek writers did come to treat Artemis as inherently asexual and as an opposite to Aphrodite.",
"Furthermore, some have described Artemis along with the goddesses Hestia and Athena as being asexual; this is mainly supported by the fact that in the Homeric Hymns, 5, ''To Aphrodite,'' Aphrodite is described as having \"no power\" over the three goddesses.===As a mother goddess===Despite her virginity, both modern scholars and ancient commentaries have linked Artemis to the archetype of the mother goddess.",
"Artemis was traditionally linked to fertility and was petitioned to assist women with childbirth.",
"According to Herodotus, Greek playwright Aeschylus identified Artemis with Persephone as a daughter of Demeter.",
"Her worshipers in Arcadia also traditionally associated her with Demeter and Persephone.",
"In Asia Minor, she was often conflated with local mother-goddess figures, such as Cybele, and Anahita in Iran.The Artemis of Ephesus, second century CE.",
"Ephesus Archaeological Museum, Izmir, TurkeyThe archetype of the mother goddess, though, was not highly compatible with the Greek pantheon, and though the Greeks had adopted the worship of Cybele and other Anatolian mother goddesses as early as the seventh century BCE, she was not directly conflated with any Greek goddesses.",
"Instead, bits and pieces of her worship and aspects were absorbed variously by Artemis, Aphrodite, and others as Eastern influence spread.===As the Lady of Ephesus===At Ephesus in Ionia, Turkey, her temple became one of the Seven Wonders of the World.",
"It was probably the best-known center of her worship except for Delos.",
"There, the Lady whom the Ionians associated with Artemis through ''interpretatio graeca'' was worshipped primarily as a mother goddess, akin to the Phrygian goddess Cybele, in an ancient sanctuary where her cult image depicted the \"Lady of Ephesus\" adorned with multiple large beads.",
"Excavation at the site of the ''Artemision'' in 1987–88 identified a multitude of tear-shaped amber beads that had been hung on the original wooden statue (''xoanon''), and these were probably carried over into later sculpted copies.In Acts of the Apostles, Ephesian metalsmiths who felt threatened by Saint Paul's preaching of Christianity, jealously rioted in her defense, shouting \"Great is Artemis of the Ephesians!\"",
"Of the 121 columns of her temple, only one composite, made up of fragments, still stands as a marker of the temple's location.===As a lunar deity===Praxitelean bronze head of a goddess (probably Artemis), wearing a lunate crown, 4th century BC.",
"Found at Issa, Vis, Croatia).No records have been found of the Greeks referring to Artemis as a lunar deity, as their lunar deity was Selene, but the Romans identified Artemis with Selene leading them to perceive her as a lunar deity, though the Greeks did not refer to her or worship her as such.",
"As the Romans began to associate Apollo more with Helios, the personification of the Sun, it was only natural that the Romans would then begin to identify Apollo's twin sister, Artemis, with Helios' own sister, Selene, the personification of the Moon.",
"Evidence of the syncretism of Artemis and Selene is found early on; a scholium on the ''Iliad'', claiming to be reporting sixth century BCE author Theagenes's interpretation of the ''theomachy'' in Book 21, says that in the fight between Artemis and Hera, Artemis represents the Moon, while Hera represents the earthly air.",
"Active references to Artemis as an illuminating goddess start much later.",
"Notably, Roman-era author Plutarch writes how during the Battle of Salamis, Artemis led the Athenians to victory by shining with the full moon, but all lunar-related narratives of this event come from Roman times, and none of the contemporary writers (such as Herodotus) makes any mention of the night or the Moon.Marble statue of Artemis-Selene with torch, 3rd century.",
"Museo Chiaramonti - Vatican Museums.Artemis' connection to childbed and women's labour naturally led to her becoming associated with the menstrual cycle in course of time, thus the Moon.",
"Selene, just like Artemis, was linked to childbirth, as it was believed that women had the easiest labours during the full moon, paving thus the way for the two goddesses to be seen as the same.",
"On that, Cicero writes: Apollo, a Greek name, is called Sol, the sun; and Diana, Luna, the moon.",
"... Luna, the moon, is so called a lucendo (from shining); she bears the name also of Lucina: and as in Greece the women in labor invoke Diana Lucifera,Association to health was another reason Artemis and Selene were syncretized; Strabo wrote that Apollo and Artemis were connected to the Sun and the Moon, respectively, which was due to the changes the two celestial bodies caused in the temperature of the air, as the twins were gods of pestilential diseases and sudden deaths.Roman authors applied Artemis/Diana's byname, \"Phoebe\", to Luna/Selene, the same way as \"Phoebus\" was given to Helios due to his identification with Apollo.",
"Another epithet of Artemis that Selene appropriated is \"Cynthia\", meaning \"born in Mount Cynthus.\"",
"The goddesses Artemis, Selene, and Hecate formed a triad, identified as the same goddess with three avatars: Selene in the sky (moon), Artemis on earth (hunting), and Hecate beneath the earth (Underworld).",
"In Italy, those three goddesses became a ubiquitous feature in depictions of sacred groves, where Hecate/Trivia marked intersections and crossroads along with other liminal deities.",
"The Romans enthusiastically celebrated the multiple identities of Diana as Hecate, Luna, and Trivia.Roman poet Horace in his odes enjoins Apollo to listen to the prayers of the boys, as he asks Luna, the \"two-horned queen of the stars\", to listen to those of the girls in place of Diana, due to their role as protectors of the young.",
"In Virgil's ''Aeneid'', when Nisus addresses Luna/the Moon, he calls her \"daughter of Latona.",
"\"In works of art, the two goddesses were mostly distinguished; Selene is usually depicted as being shorter than Artemis, with a rounder face, and wearing a long robe instead of a short hunting chiton, with a billowing cloak forming an arc above her head.",
"Artemis was sometimes depicted with a lunate crown.===As Hecate===Artemis holding torches.",
"Marble, Roman copy of the 2nd century AD after a Greek original of the 4th century BC.",
"Museo Chiaramonti, Vatican MuseumsHecate was the goddess of crossroads, boundaries, ghosts and witchcraft.",
"She is the queen of the witches.",
"Artemis absorbed the Pre-Greek goddess Potnia Theron who was closely associated with the daimons.",
"In the Mycenean age daimons were lesser deities of ghosts, divine spirits and tutelary deities.Some scholars believe that Hecate was an aspect of Artemis prior to the latter's adoption into the Olympian pantheon.Artemis would have, at that point, become more strongly associated with purity and maidenhood on the one hand, while her originally darker attributes like her association with magic, the souls of the dead, and the night would have continued to be worshipped separately under her title Hecate.Both goddesses carried torches, and were accompanied by a dog.",
"It seems that the character of Artemis in Arcadia was original.",
"At Acacesium Artemis ''Hegemone'' is depicted holding two torches, and at Lycosura Artemis is depicted holding a snake and a torch.",
"A bitch suitable for hunting was lying down by her side.Sophocles calles Artemis ''Amphipyros'', carrying a torch in each hand, however the adjective refers also to the twin fire on the two peaks of the mountain Parnassus behind Delphi.",
"In the fest of Laphria at Delphi Artemis is related to the Pre-Greek mistress of the animals, with barbaric sacrifices and possible connections with magic and ghosts since Potnia Theron was close to the daimons.",
"The annual fire was the characteristique custom of the fest.At Kerameikos in Athens Artemis is clearly identified with Hecate.",
"Pausanias believes that ''Kalliste'' (the most beautiful ) is a surname of Artemis carrying a torch.",
"In Thessaly the distinctly local goddess Enodia with the surname Pheraia is identified with Hecate.",
"Artemis Pheraia was worshipped in Argos, Athens and Sicyon.===Symbols===Artemis with a bow and a deer.",
"Attic lekythos 460-450 BC====Chariots====Detail of an Attic red-figure hydria depicting Apollo and Artemis.",
"480-450 BC by the Pan Painter.",
"Legion of Honor (museum), San Francisco.Homer uses the epithet ''Chrisinios'', of the golden reigns, to illustrate the chariot of the goddess of hunting.",
"At the fest of Laphria at Delphi the priestess followed the parade on a chariot which was covered with the skin of a deer.====Spears, nets, and lyre====Artemis is rarely portrayed with a hunting spear.",
"In her cult in Aetolia, the Artemis ''Aetole'' was depicted with a hunting spear or javelin.Artemis is also sometimes depicted with a fishing spear connected with her cult as a patron goddess of fishing.",
"This conception relates her with ''Diktynna'' (Britomartis).",
"As a goddess of maiden dances and songs, Artemis is often portrayed with a lyre in ancient art.====Deer====Deer were the only animals held sacred to Artemis herself.",
"On seeing a deer larger than a bull with horns shining, she fell in love with these creatures and held them sacred.",
"Deer were also the first animals she captured.",
"She caught five golden-horned deer and harnessed them to her chariot.",
"At Lycosura in isolated Arcadia Artemis is depicted holding a snake and a torch and dressed with a deer skin, besides Demeter and Persephone.",
"It seems that the depictions of Artemis and Demeter-Melaina (black) in Arcadia correspond to the earliest conceptions of the first Greeks in Greece.",
"At the fest of Laphria at Delphi the priestess followed the parade on a chariot which was covered with the skin of a deer.The third labour of Heracles, commanded by Eurystheus, consisted of chasing and catching the terrible Ceryneian Hind.",
"The hind was a female deer with golden andlers and hooves of bronze and was sacred to Artemis.",
"Heracles begged Artemis for forgiveness and promised to return it alive.",
"Artemis forgave him, but targeted Eurystheus for her wrath.====Hunting dog====Artemis with a hunting dog pouring a libation, c. 460-450 BCE.In a legend Artemis got her hunting dogs from Pan in the forest of Arcadia.",
"Pan gave Artemis two black-and-white dogs, three reddish ones, and one spotted one – these dogs were able to hunt even lions.",
"Pan also gave Artemis seven bitches of the finest Arcadian race, but Artemis only ever brought seven dogs hunting with her at any one time.",
"In the earliest conceptions of Artemis at Lycosura, a bitch suitable for hunting was lying down by her side.====Bear====In a Pre-Greek cult Artemis was conceived as a bear.",
"Kallisto was transformed into a bear, and she is a hypostasis of Artemis with a theriomorph form.",
"In the cults of Artemis at Brauron and at Piraeus Munichia (arkteia) young virgin girls were disguished to she-bears (arktoi) in a ritual and they served the goddess before marriage.The small Piraeus Artemis, bronze statue of the 4th century.An etiological myth tries to explain the origin of the ''Arkteia''.",
"Every year, a girl between five and ten years of age was sent to Artemis' temple at Brauron.",
"A bear was tamed by Artemis and introduced to the people of Athens.",
"They touched it and played with it until one day a group of girls poked the bear until it attacked them.",
"A brother of one of the girls killed the bear, so Artemis sent a plague in revenge.",
"The Athenians consulted an oracle to understand how to end the plague.",
"The oracle suggested that, in payment for the bear's blood, no Athenian virgin should be allowed to marry until she had served Artemis in her temple (played the bear for the goddess).In a legend of the cult of ''Munichia'' if someone killed a bear, then they were to be punished by sacrificing their daughter in the sanctuary.",
"Embaros disguised his daughter dressing her like a bear (arktos), and hid her in the adyton.",
"He placed a goat on the altar and he sacrificed the goat instead of his daughter.====Boar====The boar is one of the favorite animals of the hunters, and also hard to tame.",
"In honor of Artemis' skill, they sacrificed it to her.",
"Oeneus and Adonis were both killed by Artemis' boar.",
"In The Odyssey, she descends from a peak and she travels along the ridges of Mount Erymanthos, that was sacred to the \"Mistress of the animals\".",
"When the goddess became wrathful she would send the terrible Erymanthian boar to laid waste the farmer's fields.",
"Heracles managed to kill the terrible creature during his Twelve Labors.In one legend, the Calydonian boar had terrorized the territory of Calydon because Artemis (the mistress of the animals) was offended.",
"The Calydonian boar hunt is one of the great heroic adventures in Greek legend.",
"The most famous Greek heroes including Meleager and Atalanta took part in the expedition.",
"The fierce-hunter virgin Atalanta allied to the goddess Artemis was the first who wounded the Calydonian boar.Ovid describes the boar as follows::A dreadful boar.—His burning, bloodshot eyes:seemed coals of living fire, and his rough neck:was knotted with stiff muscles, and thick-set:with bristles like sharp spikes.",
"A seething froth:dripped on his shoulders, and his tusks:were like the spoils of Ind India.",
"Discordant roars:reverberated from his hideous jaws;:and lightning—belched forth from his horrid throat—:scorched the green fields.",
"::— Ovid, ''Metamorphoses'' 8.284–289 (Brookes More translation)====Guinea fowl====Artemis felt pity for the Calydonian princesses Meleagrids as they mourned for their lost brother, Meleager, so she transformed them into Guinea fowl to be her favorite animals.====Buzzard hawk====Hawks were the favored birds of many of the gods, Artemis included.",
"Coin from Tauric Chersonesus with Artemis, deer, bull, club and quiver ()====Bull====Artemis is sometimes identified with the mythical bull-goddess in a cult foreign in Greece.",
"The cult can be identified in Halae Araphenides in Attica.",
"At the end of the peculiar fest the sacrifice of a man was represented in a ritual.",
"Apollo (left) and Artemis (right) carrying a torch and flanking an altar.",
"Terracotta amphora (jar) 490 BC.",
"Metropolitan Museum of Art.",
"Manhattan, NYEuripides relates her cult with Tauris (tauros:bull) and with the myth of Iphigenia at Brauron.",
"Orestes brought the image of the goddess from Tauris, to Brauron Sparta or Aricia.====Torch====Artemis is often depicted holding one or two torches.",
"There is not any sufficient explanation for this depiction.",
"The character of the goddess in Arcadia seems to be original.",
"At Acacesium Artemis ''Hegemone'' (the leader) is depicted holding two torches.",
"At Lycosura the goddess is depicted holding a snake and a torch, and a bitch suitable for hunting was lying down by her sideSophocles calls Artemis \"Elaphebolos, (deer slayer) Amphipyros (with a fire in each end)\" reminding the annual fire of the fest Laphria at Delphi.",
"The adjective refers also to the twin fires of the two peaks of the Mount Parnassus above Delphi (Phaedriades).",
"Heshychius believes that ''Kalliste'' is the name of Hecate established at Kerameikos of Athens, who some call Artemis (torch bearing).",
"On a relief from Sicily the goddess is depicted holding a torch in one hand and an offering on the other.",
"The torch was used for the ignition of the fire on the altar."
],
[
"Archaic and classical art",
"Artémis Potnia TheronDuring the Bronze Age, the \"mistress of the animals\" is usually depicted between two lions with a peculiar crown on her head.The oldest representations of Artemis in Greek Archaic art portray her as Potnia Theron (\"Queen of the Beasts\"): a winged goddess holding a stag and lioness in her hands, or sometimes a lioness and a lion.",
"Potnia theron is the only Greek goddess close to the daimons and sometimes is depicted with a Gorgon head, and the Gorgon is her distant ancestor.",
"This winged Artemis lingered in ex-votos as Artemis Orthia, with a sanctuary close by Sparta.In Greek classical art she is usually portrayed as a maiden huntress, young, tall, and slim, clothed in a girl's short skirt, with hunting boots, a quiver, a golden or silver bow and arrows.Often, she is shown in the shooting pose, and is accompanied by a hunting dog or stag.",
"When portrayed as a lunar deity, Artemis wore a long robe and sometimes a veil covered her head.",
"Her darker side is revealed in some vase paintings, where she is shown as the death-bringing goddess whose arrows fell young maidens and women, such as the daughters of Niobe.Artemis was sometimes represented in Classical art with the crown of the crescent moon, such as also found on Luna and others.On June 7, 2007, a Roman-era bronze sculpture of ''Artemis and the Stag'' was sold at Sotheby's auction house in New York state by the Albright-Knox Art Gallery for $25.5 million."
],
[
"Gallery",
"File:Funeral pithos, Potnia theron, Fortetsa near Knossos, 850-800 BC, AMH, 079075.jpg|Potnia theron, Fortetsa near Knossos, 850-800 BC.File:Gold pin figure Louvre Bj954.jpg|Gold pin figure LouvreFile:Gorgon Kameiros BM GR1860.4-4.2.jpg|Representation of Potnia Theron with a Gorgon's head.",
"Winged goddess wearing a split skirt and holding a bird in each hand, orientalizing plate, ca 600 BC, from Kameiros, Rhodes, British Museum, London.File:Niobid Krater - Niobid massacre.jpg|Apollo and Artemis kill the children of Niobe, 460-450 BC by the Niobid Painter.",
"Louvre, Paris.File:Bronzetto della dea pòtnia theròn, dea degli animali, 550 ac ca., dalle vicinanze di San Martino Delfico.jpg|Bronze,votive of potnia theron 550 BC.File:Maîtresse des chèvres.jpg|Mistress of the AnimalsFile:Artemis Hekate.",
"Apollonia, Albania.jpg|Artemis Hecate, as a goddess protector of the necropolis.",
"Marble, 3rd century AD, Apollonia, Albania.File:Horse-Bird Painter - Artemis as potnia theron - horse-bird - London BM 1894-1031-1.jpg|Horse-Bird Painter - Artemis as potnia theron - horse-bird - LondonFile:Lead figure of a winged goddess, possibly Artemis Orthia MET DP118294.jpg|Figure of a winged goddess, possibly Artemis Orthia.File:Boeotian early orientalizing - neck-amphora - Artemis as potnia theron - eagle chasing hare - Athens NAM 220 - 01.jpg|Boeotian early orientalizing - neck-amphora - Artemis as potnia theron.File:Hellenistic pottery, Kantharo, Artemis, AGMA, 225302.jpg|Hellenistic pottery, Kantharos, Artemis.File:Plaque votive figurant Artémis ou Hécate.jpg|Votive figure Artemis and HecateFile:Colombel - Diana returning from the hunt.jpg|Colombel,Artemis returning from the huntFile:0 Diane chasseresse et ses nymphes - Pierre Paul Rubens (1).JPG|Artemis-Diana hunting with her nymphs.",
"-Piere Paul RubensFile:Diana and her hound.jpg|Artemis-Diana and her hound.File:Boucher Diane sortant du bain Louvre 2712.jpg|Boucher, Artemis-Diana, LouvreFile:Artemis (BM 1899,0120.160).jpg|Artemis in a landscape.File:Artemis-Endymion-Palais-Garnier.jpg|Artemis-Endymion-Palais-GarnierFile:Orion aveugle cherchant le soleil.jpg|Nicolas Poussin (1658) \"Landscape with blind Orion seeking the sun\".",
"Metropolitan Museum of Arts, Manhatan, NY."
],
[
"Legacy",
"===In astronomy===*105 Artemis (an asteroid discovered in 1868)*Artemis (crater) (a tiny crater on the moon, named in 2010)*Artemis Chasma (a nearly circular fracture on the surface of the planet Venus, described in 1980)*Artemis Corona (an oval feature largely enclosed by the Artemis Chasma, also described in 1980)*Acronym (ArTeMiS) for \"Architectures de bolometres pour des Telescopes a grand champ de vue dans le domaine sub-Millimetrique au Sol\", a large bolometer camera in the submillimeter range that was installed in 2010 at the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX), located in the Atacama Desert in northern Chile.===In taxonomy===The taxonomic genus ''Artemia'', which entirely comprises the family Artemiidae, derives from Artemis.",
"''Artemia'' species are aquatic crustaceans known as brine shrimp, the best-known species of which, ''Artemia salina'', or sea monkeys, was first described by Carl Linnaeus in his ''Systema Naturae'' in 1758.",
"''Artemia'' species live in salt lakes, and although they are almost never found in an open sea, they do appear along the Aegean coast near Ephesus, where the Temple of Artemis once stood.===In modern spaceflight===The Artemis program is an ongoing robotic and crewed spaceflight program carried out by NASA, U.S. commercial spaceflight companies, and international partners such as ESA, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, and the Canadian Space Agency.",
"The program has the goal of landing \"the first woman and the next man\" on the lunar south pole region no earlier than 2025."
],
[
"Genealogy"
],
[
"See also",
"*Bendis*Dali (goddess)*Janus*Lunar deity*Palermo Fragment*Regarding Tauropolos:**Bull (mythology)**Iphigenia in Tauris**Taurus (Mythology)"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Bibliography",
"*Aelian, ''On Animals, Volume III: Books 12-17'', translated by A. F. Scholfield, Loeb Classical Library No.",
"449, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 1959.Online version at Harvard University Press.",
".",
"*Apollodorus, ''Apollodorus, The Library, with an English Translation by Sir James George Frazer, F.B.A., F.R.S.",
"in 2 Volumes.''",
"Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1921.Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.",
"*Aratus Solensis, ''Phaenomena'' translated by G. R. Mair.",
"Loeb Classical Library Volume 129.London: William Heinemann, 1921.Online version at the Topos Text Project.",
"* *Athenaeus, ''The Learned Banqueters, Volume V: Books 10.420e-11.Edited and translated by S. Douglas Olson.''",
"Loeb Classical Library 274.Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2009.",
"*Budin, Stephanie, ''Artemis'', Routledge publications, 2016, .",
"Google books.",
"*Burkert, Walter, ''Greek Religion'', Harvard University Press, 1985..*Callimachus.",
"''Hymns'', translated by Alexander William Mair (1875–1928).",
"London: William Heinemann; New York: G.P.",
"Putnam's Sons.",
"1921.Internet Archive.",
"Online version at the Topos Text Project.",
"*Celoria, Francis, ''The Metamorphoses of Antoninus Liberalis: A Translation with a Commentary'', Routledge, 1992..*Cicero, ''Nature of the Gods'', from the Treatises of M.T.",
"Cicero, translated by Charles Duke Yonge (1812-1891), Bohn edition of 1878, in the public domain.",
"Text available online at Topos text.",
"*Collins-Clinton, Jacquelyn, ''Cosa: The Sculpture and Furnishings in Stone and Marble'', University of Michigan Press, 2020, .",
"Google books.",
"*Diodorus Siculus, ''Bibliotheca Historica.",
"Vol 1-2''.",
"Immanel Bekker.",
"Ludwig Dindorf.",
"Friedrich Vogel.",
"in aedibus B. G. Teubneri.",
"Leipzig.",
"1888–1890.Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library.",
"*Evelyn-White, Hugh, ''The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G. Evelyn-White''.",
"Homeric Hymns.",
"Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1914.Google Books.",
"Internet Archive.",
"*Fontenrose, Joseph Eddy, ''Orion: The Myth of the Hunter and the Huntress'', University of California Press, 1981..*Forbes Irving, P. M. C., ''Metamorphosis in Greek Myths'', Clarendon Press Oxford, 1990..*Freeman, Kathleen, ''Ancilla to the Pre-Socratic Philosophers: A Complete Translation of the Fragments in Diels, Fragmente Der Vorsokratiker'', Harvard University Press, 1983..*Gantz, Timothy, ''Early Greek Myth: A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources'', Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996, Two volumes: (Vol.",
"1), (Vol.",
"2).",
"*Robert Graves (1955) 1960.",
"''The Greek Myths'' (Penguin)*Grimal, Pierre, ''The Dictionary of Classical Mythology'', Wiley-Blackwell, 1996..*Hansen, William, ''Handbook of Classical Mythology'', ABC-CLIO, 2004..*Hard, Robin, ''The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology: Based on H.J.",
"Rose's \"Handbook of Greek Mythology\"'', Psychology Press, 2004, .",
"Google Books.",
"*Homer, ''The Iliad with an English Translation by A.T. Murray, PhD in two volumes''.",
"Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1924.Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.",
"*Hesiod, ''Astronomia'', in ''The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G. Evelyn-White'', Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1914.Internet Archive.",
"*Hesiod, ''Theogony'', in ''The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G. Evelyn-White'', Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1914.Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.",
"*Hyginus, Gaius Julius, ''De Astronomica'', in ''The Myths of Hyginus'', edited and translated by Mary A.",
"Grant, Lawrence: University of Kansas Press, 1960.Online version at ToposText.",
"*Hyginus, Gaius Julius, ''Fabulae'', in ''The Myths of Hyginus'', edited and translated by Mary A.",
"Grant, Lawrence: University of Kansas Press, 1960.Online version at ToposText.",
"**Kerényi, Karl (1951), ''The Gods of the Greeks'', Thames and Hudson, London, 1951.",
"***Liddell, Henry George, Robert Scott, ''A Greek-English Lexicon'', revised and augmented throughout by Sir Henry Stuart Jones with the assistance of Roderick McKenzie, Clarendon Press Oxford, 1940.Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.",
"*Mikalson, Jon D., ''The Sacred and Civil Calendar of the Athenian Year'', Princeton University Press, 1975.Google books.",
"*Morford, Mark P. O., Robert J. Lenardon, ''Classical Mythology'', Eighth Edition, Oxford University Press, 2007.. Internet Archive.",
"*Most, G.W., ''Hesiod, Theogony, Works and Days, Testimonia,'' Edited and translated by Glenn W. Most, Loeb Classical Library No.",
"57, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 2018.. Online version at Harvard University Press.",
"*Most, G.W., ''Hesiod: The Shield, Catalogue of Women, Other Fragments'', Loeb Classical Library, No.",
"503, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 2007, 2018.. Online version at Harvard University Press.",
"*Nonnus, ''Dionysiaca''; translated by Rouse, W H D, in three volumes.",
"Loeb Classical Library No.",
"346, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1940.Internet Archive.",
"*Ovid, ''Metamorphoses'', Brookes More, Boston, Cornhill Publishing Co. 1922.Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.*Ovid.",
"''Metamorphoses, Volume I: Books 1-8''.",
"Translated by Frank Justus Miller.",
"Revised by G. P. Goold.",
"Loeb Classical Library No.",
"42.Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1977, first published 1916.. Online version at Harvard University Press.",
"*Ovid, ''Ovid's Fasti: With an English translation by Sir James George Frazer'', London: W. Heinemann LTD; Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 1959.Internet Archive.",
"*The J. Paul Getty Museum Journal: Volume 24, 1996, .",
"Google books.",
"*''The Oxford Classical Dictionary'', second edition, Hammond, N.G.L.",
"and Howard Hayes Scullard (editors), Oxford University Press, 1992..*Pannen, Imke, ''When the Bad Bleeds: Mantic Elements in English Renaissance Revenge Tragedy'', Volume 3 of Representations & Reflections; V&R unipress GmbH, 2010..*Papathomopoulos, Manolis, ''Antoninus Liberalis: Les Métamorphoses'', ''Collection Budé'', Paris, Les Belles Lettres, 1968..*Pausanias, ''Pausanias Description of Greece with an English Translation by W.H.S.",
"Jones, Litt.D., and H.A.",
"Ormerod, M.A., in 4 Volumes.''",
"Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1918.Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.",
"*Pindar, ''The Odes of Pindar'' including the Principal Fragments with an Introduction and an English Translation by Sir John Sandys, Litt.D., FBA.",
"Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1937.Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library.",
"****Smith, William; ''Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology'', London (1873).",
"*Strabo, ''The Geography of Strabo.''",
"Edition by H.L.",
"Jones.",
"Cambridge, Mass.",
": Harvard University Press; London: William Heinemann, Ltd. 1924.Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.*.",
"*Tripp, Edward, ''Crowell's Handbook of Classical Mythology'', Thomas Y. Crowell Co; First edition (June 1970).",
".",
"*West, M. L. (2003), ''Greek Epic Fragments: From the Seventh to the Fifth Centuries BC'', edited and translated by Martin L. West, Loeb Classical Library No.",
"497, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 2003.. Online version at Harvard University Press.",
"**"
],
[
"External links",
"* Theoi Project, Artemis, information on Artemis from original Greek and Roman sources, images from classical art.",
"* ''A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities'' (1890) (eds.",
"G. E. Marindin, William Smith, LLD, William Wayte)* Fischer-Hansen T., Poulsen B.",
"(eds.)",
"''From Artemis to Diana: the goddess of man and beast''.",
"Collegium Hyperboreum and Museum Tusculanum Press, Copenhagen, 2009* Warburg Institute Iconographic Database (ca 1,150 images of Artemis)"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Arbeit macht frei"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Slogan displayed at AuschwitzTheresienstadt in the Czech Republic'''''' () is a German phrase meaning \"Work sets you free\" or \"Work makes one free\".",
"The slogan originates from a 1873 novel by Lorenz Diefenbach.",
"It is known for appearing on the entrance of Auschwitz and other Nazi concentration camps."
],
[
"Origin",
"The expression comes from the title of an 1873 novel by the German philologist Lorenz Diefenbach, , in which gamblers and fraudsters find the path to virtue through labour.",
"The phrase was also used in French () by Auguste Forel, a Swiss entomologist, neuroanatomist and psychiatrist, in his () (1920).",
"In 1922, the of Vienna, an ethnic nationalist \"protective\" organization of Germans within Austria, printed membership stamps with the phrase .The phrase is also evocative of the medieval German principle of (\"urban air makes you free\"), according to which serfs were liberated after being a city resident for one year and one day."
],
[
"Use by the Nazis",
"Gross-RosenKZ SachsenhausenDachauIn 1933, the first communist prisoners were being rounded up for an indefinite period without charges.",
"They were held in a number of places in Germany.",
"The slogan was first used over the gate of a \"wild camp\" in the city of Oranienburg, which was set up in an abandoned brewery in March 1933 (it was later rebuilt in 1936 as Sachsenhausen).The slogan was placed at the entrances to a number of Nazi concentration camps.",
"The slogan's use was implemented by (SS) officer Theodor Eicke at Dachau concentration camp.",
"From Dachau, it was copied by the Nazi officer Rudolf Höss, who had previously worked there.",
"Höss was appointed to create the original camp at Auschwitz, which became known as Auschwitz (or Camp) 1 and whose intended purpose was to incarcerate Polish political detainees.",
"The Auschwitz I sign was made by prisoner-laborers including master blacksmith Jan Liwacz, and features an upside-down ''B'', which has been interpreted as an act of defiance by the prisoners who made it.",
"In ''The Kingdom of Auschwitz'', Otto Friedrich wrote about Rudolf Höss, regarding his decision to display the motto so prominently at Auschwitz:In 1938, the Austrian political cabaret writer Jura Soyfer and the composer Herbert Zipper, while prisoners at Dachau, wrote the or \"The Dachau Song\".",
"They had spent weeks marching in and out of the camp's gate to daily forced labour, and considered the motto over the gate an insult.",
"The song repeats the phrase cynically as a \"lesson\" taught by Dachau.An example of ridiculing the falsity of the slogan was a popular saying used among Auschwitz prisoners:It can also be seen at the Gross-Rosen, and Theresienstadt camps, as well as at Fort Breendonk in Belgium.",
"At the Monowitz camp (also known as Auschwitz III), the slogan was reportedly placed over the entrance gates.",
"However, Primo Levi describes seeing the words illuminated over a doorway (as distinct from a gate).",
"The slogan appeared at the Flossenbürg camp on the left gate post at the camp entry.",
"The original gate posts survive in another part of the camp, but the sign no longer exists.The signs are prominently displayed, and were seen by all prisoners and staff— all of whom knew, suspected, or quickly learned that prisoners confined there would likely only be freed by death.",
"The signs' psychological impact was tremendous."
],
[
"Thefts of {{Lang|de|Arbeit macht frei}} signs",
"The sign over the Auschwitz I gate was stolen in December 2009 and later recovered by authorities in three pieces.",
"Anders Högström, a Swedish neo-Nazi, and two Polish neo-Nazi men were jailed as a result.",
"The original sign is now in storage at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum and a replica was put over the gate in its place.On 2 November 2014, the sign over the Dachau gate was stolen.",
"It was found on 28 November 2016 under a tarp at a parking lot in Ytre Arna, a settlement north of Bergen, Norway's second-largest city."
],
[
"See also",
"*Extermination through labour* (idiomatically, \"everyone gets what he deserves\"), a motto used at the Buchenwald concentration camp."
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"**"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Axayacatl"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Map showing territorial expansions of the Aztec Empire under each of the Aztec rulers.",
"Expansions during the reign of Axayacatl are indicated in blue.",
"'''Axayacatl''' (; ; ; meaning \"face of water\"; –1481) was the sixth of the of Tenochtitlan and Emperor of the Aztec Triple Alliance."
],
[
"Biography",
"===Early life and background===Axayacatl was a son of the princess Atotoztli II and her cousin, prince Tezozomoc.",
"He was a grandson of the Emperors Moctezuma I and Itzcoatl.",
"He was a descendant of the king Cuauhtototzin.He was a successor of Moctezuma and his brothers were Emperors Tizoc and Ahuitzotl and his sister was the Queen Chalchiuhnenetzin.",
"He was an uncle of the Emperor Cuauhtémoc and father of Emperors Moctezuma II and Cuitláhuac.===Rise to power===During his youth, his military prowess gained him the favor influential figures such as Nezahualcoyotl and Tlacaelel I, and thus, upon the death of Moctezuma I in 1469, he was chosen to ascend to the throne, much to the displeasure of his two older brothers, Tizoc and Ahuitzotl.It is also important that the Great Sun Stone, also known as the Aztec Calendar, was carved under his leadership.",
"An earthquake in Tenochtitlán occurred and destroyed many homes.===Military actions and death===Using as a pretext the insulting behavior of a few Tlatelolcan citizens, Axayacatl invaded his neighbor, killed its ruler, Moquihuix, and replaced him with a military governor.",
"The Tlatelolcans lost any voice they had in forming Aztec policy.",
"Moquihuix's death as depicted in the Codex Mendoza.Axayacatl largely dedicated his twelve-year reign to consolidating his militaristic repute: he led successful campaigns against the neighboring of Tlatelolco in 1473 (see Battle of Tlatelolco) and the Matlatzinca of the Toluca Valley in 1474, but was finally defeated by the Tarascans of Michoacán in 1476.Despite some subsequent minor triumphs, Axayacatl's defeat at the hands of the Tarascans irreversibly marred his image, as it constituted the only major defeat suffered by the Aztecs up to that moment.",
"In spite of his young age, he fell gravely ill in 1480, passing away a mere year later, in 1481, whereupon he was succeeded by his brother Tizoc.===Axayacatl the poet===Axayacatl wrote two poems.",
"The first, ''Ycuic Axayayatzin'' (English: \"Song of Axayacatl\") is a defense against his brothers and critics; the second, ''Huehue cuicatl'' (English: \"Song of the Ancients\") is a lament written after his defeat in Michoacan."
],
[
"In popular culture",
"* The ''Obsidian and Blood'' series by Aliette de Bodard are set in the last year of the reign of Axayacatl and the first years of the reign of Tizoc, with their youngest brother Ahuitzotl appearing as a primary character."
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"See also",
"* List of Tenochtitlan rulers"
],
[
"References",
"* * * * *"
],
[
"External links",
"*"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Ahuitzotl"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Map showing the expansion of the Aztec Triple Alliance.",
"The conquests of Ahuitzotl are marked in yellow.",
"'''Ahuitzotl''' (, ) was the eighth Aztec ruler, the ''Huey Tlatoani'' of the city of Tenochtitlan, son of princess Atotoztli II.",
"His name literally means \"Water Thorny\" and was also applied to the otter.",
"It is also theorized that more likely, the animal called ahuitzotl is actually the water opossum, the hand symbolizing its prehensile tail, which otters notably lack.Either Ahuitzotl or his predecessor Tizoc was the first ''tlatoani'' of Tenochtitlan to assume the title ''Huey Tlatoani'' (\"supreme ''tlatoani''\") to make their superiority over the other cities in the Triple Alliance (Aztec Empire) clear.",
"Ahuitzotl was responsible for much of the expansion of the Mexica domain, and consolidated the empire's power after emulating his predecessor.",
"He took power as Emperor in the year 7 Rabbit (1486), after the death of his predecessor and brother, Tizoc.He had two sons, the kings Chimalpilli II and Cuauhtémoc, and one daughter."
],
[
"Biography",
"Perhaps the greatest known military leader of pre-Columbian Mesoamerica, Ahuizotl began his reign by suppressing a Huastec rebellion, and then swiftly more than doubled the size of lands under Aztec dominance.",
"He conquered the Mixtec, Zapotec, and other peoples from Pacific Coast of Mexico down to the western part of Guatemala.",
"Ahuizotl also supervised a major rebuilding of Tenochtitlan on a grander scale including the expansion of the Great Pyramid or Templo Mayor in the year 8 Reed (1487).He presided over the introduction of the great-tailed grackle into the Valley of Mexico, the earliest documented case of human-mediated bird introduction in the Western Hemisphere.Ahuizotl died in the year 10 Rabbit (1502) and was succeeded by his nephew, Moctezuma II.Ahuizotl took his name from the animal ahuizotl, which the Aztecs considered to be a legendary creature in its own right rather than a mere mythical representation of the king.In January 2021 the INAH proposed moving the statues of Ahuizotl and Itzcóatl, known as the ''Indios Verdes,'' from the ''Parque del Mestizaje'' in Gustavo A. Madero, Mexico City to the Paseo de la Reforma.",
"“The transfer means a reading of the urban space, recovering the historical discourse that gave rise to the formation of a set of monuments and roundabouts on Paseo de la Reforma, conceived at the end of the 19th century, with the idea of honoring the Reformation, a great transformation that it meant for Mexico, but to recover a historical reading that began precisely by underlining the Mexican splendor and the importance of the pre-Hispanic or Mesoamerican antecedents of our country”, Diego Prieto, director of INAH said."
],
[
"In popular culture",
"Under the name Teomitl, Ahuitzotl is a primary character in the ''Obsidian and Blood'' series by Aliette de Bodard, which are set in the last year of the reign of Axayacatl and the first years of the reign of Tizoc.In the historical fiction novel, ''Aztec'' by Gary Jennings, Ahuitzotl is a prominent character.",
"Set in the time just before the arrival of the Spanish Conquistadors, it accounts his construction of the many expansions of Tenochtitlan, and wars of conquest, trade, and proclivities."
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Bibliography",
"* Townsend, Richard F. (2000) ''The Aztecs''.",
"revised ed.",
"Thames and Hudson, New York.",
"* Hassig, Ross (1988) ''Aztec Warfare: Imperial Expansion and Political Control''.",
"University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.",
"*"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Albinism in humans"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Albinism''' is a congenital condition characterized in humans by the partial or complete absence of pigment in the skin, hair and eyes.",
"Albinism is associated with a number of vision defects, such as photophobia, nystagmus, and amblyopia.",
"Lack of skin pigmentation makes for more susceptibility to sunburn and skin cancers.",
"In rare cases such as Chédiak–Higashi syndrome, albinism may be associated with deficiencies in the transportation of melanin granules.",
"This also affects essential granules present in immune cells, leading to increased susceptibility to infection.Albinism results from inheritance of recessive gene alleles and is known to affect all vertebrates, including humans.",
"It is due to absence or defect of tyrosinase, a copper-containing enzyme involved in the production of melanin.",
"Unlike humans, other animals have multiple pigments and for these, albinism is considered to be a hereditary condition characterised by the absence of melanin in particular, in the eyes, skin, hair, scales, feathers or cuticle.",
"While an organism with complete absence of melanin is called an albino, an organism with only a diminished amount of melanin is described as leucistic or albinoid.",
"The term is from the Latin ''albus'', \"white\"."
],
[
"Signs and symptoms",
"Girl with albinism from Papua New GuineaThere are two principal types of albinism: oculocutaneous, affecting the eyes, skin and hair, and ocular affecting the eyes only.There are different types of oculocutaneous albinism depending on which gene has undergone mutation.",
"With some there is no pigment at all.",
"The other end of the spectrum of albinism is \"a form of albinism called rufous oculocutaneous albinism, which usually affects dark-skinned people\".According to the National Organization for Albinism and Hypopigmentation, \"With ocular albinism, the color of the iris of the eye may vary from blue to green or even brown, and sometimes darkens with age.",
"However, when an optometrist or ophthalmologist examines the eye by shining a light from the side of the eye, the light shines back through the iris since very little pigment is present.",
"\"Because individuals with albinism have skin that entirely lacks the dark pigment melanin, which helps protect the skin from the sun's ultraviolet radiation, their skin can burn more easily from overexposure.The human eye normally produces enough pigment to color the iris blue, green or brown and lend opacity to the eye.",
"In photographs, those with albinism are more likely to demonstrate \"red eye\", due to the red of the retina being visible through the iris.",
"Lack of pigment in the eyes also results in problems with vision, both related and unrelated to photosensitivity.Those with albinism are generally as healthy as the rest of the population (but see related disorders below), with growth and development occurring as normal, and albinism by itself does not cause mortality, although the lack of pigment blocking ultraviolet radiation increases the risk of melanomas (skin cancers) and other problems.===Visual problems===Malian Mandinka singer Salif Keita with albinismDevelopment of the optical system is highly dependent on the presence of melanin.",
"For this reason, the reduction or absence of this pigment in people with albinism may lead to:* Misrouting of the retinogeniculate projections, resulting in abnormal decussation (crossing) of optic nerve fibres* Photophobia and decreased visual acuity due to light scattering within the eye (ocular straylight) Photophobia is specifically when light enters the eye, unrestrictedwith full force.",
"It is painful and causes extreme sensitivity to light.",
"* Reduced visual acuity due to foveal hypoplasia and possibly light-induced retinal damage.Eye conditions common in albinism include:* Nystagmus, irregular rapid movement of the eyes back and forth, or in circular motion.",
"* Amblyopia, decrease in acuity of one or both eyes due to poor transmission to the brain, often due to other conditions such as strabismus.",
"* Optic nerve hypoplasia, underdevelopment of the optic nerve.The improper development of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), which in normal eyes absorbs most of the reflected sunlight, further increases glare due to light scattering within the eye.",
"The resulting sensitivity (photophobia) generally leads to discomfort in bright light, but this can be reduced by the use of sunglasses or brimmed hats."
],
[
"Genetics",
"Family with albinism, showing inheritanceOculocutaneous albinism is generally the result of the biological inheritance of genetically recessive alleles (genes) passed from both parents of an individual such as OCA1 and OCA2.A mutation in the human TRP-1 gene may result in the deregulation of melanocyte tyrosinase enzymes, a change that is hypothesized to promote brown versus black melanin synthesis, resulting in a third oculocutaneous albinism (OCA) genotype, \"OCA3\".",
"Some rare forms are inherited from only one parent.",
"There are other genetic mutations which are proven to be associated with albinism.",
"All alterations, however, lead to changes in melanin production in the body.",
"Some of these are associated with increased risk of skin cancer .The chance of offspring with albinism resulting from the pairing of an organism with albinism and one without albinism is low.",
"However, because organisms (including humans) can be carriers of genes for albinism without exhibiting any traits, albinistic offspring can be produced by two non-albinistic parents.",
"Albinism usually occurs with equal frequency in both sexes.",
"An exception to this is ocular albinism, which it is passed on to offspring through X-linked inheritance.",
"Thus, ocular albinism occurs more frequently in males as they have a single X and Y chromosome, unlike females, whose genetics are characterized by two X chromosomes.There are two different forms of albinism: a partial lack of the melanin is known as hypomelanism, or hypomelanosis, and the total absence of melanin is known as amelanism or amelanosis.===Enzyme===The enzyme defect responsible for OCA1-type albinism is tyrosine 3-monooxygenase (tyrosinase), which synthesizes melanin from the amino acid tyrosine.===Evolutionary theories===It is suggested that the early genus ''Homo'' (humans in the broader sense) started to evolve in East Africa around 3 million years ago.",
"The dramatic phenotypic change from the ape-like ''Australopithecus'' to early ''Homo'' is hypothesized to have involved the extreme loss of body hair – except for areas most exposed to UV radiation, such as the head – to allow for more efficient thermoregulation in the early hunter-gatherers.",
"The skin that would have been exposed upon general body hair loss in these early proto-humans would have most likely been non-pigmented, reflecting the pale skin underlying the hair of our chimpanzee relatives.",
"A positive advantage would have been conferred to early hominids inhabiting the African continent that were capable of producing darker skin – those who first expressed the eumelanin-producing MC1R allele – which protected them from harmful epithelium-damaging ultraviolet rays.",
"Over time, the advantage conferred to those with darker skin may have led to the prevalence of darker skin on the continent.",
"The positive advantage, however, would have had to be strong enough so as to produce a significantly higher reproductive fitness in those who produced more melanin.",
"The cause of a selective pressure strong enough to cause this shift is an area of much debate.",
"Some hypotheses include the existence of significantly lower reproductive fitness in people with less melanin due to lethal skin cancer, lethal kidney disease due to excess vitamin D formation in the skin of people with less melanin, or simply natural selection due to mate preference and sexual selection.When comparing the prevalence of albinism in Africa to its prevalence in other parts of the world, such as Europe and the United States, the potential evolutionary effects of skin cancer as a selective force due to its effect on these populations may not be insignificant.",
"It would follow, then, that there would be stronger selective forces acting on albino individuals in Africa than on albinos in Europe and the US.",
"In two separate studies in Nigeria, very few people with albinism appear to survive to old age.",
"One study found that 89% of people diagnosed with albinism are between 0 and 30 years of age, while the other found that 77% of albinos were under the age of 20.However, it has also been theorized that albinism may have been able to spread in some Native American communities, because albino males were culturally revered and assumed as having divine origins.",
"The very high incidence of albinism among the Hopi tribe has been frequently attributed to the privileged status of albino males in Hopi society, who were not required to perform physical work outdoors, shielding them from the harmful effects of UV radiation.",
"This privileged status of albino males in Hopi society allowed them to reproduce with large numbers of non-albino women, spreading the genes that are associated with albinism."
],
[
"Diagnosis",
"Genetic testing can confirm albinism and what variety it is, but offers no medical benefits, except in the case of non-OCA disorders.",
"Such disorders cause other medical problems in conjunction with albinism, and may be treatable.",
"Genetic tests are currently available for parents who want to find out if they are carriers of ty-neg albinism.",
"Diagnosis of albinism involves carefully examining a person's eyes, skin and hairs.",
"Genealogical analysis can also help.Albinism can also be a feature of several syndromes:* ABCD syndrome* Albinism-hearing loss syndrome* Deafness, congenital, with total albinism* Ermine phenotype* Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome 1 to 11 (excluding 9)* Microcephaly-albinism-digital anomalies syndrome* Ocular albinism with late-onset sensorineural deafness* Ocular albinism, type II* Oculocutaneous albinism types 1B, 3 to 7* Tyrosinase-negative oculocutaneous albinism* Tyrosinase-positive oculocutaneous albinism* Vici syndrome* Waardenburg syndrome type 2A"
],
[
"Management",
"Since there is no cure for albinism, it is managed through lifestyle adjustments.",
"People with albinism need to take care not to get sunburnt and should have regular healthy skin checks by a dermatologist.For the most part, treatment of the eye conditions consists of visual rehabilitation.",
"Surgery is possible on the extra-ocular muscles to decrease strabismus.",
"Nystagmus-damping surgery can also be performed, to reduce the \"shaking\" of the eyes back and forth.",
"The effectiveness of all these procedures varies greatly and depends on individual circumstances.Glasses (often with tinted lenses), low vision aids, large-print materials, and bright angled reading lights can help individuals with albinism.",
"Some people with albinism do well using bifocals (with a strong reading lens), prescription reading glasses, hand-held devices such as magnifiers or monoculars or wearable devices like eSightand Brainport.The condition may lead to abnormal development of the optic nerve and sunlight may damage the retina of the eye as the iris cannot filter out excess light due to a lack of pigmentation.",
"Photophobia may be ameliorated by the use of sunglasses which filter out ultraviolet light.",
"Some use bioptics, glasses which have small telescopes mounted on, in, or behind their regular lenses, so that they can look through either the regular lens or the telescope.",
"Newer designs of bioptics use smaller light-weight lenses.",
"Some US states allow the use of bioptic telescopes for driving motor vehicles.",
"(See also NOAH bulletin \"Low Vision Aids\".",
")There are a number of national support groups across the globe which come under the umbrella of the World Albinism Alliance."
],
[
"Epidemiology",
"Albinism affects people of all ethnic backgrounds; its frequency worldwide is estimated to be approximately one in 17,000.Prevalence of the different forms of albinism varies considerably by population, and is highest overall in people of sub-Saharan African descent.",
"Today, the prevalence of albinism in sub-Saharan Africa is around 1 in 5,000, while in Europe and the US it is around 1 in 20,000 of the European derived population.",
"Rates as high as 1 in 1,000 have been reported for some populations in Zimbabwe and other parts of Southern Africa.Certain ethnic groups and populations in isolated areas exhibit heightened susceptibility to albinism, presumably due to genetic factors.",
"These include notably the Native American Kuna, Zuni and Hopi nations (respectively of Panama, New Mexico and Arizona); Japan, in which one particular form of albinism is unusually common (OCA 4); and Ukerewe Island, the population of which shows a very high incidence of albinism."
],
[
"Society and culture",
"In physical terms, humans with albinism commonly have visual problems and need sun protection.===Special status of albinos in Native American culture===In some Native American and South Pacific cultures, people with albinism have been traditionally revered, because they were considered heavenly beings associated with the sky.",
"Among various indigenous tribes in South America, albinos were able to live luxurious lives due to their divine status.",
"This special status was applied mainly to male albinos.",
"It has been theorized that the very high level of albinism among some Native American tribes can be attributed to sexual privileges given to male albinos, which allowed them to reproduce with large numbers of non-albino women in their tribes, leading to the spread of genes that are associated with albinism.===Persecution of people with albinism===Humans with albinism often face social and cultural challenges (even threats), as the condition is often a source of ridicule, discrimination, or even fear and violence.",
"It is especially socially stigmatised in many African societies.",
"A study conducted in Nigeria on albino children stated that \"they experienced alienation, avoided social interactions and were less emotionally stable.",
"Furthermore, affected individuals were less likely to complete schooling, find employment, and find partners\".",
"Many cultures around the world have developed beliefs regarding people with albinism.In African countries such as Tanzania and Burundi, there has been an unprecedented rise in witchcraft-related killings of people with albinism in recent years, because their body parts are used in potions sold by witch doctors.",
"Numerous authenticated incidents have occurred in Africa during the 21st century.",
"For example, in Tanzania, in September 2009, three men were convicted of killing a 14-year-old albino boy and severing his legs in order to sell them for witchcraft purposes.",
"Again in Tanzania and Burundi in 2010, the murder and dismemberment of a kidnapped albino child was reported from the courts, as part of a continuing problem.",
"The US-based National Geographic Society estimated that in Tanzania a complete set of albino body parts is worth US$75,000.Another harmful and false belief is that sex with an albinistic woman will cure a man of HIV.",
"This has led, for example in Zimbabwe, to rapes (and subsequent HIV infection).===Albinism in popular culture===Famous people with albinism include historical figures such as Oxford don William Archibald Spooner; actor-comedian Victor Varnado; musicians such as Johnny and Edgar Winter, Salif Keita, Winston \"Yellowman\" Foster, Brother Ali, Sivuca, Hermeto Pascoal, Willie \"Piano Red\" Perryman, Kalash Criminel; actor-rapper Krondon, and fashion models Connie Chiu, Ryan \"La Burnt\" Byrne and Shaun Ross.",
"Emperor Seinei of Japan is thought to have been an albino because he was said to have been born with white hair.===International Albinism Awareness Day===International Albinism Awareness Day was established after a motion was accepted on 18 December 2014 by the United Nations General Assembly, proclaiming that 13 June would be known as International Albinism Awareness Day as of 2015.This was followed by a mandate created by the United Nations Human Rights Council that appointed Ms. Ikponwosa Ero, who is from Nigeria, as the first Independent Expert on the enjoyment of human rights by persons with albinism."
],
[
"See also"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* GeneReview/NCBI/NIH/UW entry on Oculocutaneous Albinism Type 2* GeneReview/NCBI/NIH/UW entry on Oculocutaneous Albinism Type 4*"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Amr Diab"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Amr Abdel Basset Abdel Azeez Diab''' (, ; born 11 October 1961) is an Egyptian singer, composer and actor.",
"He has established himself as a globally acclaimed recording artist and author.",
"He is a Guinness World Record holder, the best selling Middle Eastern artist, a seven-times winner of World Music Awards and five-times winner of Platinum Records."
],
[
"Early life",
"Diab was born as Amr Abdel Basset Abdel Azeez Diab (Arabic: عمرو عبد الباسط عبد العزيز دياب) on 11 October 1961 in Port Said to a middle-class Muslim family from the Egyptian countryside of Menia Elamh, in Sharqia Governorate, Egypt.",
"Diab graduated with a bachelor's degree in music from the Cairo Academy of Arts in 1986."
],
[
"Music career",
"Diab released his first album entitled '''' in 1983.Diab's second album, '''' (1984), was the first of a series of records he released with Delta Sound; including '''' (1986), '''' (1987), and '''' (1988), with the title track becoming one of the top 10 songs in the world at the time.",
"His later releases include '''' (1989), '''' (1990), '''' (1991), '''' (1992), '''' (1993), '''' (1994), and '''' (1995).",
"By 1992, he became the first Egyptian and Middle Eastern artist to start making high-tech music videos.In 1996, Diab released his first album with Alam El Phan entitled '''', and he won the World Music Award for the first time, which proved an international success and gained Diab recognition beyond the Arabic-speaking world.",
"Diab recorded four more albums with Alam El Phan, including '''' (1999).",
"Diab also collaborated with Khaled (on the song \"\") and with Angela Dimitriou (on the song \"Bahebak Aktar\").According to research by Michael Frishkopf, he has created a style in the song \"\", termed as \"Mediterranean music\", a blend of Western and Egyptian rhythms.In the summer of 2004, Diab, having left Alam El Phan, released his first album with Rotana Records, '','' which he followed up with the hugely successful '''' (2005), and '''' (2007).",
"was released for sale on the internet on 27 June 2009; however, the album was leaked online and was downloaded illegally amid complaints of slow download speed on the official site.",
"Diab's fans initiated a massive boycott of the sites with the illegal copies.On 18 October 2009, Diab won four 2009 African Music Awards in the categories of best artist, album, vocalist and song for \"\"; Diab had been nominated by the Big Apple Music Awards.In February 2011, Diab released his hit single '''' (\"Egypt spoke\"), followed by the release of his album '''' in September, produced by Rotana.",
"In 2012, Diab hosted the first Google Hangout in the Middle East during his performance in Dubai.",
"In October 2014, Diab released his album '''', which topped his last album '''' and again became the best-selling album in Egypt on iTunes.",
"In July 2015, Diab released a music video for his song \"\" from his album ''''.",
"In March 2016, he released '''', his first album since he left Rotana Music.",
"The album was produced by the record label Nay For Media.",
"His new album '''' was released in July 2017 with Nay Records.His 2014 album '''' peaked at No.",
"1 on the ''Billboard'' World Albums Charts, making him the first Egyptian and Middle Eastern performer to accomplish such a feat.In October 2018, he released a new album called ''''.",
"In 2019, he released a mini-album, '''', and in February 2020 he released his 35th album, '''', which included 16 songs.In February 2022, Anghami announced an exclusive partnership that will see the Diab's entire Nay Label audio and video catalogue and future releases available only on Anghami."
],
[
"Musical style",
"Diab is known as the \"father of Mediterranean music\".",
"David Cooper and Kevin Dawe refer to his music as \"the new breed of Mediterranean music\".",
"According to author Michael Frishkopf, Diab has produced a new concept of Mediterranean music, especially with his international hit, \"\".",
"Moreover, Diab is known as a composer, having composed more than 97 of his own songs."
],
[
"Music videos",
"Diab is one of the first singers to popularize music videos in the whole MENA region and is the first Egyptian singer to appear in music videos."
],
[
"Film career",
"Diab's fame in the music industry has led him to experiment with other forms of media, such as film.",
"Diab played himself in his first film, '''', which was released in 1989.It also starred Madiha Kamel.",
"His second film was Hussein El-Imam's production ''Ice Cream in Gleam'' (''''), in which Diab starred in 1992, was chosen as one of the best five Egyptian musical films by the University of California, Los Angeles (ULCA) School of Theater, Film and Television.",
"The film was featured in the UCLA Film and Television Archive's new program \"Music on the Nile: Fifty Years of Egyptian Musical Films\" at James Bridges Theater at UCLA on 6, 8 and 10 April 1999.David Chute of the ''LA Weekly'' termed it \"observant\" and \"a big leap\".",
"His third movie was released in 1993, and was named '''' (''Laughter and Fun'').",
"The film premiered in the Egyptian Film Festival in 1993.Diab played alongside international Egyptian movie star Omar Sharif (''Lawrence of Arabia'', ''Doctor Zhivago'') and Yousra.",
"Overall, Diab did not experience the same level of success in film that he had with his music career.",
"Since 1993, Diab has focused on his singing career.=== Amr Diab in movies ===Diab's songs have been used in several films, including:* \"\" in ''Divine Intervention'' (2002)* \"\" in ''The Dancer Upstairs'' (2002)* \"\" and \"\" in ''O Clone'' (2001)* \"\" in ''Double Whammy'' (2001)* \"\" and \"\" in ''Coco'' (2009)* \"\" in ''The Dictator'' (2012)"
],
[
"Egyptian Revolution",
"During the 2011 uprising, some protesters criticized Diab for staying silent, and for fleeing Egypt for London.",
"A few days after former President Hosni Mubarak stepped down, Diab composed and sang a memorial song, \"\" (Egypt Said), and released it in conjunction with a music video showing pictures of the martyrs who died in the uprising.",
"He initiated a charity campaign \"\" (\"Truly Egyptian\").",
"His online radio station Diab FM often presents talks and discussions about what the Diab FM team can offer to the community as well as applying it practically by being present in different sites across Egypt with a new humanitarian project each week."
],
[
"Personal life",
"Diab has an elder daughter from his first marriage to Egyptian actress Shereen Reda.",
"In 1994, he was married to Saudi businesswoman Zeina Ashour.",
"They have three children.",
"In 2018, he went on to marry Egyptian actress, Dina El Sherbiny, after his relationship with Ashour ended.",
"It is unknown whether they were separated or divorced.",
"However, Diab and El Sherbiny separated in late 2020."
],
[
"Discography",
"===Main studio albums=== Year Original Title Translation Label 1983 '''' ''Oh Road'' Sawt Al Madina 1984 ''Ghanni Min Albak'' ''Sing From Your Heart'' Delta Sound 1986 '''' ''Welcome Welcome'' 1987 '''' ''We're Done'' 1989 '''' ''Make Us Miss You''1990 ''Mayal'' ''Leaning'' '''' ''Don't Be Afraid'' 1991 '''' ''Baby'' 1992 ''Ayamna'' ''Our Days'' 1994 '''' ''Let Them Blame Me''1995''Ragein''''We're Coming Back'' 1996 '''' ''Light of the Eye'' Alam El Phan 1998 ''Awedony'' ''Made Me Used To You'' Delta Sound 1999 '''' ''Two Moons'' Alam El Phan 2000 ''Tamally Maak'' ''Always With You'' 2001 ''Aktar Wahed'' ''The One That Loves You The Most'' 2003 ''Allem Alby'' ''Teach My Heart'' 2004 ''Lealy Nahary'' ''Night and Day'' Rotana 2005 '''' ''Keep Talking'' 2007 '''' ''Tonight'' 2009 '''' ''With Her'' 2011 '''' ''Come I'm Calling You'' 2013 ''Al Leila'' ''This Night'' 2014 '''' ''I saw the days''2016 ''Min Asmaa Allah Al Hosna'' ''In the Names of God'' Nay For Media '''' ''Prettier and Prettier'' 2017 ''Meaddy El Nas'' ''Contagious to People'' 2018 '''' ''All My Life'' 2019 '''' ''I'm Different'' 2020 '''' ''Up All Night'' 2021 ''Ya Ana Ya La'' ''Either Me or No One''2023MakanakYour Place===Famous songs=== Year Original Title Translation Composers Album1984''Ghanni Min Albak''''Sing From Your Heart''Hani Zaki, Azmi Al Kilany''Ghanni Min Albak''''Ashof Ainaik''''I See Your Eyes''Traditional, adaptation Issam Abdallah1986''''''Welcome Welcome''Amr Diab, Magdi El Naggar''''1987''''''We're Done''Reda Ameen, Khalil Mostafa''''1989''''''Make Us Miss You''''''1990''Mayal''''Leaning''Magdi El Naggar, Haggag Abdel Rahman''Mayal''''''''Don't Be Afraid''Amr Diab, Magdi El Naggar''''1992''Ice Cream Fi Glym''''Ice Cream in Glym''Amr Diab, Medhat El Adl''Ice Cream in Glym''''Raseef Nemra Khamsa''''Sidewalk Number Five''''Wehna Maak''''We'll Sing With You''1992''El Mady''''The Past''Magdi El Naggar, Abdel Azeez Al Nasir''Ayamna''1993''''''Our Days Together''Amr Diab, Magdi El Naggar''''1994''Africa''''Africa''''Zekrayat''1995''Ragein''''We're Coming Back''Medhat El Adl, Tarek El Hamshari''Ragein''1996''''''Light of the Eye''Ahmed Shatta, Nasser Al Mezdawy''''1998''Awedouny''''Made Me Used to You''Amr Tantawy, Abdel Monem Taha''Awedouny''1999''''''Two Moons''Mohamed Refahy, Sherif Tag''''''''(featuring Khaled)''My Heart''Magdi El Naggar, Amr Mahmoud''Bahebbak Aktar''(featuring Angela Dimitriou)''I Love You More''Mohamed Refahy, Sherif Tag, Panos Falaras2000''El Alem Allah''''God Knows''Amr Diab, Amr Mostafa, Amir Taeema''Tamally Maak''''Tamally Maak''''Always With You''Ayman Bahgat Amar, Sherif Tag, Ahmed Ali Moussa''We Heya Amleh Eih''''And How is She Doing''Essam Karika, Bahaa Al Din Mohamed2001''Wala Ala Balo''''Not On Her Mind''Mohamed Refahy, Mohamed Rohaym''Aktar Wahed''''Aktar Wahed''''The One Who Loves You Most''Mohamed Refahy, Mohamed Rohaym''Kan Tayeb''''He Was Good''Amr Diab, Ayman Bahgat Amar''Baed El Layaly''''I Count The Nights''Mohamed Refahy, Khaled Ezz2003''Allem Alby''''Teach My Heart''Amr Diab, Khaled Ezz, Waleed Galal''Allem Alby''''Ana Ayesh''''I'm Alive''Amr Diab, Amr Mostafa, Rabih El Sewefy2004''Lealy Nahary''''Night and Day''Amr Mostafa, Khaled Tag Eldeen''Lealy Nahary''2005''''''Keep Talking''Amr Taeema, Nasser Al Mezdawy''''''W Eh Malo''''What's Wrong''Amr Mostafa, Khaled Tag Eldeen2007''''''Tonight''Amr Mostafa, Ayman Bahgat Amar''''2009''''''With Her''Amr Mostafa, Tamer Hussein''''2011''''''Come I'm Calling You''Amr Diab, Tamer Hussein''''2013''Al Leila''''This Night''Amr Tantawy, Tamer Hussein''Al Leila''2014''''''Did You See the Days''Tamer Hussein, Shady Hassan''''''''''Her Beauty''2016''Amaken Al Sahar''''Up All Night''Tamer Hussein, Aziz ElshafeySingle Release2021''Ya Ana Ya La''''Either Me or No One''Ayman Bahgat Amar, Mohamed Yehya''Ya Ana Ya La''"
],
[
"Awards",
"He has been awarded the World Music Award for Best Selling Middle Eastern Artist four times: 1996 for album '''', 2001 for album ''Akter Wahed'', 2007 for album ''El Lillady'' and 2013 for '''' album.",
"He has also won (Best Egyptian Artist, Best Male Arab Artist and World's Best Arab Male Artist Voted Online) at the World Music Awards 2014.Amr Diab is the only Middle Eastern artist to have received 7 World Music Awards.",
"Five of his albums reached the top 10 of ''Billboard'''s World Albums chart, with reaching No.",
"1 in 2014, the first for an Arabic performer.",
"Alongside that accomplishment, two of his albums (2014's and 2016's ) both peaked at 29 and 14 respectively on Billboard's Heatseekers charts.On 28 September 2016, Diab announced that he achieved a Guinness World Records title for \"Most World Music Awards for Best Selling Middle Eastern Artist\".",
"thumb===List of awards received by Amr Diab===* Seven World Music Awards (1997/2001/2007/2014/2020)* Six African Music Awards (2009/2010)* Two All Africa Music Awards (2016/2017) * Guinness World Record (2016)"
],
[
"Program \"Al-helm\"",
"A program produced by Amr Afifi, consisting of 12 parts aired on Rotana Music, Rotana Cinema and Egyptian Channel 1 station.",
"The program detailed the biography of Diab and was scheduled to be launched simultaneously with the release of Amr Diab's new album, but the album's release was postponed to a later date."
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* * Amr Diab World (archive)*"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Belgian hip hop"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Belgian hip hop music''' has a few rappers stemming from Africa and Italy.",
"Belgium, like France, controlled African countries like the Democratic Republic of the Congo (formerly Zaire), Rwanda, and Burundi until the early 1960s.",
"Like in France, immigrants from these countries started to study and live in Belgium.The Belgian hip hop scene started in the late 1980s with a U.S.-based techno/hip hop group called Technotronic.",
"In the group was an emcee named Ya Kid K from the Democratic Republic of the Congo who later led the group into international fame with hits like \"Pump up the Jam\" and \"Shake That Body\".",
"In 1990, she also joined the group Hi-Tek 3 who were heard on ''Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack''.However, the first major pop rapper from Belgium was Benny B, who had a very mainstream and commercial sound.",
"According to the European Music Office's report on ''Music in Europe'', this was the first of many pop acts that helped inspire a backlash and the creation of an underground hip hop scene.Also in the late 1980s in the Walloon south of the country, French speaking/rapping Starflam was the biggest name in hip hop.",
"In the Flemish north Dutch speaking/rapping groups like 't Hof van Commerce, Krapoel In Axe, St Andries MC's, and ABN were popular, rapping in their regional dialects.Today, the Belgian hip hop scene is growing.",
"Rappers like Coely, Roméo Elvis and Damso are achieving commercial success in their country and abroad.",
"Other contemporary rappers/formations are Stikstof, Woodie Smalls, L'Or Du Commun and Isha.To find out more about today's Belgian hip hop scene, check out The Belgian Hip Hop Channel."
],
[
"References"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Dutch hip hop"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Ali Bouali is perhaps Holland's best-known rapper, also successful in many other public roles.",
"'''Dutch hip hop''' or '''Nederhop''' (\"Netherhop\") is hip hop / rap music created by Dutch speaking musicians in the Netherlands and Flanders (Belgium).",
"Although the first Dutch speaking rappers in Europe typically worked in English, this began to change after 1986, at first in an underground scene.",
"The Osdorp Posse were the first to record and release Dutch language hip hop singles, from around 1990, but it took until 1995 for a Dutch language rap single to achieve a main chart top ten hit: ''Spraakwater'' by Extince.After rapper Def Rhymz achieved the first Dutch main chart top-1 hits with ''Doekoe'' (Sranan Tongo for 'money'; 1999), and ''Schudden'' (\"Shake (it)\"/\"Shaking\"; 2001), Dutchlanguage hip hop has grown into a staple of mainstream pop music in the Netherlands and Flanders in the 21st century.In 2021, Netherlands music streaming charts are dominated by Dutch rap music artists like Boef, Josylvio, Broederliefde, Lil' Kleine, Snelle, and Sevn Alias."
],
[
"History",
"===1980s===Def Rhymz, of the 1st generation to rap in Dutch, switching in 1986, was the first to achieve number-1 hit singles in the Netherlands main charts with Dutch language hip hop.Between 1980 and 1985 a few Dutch Hip Hop records had already been released, but in 1986 Dutch rap duo MC Miker G & DJ Sven had a top 10 hit in at least ten countries, across Europe with their ''Holiday Rap'', which sampled Madonna's ''Holiday'', and caused notable financial disputes, four years ahead of Vanilla Ice's similar sampling troubles with Ice Ice Baby.",
"That same year Dutch rapper Extince released his first record: ''Rap Around The Clock''; in 1987 he scored a modest hit with ''The Milkshake Rap''.However, in the late 1980s '''Nederhop''' (\"Netherhop\") emerged, as artists began to rap in Dutch, such as Def Rhymz, Blonnie B, Alex and the CityCrew, Dynamic Rockers, and the Osdorp Posse.",
"Though there is disagreement about who were the first, the pioneers' work was at first only experimental, except for the Osdorp Posse, a group from Osdorp, a \"hood\" in Amsterdam, who were first to ''release'' tracks in Dutch, for instance the single ''Moordenaar'' (\"Murderer\") in 1989, marking a beginning milestone of Nederhop.",
"After their frontman, rapper Def P, began by literally translating English raps into Dutch, he started writing original work that still contained peculiar idioms that resulted from his earlier literal rewordings.",
"The result was described by rapper Ali B as highly visual and captivating.",
"Once Extince switched to Dutch in 1994, having rapped in English since 1984, both he and Osdorp Posse became highly influential in Nederhop in the 1990s and beyond.Notable in the late 1980s were All Star Fresh of King Bee topping charts with: \"Back by Dope Demand\" in early 1990 and Rudeboy of Urban Dance Squad who, at the time, were arguably more widely known in New York City than in the Netherlands.",
"DJ and Producer All Star Fresh turned professional as early as 1979.After winning the Dutch Mixing Championships (DMC) in 1988, he was invited for The World Mix Championships in the London Royal Hall and won third place among strong competition.",
"He was invited by Dave Funkenklein to enter the lion's den in New York.",
"He made history in the Big Apple of Hiphop by being the first non -American to fly into the finals of The World Supremacy Battle of DJs.",
"He gained the highly respected second place of this prestigious DJ contest).",
"The impression that he made that year, resulted in many invitations to perform with world known artists like Public Enemy, Stetsasonic, Ice T and Ultra Magnetic MCs.All Star Fresh.",
"As performer and producer he is better known as KING BEE.",
"With his second floor filler Back By Dope Demand he achieved one of his biggest hiphop hits.",
"In the Netherlands it resulted in a Top 3 position, and best Dance Product by The Edison Awards in the Netherlands.",
"(The Edison Awards is an award by the Dutch Music Industry.)",
"This also meant that with this title, he was the first black artist to win this award in the Netherlands.",
"After that he appeared as supporting act for Madonnas show in the Netherlands.",
"All Star Fresh kept entering the dance floors.",
"The last titles mentioned were also popular worldwide, selling over 2.4 million copies.",
"He didn't only work within projects like King Bee or Capella, but also was featuring well known production teams like Snap (I Got the Power).",
"This teamwork resulted in the single Lets Get Busy (Clubland Quarts feat Snap King Bee).",
"This record ended up No.",
"1 in the Billboard Dance Charts (United States).",
"Other productions in this line were Deepzone \"It's Gonna Be All right\", Kellee- my love, Ty Holden- you're my Inspiration and His Royal Freshness- They don't understand.Urban Dance Squad's biggest hit was Deeper Shade of Soul, peaking at 21 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1991.===1990s===Urban Dance Squad was a Dutch rap rock band formed after a jam-session at a festival in Utrecht in 1986, including rapper/vocalist Rudeboy Remington and DJ DNA (DoNotAsk).",
"The band's music is described as a blend of genres, including hard rock, funk, soul, hip hop, reggae, jazz and ska and is compared with Living Colour, Red Hot Chili Peppers and Fishbone.",
"They are still known for their hit single ''Deeper Shade of Soul'', which charted at number 21 in the United States on Billboard Hot 100.Rapper Extince had the Netherlands' first main chart top-10 single with ''Spraakwater'' in 1995.In 1992, Osdorp Posse released their debut album ''Osdorp Stijl'', making the first-ever Dutch language hip hop album.",
"They started out translating N.W.A songs to Dutch, though later wrote their own rhymes in Dutch.",
"Their beats, created by producer Seda on Amiga 500 with Protracker, have a familiar heavy sound and are similar to U.S. old-school hip hop.",
"Frontman Def-P describes it as hardcore rap.After the Osdorp Posse's first demo cassette, they toured around the Netherlands.",
"In Deventer they found their first following, and the first Dutch language hip hop scene.",
"The first hip hop groups after Osdorp Posse were Zuid-Oost Posse and Maasstraat Mannen.",
"These groups performed all across the Netherlands.",
"Maasstraat became famous as the first group combining reggae with Dutch lyrics, inspiring acts like Postmen, for example.Rapper Extince, in 1995, took Dutch-language Nederhop to a new commercial level and audience.",
"With two of his singles: ''Spraakwater'' and ''Kaal of Kammen'' becoming major hits in the mid-1990s, Extince was the first Dutch-language rapper to make the mainstream pop charts in the country.",
"''Spraakwater'' marked nothing short of a watershed, being not only the first Dutch rap to break in to the main Dutch Top 40 ''at all'', but also making it into the top-10 – for mainstream radio listeners practically out of nowhere.There were then two styles dominating the Dutch hip hop landscape: Extince combined easy flows and funky tunes into catchy songs full of references and metaphoric imagery, while hardcore performers like Westklan and Osdorp Posse marked their niche with more angry rhymes and harsh beats.",
"A mix of these two styles gave birth to the Spookrijders, a three-man hip-hop group founded in 1996.With MCs Stefan and Clyde rapping about their personal lives and life in Amsterdam as a black man, the Spookrijders even gained respect from non-hip-hop musicians and fans.",
"Most people admired the work of producer/DJ Cliff 'the Jazz' Nille after releasing Spookrijders debut album ''De Echte Shit'' (\"The Real Shit\").",
"In 1999, Spookrijders hit the charts twice with the hits \"Klokkenluiders\" and \"Ik ben de man.\"",
"Both these songs appeared on the second album, ''Klokkenluiders van Amsterdam''.",
"After some personal arguments among the three crewmembers, Spookrijders split up in 2003, after releasing a third and final album ''Hey... Spookies''In 1999 The Postmen released their rap/reggae mix ''De Bom'' (\"The Bom\"), a top three hit-single.",
"They were active across Europe from 1998–2003.===2000s===In 2002, Brainpower topped charts with ''Dansplaat'' and received both MTV Award and TMF Awards.From 2000 onward, Dutch language hiphop grew considerably, both in number of artists, as well as in popularity, both underground and mainstream.In the early 2000s the MC fronted band Relax got much airplay, mainly impressing with their albums.",
"Since 2002, they released four albums, the first three of which made the Dutch album top 40.Def Rhymz, Spookrijders & Brainpower helped develop the art.",
"Def Rhymz & Brainpower dropped multiple hit records.",
"Described by Ali B. as \"..a white library boy with glasses..\", Brainpower made Dutch rapping accessible to a much greater demographic.",
"With at least eight Top 100 album/EP projects Brainpower is one of the most successful Dutch MC's ever and remains a prolific bilingual lyricist (in Dutch & in English) to this day.BlaxtarTyphoon, from Zwolle, stems from one of the 'regional' Dutch rappers scenes.From the late 1990s, a flourishing underground scene in provincial town Zwolle included rappers Blaxtar, Jawat!, and Kubus, and centered around the group Opgezwolle.",
"Formed in 1998 by rappers Sticky Steez and Phreaco Rico, together with DJ Delic, the band Opgezwolle (punning their town's name into \"Swollen\"), was a group making raw hiphop.",
"They released three successful albums, in 2001, 2003, and 2006.",
"''Eigen Wereld'' (\"Own World\"), from 2006, achieved the highest notation of any Dutch-language rap album until then in the Dutch Album Top 100, reaching top 4.In the same year, rapper Typhoon, also from Zwolle, and inspired by aforementioned peer Blaxtar, released his philosophical debut album ''Tussen Licht en Lucht'' (\"Between Light and Air\").",
"The successes of the Zwolle rappers crop boosted other Dutch artists' confidence and inspired them to be proud of their origins – whether local, foreign, or mixed.",
"Rapper Typhoon pointed out, that band names of trailblazers like 'Osdorp Posse' and 'Opgezwolle' refer to their origins (Amsterdam Osdorp and Zwolle) for an important reason, and tied this to the shift from rapping in English to Dutch, making it more relatable and resonant with the audience.",
"Instead of hard and angry, some 2000s releases stood out fragile and sensitive, for instance the single ''Je moest waarschijnlijk gaan'' (\"I Guess You Had to Go\"; 2001) by Brainpower, mourned the loss of his best friend; and the raps of Typhoon are called some of the most poetic.Opgezwolle split up in 2007, but members Rico & Sticks formed a new group: Fakkelbrigade, with Typhoon, Mick 2dope Murray, MC James and beatmaker A.R.T.",
"In 2009, they released the critically acclaimed album ''Colucci Era''.Lange Frans & Baas B had top1 hit singles in Holland in 2004 and 2005.From 2003 through 2006, Lange Frans & Baas B had four top-three hits in the Dutch Top 40, beside three more listings.",
"''Zinloos'', a sad commentary on senseless violence (\"Zinloos Geweld\"), and their patriotic yet introspective ''Het Land van ..'' (\"The Land of..\") gave the duo two number-1 hits, in 2004 and 2005 respectively.In the mid-2000s Cilvaringz, Ali B. and Raymzter were also commercially successful.",
"Ali B featured on other artists' tracks, most significantly with Marco Borsato on the song \"Wat zou je doen?\"",
"for the charity War Child.",
"He first achieved solo success with \"Ik ben je zat\", featuring Brace, in 2003.Together with music artist Akon, and Ali's cousin Yes-R, Ali B made an internationally successful remix of Akon's track ''Ghetto'', including additional Dutch lyrics.",
"Yes-R had six Dutch Top 40 hits from 2006–2012, including his debut single.",
"Ali B. has sofar had fourteen Top 40 hit singles since 2003, including several top three listings.In 2005, De Jeugd van Tegenwoordig (\"Kids These Days\") were successful with ''Watskeburt?!''",
"(\"Wuzhappenin?!\").",
"Rapper Jawat won the \"Grote Prijs van Nederland\" 2006.Another Dutch hip-hop duo are Pete Philly and Perquisite who are already well known in the Netherlands, Germany, and in Japan.A famous Dutch rapper outside the Netherlands is Salah Edin.",
"His album Nederlands Grootste Nachtmerrie (Biggest Nightmare of the Netherlands) won Best Album Award in 2007 and was fully produced by Dr. Dre's right-hand man Focus...",
"He also shot three of the most expensive music videos in the history of Dutch Hip Hop, and through a management deal with Cilvaringz, performed in 34 countries worldwide.From 2015–2020, rapper Lil' Kleine had three straight top-1 albums, out of four that charted for over a year.===2010s===Social acceptance of rap / hip hop in the Netherlands was perhaps epitomized, when artist Typhoon performed for the Dutch royal family twice – both in 2013 and in 2016.In 2015, a self-titled \"New Wave\" generation of 'social media' (em)powered artists broke through with their eponymous ''New Wave'' album, as a temporary collaboration, including Bokoesam, D-Double, Jonna Fraser, Lil' Kleine, Ronnie Flex, and SFB.Sevn AliasSince 2014, rappers Broederliefde released no less than seven albums, with the ''\"worst one\"'' topping at 13 in the charts — their debut reached nr.",
"3, and their last five albums were consecutive top-2s, with three of them topping the chart.",
"Their third album, ''Hard Work Pays Off (II)'' (2016), broke an all-time record by staying at nr.",
"1 for 14 weeks, beating a 2003 12-week record, held by Dutch A-list singer Frans Bauer.",
"Nine of their singles also charted in the singles Top 40.In 2016, album ''WOP!''",
"by Lil' Kleine was the first hip-hop album to reach number 1 on the Album Top 100.In the same year, Ali B's third album, ''Een klein beetje geluk'' (\"ALittle Bit of Happiness\"), proved his best yet, reaching number 7.Starting 2016, rapper Sevn Alias released five consecutive top-10 albums, with his second reaching nr.",
"1, and the last three consistently reaching top-2 positions.",
"He is highly productive, and is also enjoying extensive success with singles, collaborations, and other track releases.===2020s======Conflicts===The Dutch hip-hop scene also saw many conflicts between rappers, followed by diss tracks.",
"The following were among the biggest Dutch feuds in hip-hop:Osdorp Posse vs. Extince, BrainPower vs. Extince, T.H.C vs. Negativ, Kempi vs. Nino, Yukkie B vs. Negativ, T.H.C.",
"vs. Lexxxus, Baas B vs. Kimo, Kempi vs. Mini, Kempi vs. Bloedserieus, Heist Rockah vs. Negativ, and Regga vs. Lexxxus.The feud between T.H.C.",
"and Lexxxus resulted in a fistfight on a hip-hop event, when T.H.C.",
"frontman Rocks got into an argument with Lexxxus and then started the fistfight."
],
[
"Genres in Dutch hip hop",
"===Gangsta===Dutch gangsta hip hop is currently a large scene together with underground hip-hop.",
"Among the most notable acts and performers are THC, Heinek'n, Keizer, Kempi, Steen, Hef, Crooks, Adonis and Negativ.",
"The rhythms are influenced by the American rap scene, and the lyrics are often about crime, drugs, money, women and other criminal things.Often coming from Dutch ghettos, lyrics often include themes occurring in these areas.Dutch gangsta hip hop mostly comes from the five largest cities: Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague, Utrecht and Eindhoven.===Commercial success===The commercial success of Dutch hip hop is largely made by Brainpower, Yes-R, Ali B, Lange Frans & Baas B and Extince.",
"For a large part of the Dutch hip hop community Yes-R, Ali B and Lange Frans & Baas B are sometimes considered fake because they do a lot of work for children TV stations.",
"Brainpower and Extince however both enjoy a great respect for bringing up hip hop in their native Dutch.",
"Other commercial rappers are De Jeugd van Tegenwoordig, and one of the more popular artists in the Netherlands, Partysquad or The Partysquad.",
"They are a 2-man group, having had success with hits such as \"Stuk\" (Broken), and \"Dat is Die Shit\" (That's the shit), with other popular songs in the background such as \"Non Stop\" ft. Brainpower, \"We Gaan Los\" (we're going crazy {because of highness or drunkenness}) with Kempi, and \"Wat Wil Je Doen\" (What do you want to do?",
").===Dutch oldskool===The Dutch oldskool exists out of three primary artists, LTH, Osdorp Posse, Extince, Sugacane and Duvelduvel.",
"Osdorp Posse make to what they themselves call hardcore rap and use beats that have much in common with N.W.A.",
"Their lyrics are about racism, prostitution (not always negatively), police and other social subjects.",
"Extince uses very different, more funky kind of beats than Osdorp Posse and uses a completely different rapstyle.",
"Duvelduvel is known as a conceptual hip hop group."
],
[
"Notable artists",
"Notable Dutch hip hop artists, listed by locality include:"
],
[
"See also",
"* European hip hop"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* Nederhop Video – Categorized video clips of Dutch-language rappers* Nederhop Radio* Rap beats from Dutch producer Marcel van Ling (MoSound Productions)* Rap Hiphop beats from Dutch producer* Best Hip Hop duo in Amsterdam right now!",
"* Het VerZet - Hip-hop crew"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Anaïs Nin"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Angela Anaïs Juana Antolina Rosa Edelmira Nin y Culmell''' ( , ; February 21, 1903 – January 14, 1977) was a French-born American diarist, essayist, novelist, and writer of short stories and erotica.",
"Born to Cuban parents in France, Nin was the daughter of the composer Joaquín Nin and the classically trained singer Rosa Culmell.",
"Nin spent her early years in Spain and Cuba, about sixteen years in Paris (1924–1940), and the remaining half of her life in the United States, where she became an established author.Nin wrote journals prolifically from age eleven until her death.",
"Her journals, many of which were published during her lifetime, detail her private thoughts and personal relationships.",
"Her journals also describe her marriages to Hugh Parker Guiler and Rupert Pole, in addition to her numerous affairs, including those with psychoanalyst Otto Rank and writer Henry Miller, both of whom profoundly influenced Nin and her writing.In addition to her journals, Nin wrote several novels, critical studies, essays, short stories, and volumes of erotic literature.",
"Much of her work, including the collections of erotica ''Delta of Venus'' and ''Little Birds'', was published posthumously amid renewed critical interest in her life and work.",
"Nin spent her later life in Los Angeles, California, where she died of cervical cancer in 1977.She was a finalist for the Neustadt International Prize for Literature in 1976."
],
[
"Early life",
"Anaïs Nin was born in Neuilly, France, to Joaquín Nin, a Cuban pianist and composer, and Rosa Culmell, a classically trained Cuban singer.",
"Her father's grandfather had fled France during the French Revolution, going first to Saint-Domingue, then New Orleans, and finally to Cuba, where he helped build the country's first railway.Nin was raised a Roman Catholic but left the church when she was 16 years old.",
"She spent her childhood and early life in Europe.",
"Her parents separated when she was two; her mother then moved Nin and her two brothers, Thorvald Nin and Joaquín Nin-Culmell, to Barcelona, and then to New York City, where she attended high school.",
"Nin dropped out of high school in 1919 at age sixteen, and according to her diaries, ''Volume One, 1931–1934'', later began working as an artist's model.",
"After being in the United States for several years, Nin had forgotten how to speak Spanish, but retained her French and became fluent in English.Anaïs Nin as a teenager, On March 3, 1923, in Havana, Cuba, Nin married her first husband, US-American Hugh Parker Guiler (1898–1985), a banker and artist from Boston, later known as \"Ian Hugo\", when he became an experimental filmmaker in the late 1940s.",
"The couple moved to Paris the following year, where Guiler pursued his banking career and Nin began to pursue her interest in writing; in her diaries she also mentions having trained as a flamenco dancer in Paris in the mid-to-late 1920s with Francisco Miralles Arnau.",
"Her first published work was a critical 1932 evaluation of D. H. Lawrence called ''D.",
"H. Lawrence: An Unprofessional Study'', which she wrote in sixteen days.Nin became interested in psychoanalysis and studied extensively, first with René Allendy in 1932 and then with Otto Rank.",
"Both men eventually became her lovers, as she recounts in her ''Journal''.",
"On her second visit to Rank, Nin reflects on her desire to be reborn as a woman and artist.",
"Rank, she observes, helped her move between what she could verbalize in her journals and what remained unarticulated.",
"She discovered the quality and depth of her feelings in the wordless transitions between what she could and could not say.",
"\"As he talked, I thought of my difficulties with writing, my struggles to articulate feelings not easily expressed.",
"Of my struggles to find a language for intuition, feeling, instincts which are, in themselves, elusive, subtle, and wordless.",
"\"In the late summer of 1939, when residents from overseas were urged to leave France due to the approaching war, Nin left Paris and returned to New York City with her husband (Guiler was, according to his own wishes, edited out of the diaries published during Nin's lifetime; his role in her life is therefore difficult to evaluate).",
"During the war, Nin sent her books to Frances Steloff of the Gotham Book Mart in New York for safekeeping.In New York, Anaïs rejoined Otto Rank, who had previously moved there, and moved into his apartment.",
"She actually began to act as a psychoanalyst herself, seeing patients in the room next to Rank's.",
"She quit after several months, however, stating: \"I found that I wasn't good because I wasn't objective.",
"I was haunted by my patients.",
"I wanted to intercede.\"",
"It was in New York that she met the Japanese-American modernist photographer Soichi Sunami, who went on to photograph her for many of her books."
],
[
"Literary career",
"===Journals===Nin at a book reading with George Leite in Berkeley, California, 1946Nin's most studied works are her diaries or journals, which she began writing in her adolescence.",
"The published journals, which span six decades, provide insight into her personal life and relationships.",
"Nin was acquainted, often intimately, with a number of prominent authors, artists, psychoanalysts, and other figures, and wrote of them often, especially Otto Rank.",
"Moreover, as a female author describing a primarily masculine group of celebrities, Nin's journals have acquired importance as a counterbalancing perspective.",
"She initially wrote in French and did not begin to write in English until she was seventeen.",
"Nin felt that French was the language of her heart, Spanish was the language of her ancestors, and English was the language of her intellect.",
"The writing in her diaries is explicitly trilingual; she uses whichever language best expresses her thought.In the second volume of her unexpurgated journal, ''Incest'', she wrote about her father candidly and graphically (207–15), detailing her incestuous adult sexual relationship with him.Previously unpublished works were released in ''A Café in Space, the Anaïs Nin Literary Journal'', which includes \"Anaïs Nin and Joaquín Nin y Castellanos: Prelude to a SymphonyLetters between a father and daughter\".So far sixteen volumes of her journals have been published.",
"All but the last five of her adult journals are in expurgated form.===Erotic writings===Nin is hailed by many critics as one of the finest writers of female erotica.",
"She was one of the first women known to explore fully the realm of erotic writing, and certainly the first prominent woman in the modern West known to write erotica.",
"Before her, erotica acknowledged to be written by women was rare, with a few notable exceptions, such as the work of Kate Chopin.",
"Nin often cited authors Djuna Barnes and D. H. Lawrence as inspirations, and she states in ''Volume One'' of her diaries that she drew inspiration from Marcel Proust, André Gide, Jean Cocteau, Paul Valéry, and Arthur Rimbaud.According to ''Volume One'' of her diaries, ''1931–1934'', published in 1966, Nin first came across erotica when she returned to Paris with her husband, mother and two brothers in her late teens.",
"They rented the apartment of an American man who was away for the summer, and Nin came across a number of French paperbacks: \"One by one, I read these books, which were completely new to me.",
"I had never read erotic literature in America...",
"They overwhelmed me.",
"I was innocent before I read them, but by the time I had read them all, there was nothing I did not know about sexual exploits...",
"I had my degree in erotic lore.",
"\"Faced with a desperate need for money, Nin, Henry Miller and some of their friends began in the 1940s to write erotic and pornographic narratives for an anonymous \"collector\" for a dollar a page, somewhat as a joke.",
"(It is not clear whether Miller actually wrote these stories or merely allowed his name to be used.)",
"Nin considered the characters in her erotica to be extreme caricatures and never intended the work to be published, but changed her mind in the early 1970s and allowed them to be published as ''Delta of Venus'' and ''Little Birds''.",
"In 2016, a previously undiscovered collection of Nin's erotica, ''Auletris'', was published for the first time.Nin was a friend, and in some cases lover, of many literary figures, including Miller, John Steinbeck, Antonin Artaud, Edmund Wilson, Gore Vidal, James Agee, James Leo Herlihy, and Lawrence Durrell.",
"Her passionate love affair and friendship with Miller strongly influenced her both sexually and as an author.",
"Claims that Nin was bisexual were given added circulation by the 1990 Philip Kaufman film ''Henry & June'' about Miller and his second wife June Miller.",
"The first unexpurgated portion of Nin's journal to be published, ''Henry and June'', makes it clear that Nin was stirred by June to the point of saying (paraphrasing), \"I have become June,\" though it is unclear to what extent she consummated her feelings for her sexually.",
"To both Anaïs and Henry, June was a femme fataleirresistible, cunning, and erotic.",
"Nin gave June money, jewelry, clothes, often leaving herself without money.===Novels and other publications===In addition to her journals and collections of erotica, Nin wrote several novels, which were frequently associated by critics with the surrealist movement.",
"Her first book of fiction, ''House of Incest'' (1936), contains heavily veiled allusions to a brief sexual relationship Nin had with her father in 1933: While visiting her estranged father in France, the then-thirty-year-old Nin had a brief incestuous sexual relationship with him.",
"In 1944, she published a collection of short stories titled ''Under a Glass Bell'', which were reviewed by Edmund Wilson.Nin was also the author of several works of non-fiction: Her first publication, written during her years studying psychoanalysis, was ''D.",
"H. Lawrence: An Unprofessional Study'' (1932), an assessment of the works of D.H. Lawrence.",
"In 1968, she published ''The Novel of the Future'', which elaborated on her approach to writing and the writing process."
],
[
"Personal life",
"According to her diaries, ''Vol.",
"1, 1931–1934'', Nin shared a bohemian lifestyle with Henry Miller during her time in Paris.",
"Her husband Guiler is not mentioned anywhere in the published edition of the 1930s parts of her diary (Vol.",
"1–2) although the opening of Vol.",
"1 makes it clear that she is married, and the introduction suggests her husband declined to be included in the published diaries.",
"The diaries edited by her second husband, after her death, tell that her union with Miller was very passionate and physical, and that she believed that it was a pregnancy by him that she aborted in 1934.In 1947, at the age of 44, Nin met former actor Rupert Pole in a Manhattan elevator on her way to a party.",
"The two began a relationship and traveled to California together; Pole was sixteen years her junior.",
"On March 17, 1955, while still married to Guiler, she married Pole at Quartzsite, Arizona, returning with him to live in California.",
"Guiler remained in New York City and was unaware of Nin's second marriage until after her death in 1977, though biographer Deirdre Bair alleges that Guiler knew what was happening while Nin was in California, but consciously \"chose not to know\".Nin referred to her simultaneous marriages as her \"bicoastal trapeze\".",
"According to Deidre Bair:In 1966, Nin had her marriage with Pole annulled, due to the legal issues arising from both Guiler and Pole trying to claim her as a dependent on their federal tax returns.",
"Though the marriage was annulled, Nin and Pole continued to live together as if they were married until her death in 1977.According to Barbara Kraft, prior to her death, Nin had written to Guiler asking for his forgiveness.",
"He responded by writing how meaningful his life had been because of her.After Guiler's death in 1985, the unexpurgated versions of her journals were commissioned by Pole.",
"Six volumes have been published: ''Henry and June'', ''Fire'', ''Incest'', ''Nearer the Moon'', ''Mirages'', and ''Trapeze''.",
"Pole arranged for Guiler's ashes to be scattered in the same area where Nin's ashes were scattered, Mermaid Cove in Santa Monica Bay.",
"Pole died in July 2006.Nin once worked at Lawrence R. Maxwell Books, located at 45 Christopher Street in New York City.",
"In addition to her work as a writer, Nin appeared in the Kenneth Anger film ''Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome'' (1954) as Astarte; in the Maya Deren film ''Ritual in Transfigured Time'' (1946); and in ''Bells of Atlantis'' (1952), a film directed by Guiler under the name \"Ian Hugo\" with a soundtrack of electronic music by Louis and Bebe Barron.",
"In her later life, Nin worked as a tutor at the International College in Los Angeles."
],
[
"Death",
"Nin was diagnosed with cervical cancer in 1974.She battled the cancer for two years as it metastasized, and underwent numerous surgical operations, radiation, and chemotherapy.",
"Nin died of the cancer at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, California, on January 14, 1977.Her body was cremated, and her ashes were scattered over Santa Monica Bay in Mermaid Cove.",
"Her first husband, Hugh Guiler, died in 1985, and his ashes were scattered in the cove as well.",
"Rupert Pole was named Nin's literary executor, and he arranged to have new, unexpurgated editions of Nin's books and diaries published between 1985 and his death in 2006.Large portions of the diaries are still available only in expurgated form.",
"The originals are located in the UCLA Library."
],
[
"Legacy",
"The explosion of the feminist movement in the 1960s gave feminist perspectives on Nin's writings of the past twenty years, which made Nin a popular lecturer at various universities; contrarily, Nin dissociated herself from the political activism of the movement.",
"In 1973, prior to her death, Nin received an honorary doctorate from the Philadelphia College of Art.",
"She was also elected to the United States National Institute of Arts and Letters in 1974, and in 1976 was presented with a ''Los Angeles Times'' Woman of the Year award.The Italian film ''La stanza delle parole'' (dubbed into English as ''The Room of Words)'' was released in 1989 based on the ''Henry and June'' diaries.",
"Philip Kaufman directed the 1990 film ''Henry & June'' based on Nin's diaries published as ''Henry and June: From the Unexpurgated Diary of Anaïs Nin''.",
"She was portrayed in the film by actress Maria de Medeiros.",
"In February 2008, poet Steven Reigns organized ''Anaïs Nin at 105'' at the Hammer Museum in Westwood, Los Angeles.",
"Reigns said: \"Nin bonded and formed very deep friendships with women and men decades younger than her.",
"Some of them are still living in Los Angeles and I thought it'd be wonderful to have them share their experiences with Nin.\"",
"Bebe Barron, an electronic music pioneer and longtime friend of Nin, made her last public appearance at this event.",
"Reigns also published an essay refuting Bern Porter's claims of a sexual relationship with Nin in the 1930s.Cuban-American writer Daína Chaviano paid homage to Anaïs Nin and Henry Miller in her novel ''Gata encerrada'' (2001), where both characters are portrayed as disembodied spirits whose previous lives they shared with Melisa, the main character—and presumably Chaviano's alter ego—, a young Cuban obsessed with Anaïs Nin.The Cuban poet and novelist Wendy Guerra, long fascinated with Nin's life and works, published a fictional diary in Nin's voice, ''Posar desnuda en la Habana'' (''Posing Nude in Havana'') in 2012.She explained that \"Nin's Cuban Diary has very few pages and my delirium was always to write an apocryphal novel; literary conjecture about what might have happened\".On September 27, 2013, screenwriter and author Kim Krizan published an article in ''The Huffington Post'' revealing she had found a previously unpublished love letter written by Gore Vidal to Nin.",
"This letter contradicts Gore Vidal's previous characterization of his relationship with Nin, showing that Vidal did have feelings for Nin that he later heavily disavowed in his autobiography, ''Palimpsest''.",
"Krizan did this research in the run up to the release of the fifth volume of Anaïs Nin's uncensored diary, ''Mirages'', for which Krizan provided the foreword.In 2015, ''The Erotic Adventures of Anais Nin'' a documentary film directed by Sarah Aspinall, was released, in which Lucy Cohu portrayed Nin's character.In 2019, Kim Krizan published ''Spy in the House of Anaïs Nin'', an examination of long-buried letters, papers, and original manuscripts Krizan found while doing archival work in Nin's Los Angeles home.",
"Also that year, Routledge published the book ''Anaïs Nin: A Myth of Her Own'' by Clara Oropeza, that analyzes Nin's literature and literary theory through the perspective of mythological studies and depth psychology.In 2002 Alissa Levy Caiano produced a short film called ''The All-Seeing'' based on Nin's short story of the same name in Under a Glass Bell.In 2021, the porn film company Thousand Faces released a short film called ''Mathilde'' based on Nin's story of the same name in Delta of Venus."
],
[
"Bibliography",
"===Diaries===* ''The Early Diary of Anaïs Nin'' (1914–1931), in four volumes* ''The Diary of Anaïs Nin'', in seven volumes, edited by herself* ''Henry and June: From A Journal of Love.",
"The Unexpurgated Diary of Anaïs Nin (1931–1932)'' (1986), edited by Rupert Pole after her death* ''Incest: From a Journal of Love'' (1992)* ''Fire: From A Journal of Love'' (1995)* ''Nearer the Moon: From A Journal of Love'' (1996)* ''Mirages: The Unexpurgated Diary of Anaïs Nin, 1939–1947'' (2013)* ''Trapeze: The Unexpurgated Diary of Anaïs Nin, 1947–1955'' (2017)* ''The Diary of Others: The Unexpurgated Diary of Anaïs Nin, 1955–1966'' (2021)* ''A Joyous Transformation: The Unexpurgated Diary of Anaïs Nin, 1966–1977'' (forthcoming)===Correspondence===* ''A Literate Passion: Letters of Anaïs Nin & Henry Miller 1932–1953'' (1988)* ''Letters to a friend in Australia'' (1992)* ''Arrows of Longing: Correspondence Between Anaïs Nin & Felix Pollack, 1952–1976'' (1998)* ''Morale des épicentres'' (2004)* ''Reunited: The Correspondence of Anaïs and Joaquin Nin, 1933–1940'' (2020)* ''Letters to Lawrence Durrell 1937–1977'' (2020)====Novels====* ''House of Incest'' (1936)* ''Winter of Artifice'' (1939)* ''Cities of the Interior'' (1959), in five volumes:** ''Ladders to Fire''** ''Children of the Albatross''** ''The Four-Chambered Heart''** ''A Spy in the House of Love''** ''Seduction of the Minotaur'', originally published as ''Solar Barque'' (1958).",
"* ''Collages'' (1964)====Short stories====* ''Waste of Timelessness: And Other Early Stories'' (written before 1932, published posthumously)* ''Under a Glass Bell'' (1944)* ''Delta of Venus'' (1977)* ''Little Birds'' (1979)* ''Auletris'' (2016)===Non-fiction===* ''D.",
"H. Lawrence: An Unprofessional Study'' (1932)* ''The Novel of the Future'' (1968)* ''In Favor of the Sensitive Man'' (1976)* ''The Mystic of Sex: Uncollected Writings: 1930-1974'' (1995)"
],
[
"Filmography",
"* ''Lascivious Folk Ballet'' (1946) - (Outtakes from ''Ritual in Transfigured Time'').",
"*''Ritual in Transfigured Time'' (1946): Short film, dir.",
"Maya Deren*''Bells of Atlantis'' (1952): Short film, dir.",
"Ian Hugo*''Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome'' (1954): Short film, dir.",
"Kenneth Anger*''Melodic Inversion'' (1958)*''Lectures pour tous'' (1964)*''Anaïs Nin Her Diary'' (1966)*''Un moment avec une grande figure de la littérature, Anaïs Nin'', (3 May 1968)*''Anaïs Nin at the University of California, Berkeley'', (December 1971)*''Anaïs Nin at Hampshire College, (1972)*'''Ouvrez les guillemets'', (11 November 1974)*''Journal de Paris'', (21 November 1974)*''Anais Nin Observed'' (1974): Documentary, dir.",
"Robert Snyder"
],
[
"See also",
"* List of Cuban American writers* List of Cuban Americans"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"Citations"
],
[
"Works cited",
"* * * * * *"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* Oropeza, Clara.",
"(2019) ''Anaïs Nin: A Myth of Her Own'', Routledge * * * Yaguchi, Yuko.",
"(2022) ''Anaïs Nin's Paris Revisited'' The English–French Bilingual Edition (French Edition), Wind Rose-Suiseisha* Bita, Lili.",
"(1994) \"Anais Nin\".",
"''EI'' Magazine of European Art Center (EUARCE), Is.",
"7/1994 pp.",
"9, 24–30"
],
[
"External links",
"* The Official Anaïs Nin Blog* Anaïs Nin.com Thinking of Anaïs Nin* Anaïs Nin Foundation Contact the Anaïs Nin estate for rights and permissions requests* * * Ian Hugo (Nin's husband) * Anais Nin's Hideaway Home in Los Angeles (2022-03-21 in ''The New York Times'')"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"AIM (software)"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''AIM''' ('''AOL Instant Messenger''', sometimes stylized as '''aim''') was an instant messaging and presence computer program created by AOL, which used the proprietary OSCAR instant messaging protocol and the TOC protocol to allow registered users to communicate in real time.AIM was popular by the late 1990s, in United States and other countries, and was the leading instant messaging application in that region into the following decade.",
"Teens and college students were known to use the messenger's away message feature to keep in touch with friends, often frequently changing their away message throughout a day or leaving a message up with one's computer left on to inform buddies of their ongoings, location, parties, thoughts, or jokes.",
"AIM's popularity declined as AOL subscribers started decreasing and steeply towards the 2010s, as Gmail's Google Talk, SMS, and Internet social networks, like Facebook gained popularity.",
"Its fall has often been compared with other once-popular Internet services, such as Myspace.In June 2015, AOL was acquired by Verizon Communications.",
"In June 2017, Verizon combined AOL and Yahoo into its subsidiary Oath Inc. (now called Yahoo).",
"The company discontinued AIM as a service on December 15, 2017."
],
[
"History",
"In May 1997, AIM was released unceremoniously as a stand-alone download for Microsoft Windows.",
"AIM was an outgrowth of \"online messages\" in the original platform written in PL/1 on a Stratus computer by Dave Brown.",
"At one time, the software had the largest share of the instant messaging market in North America, especially in the United States (with 52% of the total reported ).",
"This does not include other instant messaging software related to or developed by AOL, such as ICQ and iChat.AIM version 4.7 (released 2001)During its heyday, its main competitors were ICQ (which AOL acquired in 1998), Yahoo!",
"Messenger and MSN Messenger.",
"AOL particularly had a rivalry or \"chat war\" with PowWow and Microsoft, starting in 1999.There were several attempts from Microsoft to simultaneously log into their own and AIM's protocol servers.",
"AOL was unhappy about this and started blocking MSN Messenger from being able to access AIM.",
"This led to efforts by many companies to challenge the AOL and Time Warner merger on the grounds of antitrust behaviour, leading to the formation of the OpenNet Coalition.AIM version 6.8 (released 2008)Official mobile versions of AIM appeared as early as 2001 on Palm OS through the AOL application.",
"Third-party applications allowed it to be used in 2002 for the Sidekick.",
"A version for Symbian OS was announced in 2003 as were others for BlackBerry and Windows MobileAfter 2012, stand-alone official AIM client software included advertisements and was available for Microsoft Windows, Windows Mobile, Classic Mac OS, macOS, Android, iOS, and BlackBerry OS.===Usage decline and product sunset===Around 2011, AIM started to lose popularity rapidly, partly due to the quick rise of Gmail and its built-in real-time Google Chat instant messenger integration in 2011 and because many people migrated to SMS or iMessages text messaging and later, social networking websites and apps for instant messaging, in particular, Facebook Messenger, which was released as a standalone application the same year.",
"AOL made a partnership to integrate AIM messaging in Google Talk, and had a feature for AIM users to send SMS messages directly from AIM to any number, as well as for SMS users to send an IM to any AIM user.As of June 2011, one source reported AOL Instant Messenger market share had collapsed to 0.73%.",
"However, this number only reflected installed IM applications, and not active users.",
"The engineers responsible for AIM claimed that they were unable to convince AOL management that free was the future.On March 3, 2012, AOL ended employment of AIM's development staff while leaving it active and with help support still provided.",
"On October 6, 2017, it was announced that the AIM service would be discontinued on December 15; however, a non-profit development team known as Wildman Productions started up a server for older versions of AOL Instant Messenger, known as AIM Phoenix."
],
[
"The “AIM Man”",
"The \"Running Man\"The AIM mascot was designed by JoRoan Lazaro and was implemented in the first release in 1997.This was a yellow stickman-like figure, often called the “Running Man”.",
"The mascot appeared on all AIM logos and most wordmarks, and always appeared at the top of the buddy list.",
"AIM's popularity in the late 1990s and the 2000s led to the “Running Man” becoming a familiar brand on the Internet.",
"After over 14 years, the iconic logo disappeared as part of the AIM rebranding in 2011.However, in August 2013, the \"Running Man\" returned.",
"It was used for other AOL services like AOL Top Speed and is featured in a theme on AOL Mail.In 2014, a ''Complex'' editor called it a “symbol of America”.",
"In April 2015, the Running Man was officially featured in the Virgin London Marathon, dressed by a person for the AOL-partnered Free The Children charity."
],
[
"Protocol",
"The standard protocol that AIM clients used to communicate is called Open System for CommunicAtion in Realtime (OSCAR).",
"Most AOL-produced versions of AIM and popular third party AIM clients use this protocol.",
"However, AOL also created a simpler protocol called TOC that lacks many of OSCAR's features, but was sometimes used for clients that only require basic chat functionality.",
"The TOC/TOC2 protocol specifications were made available by AOL, while OSCAR is a closed protocol that third parties had to reverse-engineer.In January 2008, AOL introduced experimental Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) support for AIM, allowing AIM users to communicate using the standardized, open-source XMPP.",
"However, in March 2008, this service was discontinued.",
"In May 2011, AOL started offering limited XMPP support.",
"On March 1, 2017, AOL announced (via XMPP-login-time messages) that the AOL XMPP gateway would be desupported, effective March 28, 2017."
],
[
"Privacy",
"For privacy regulations, AIM had strict age restrictions.",
"AIM accounts are available only for people over the age of 13; children younger than that were not permitted access to AIM.Under the AIM Privacy Policy, AOL had no rights to read or monitor any private communications between users.",
"The profile of the user had no privacy.In November 2002, AOL targeted the corporate industry with Enterprise AIM Services (EAS), a higher security version of AIM.If public content was accessed, it could be used for online, print or broadcast advertising, etc.",
"This was outlined in the policy and terms of service: \"... you grant AOL, its parent, affiliates, subsidiaries, assigns, agents and licensees the irrevocable, perpetual, worldwide right to reproduce, display, perform, distribute, adapt and promote this Content in any medium\".",
"This allowed anything users posted to be used without a separate request for permission.AIM's security was called into question.",
"AOL stated that it had taken great pains to ensure that personal information will not be accessed by unauthorized members, but that it cannot guarantee that it will not happen.AIM was different from other clients, such as Yahoo!",
"Messenger, in that it did not require approval from users to be added to other users' buddy lists.",
"As a result, it was possible for users to keep other unsuspecting users on their buddy list to see when they were online, read their status and away messages, and read their profiles.",
"There was also a Web API to display one's status and away message as a widget on one's webpage.",
"Though one could block a user from communicating with them and seeing their status, this did not prevent that user from creating a new account that would not automatically be blocked and therefore able to track their status.",
"A more conservative privacy option was to select a menu feature that only allowed communication with users on one's buddy list; however, this option also created the side-effect of blocking all users who were not on one's buddy list.",
"Users could also choose to be invisible to all."
],
[
"Chat robots",
"AOL and various other companies supplied robots (bots) on AIM that could receive messages and send a response based on the bot's purpose.",
"For example, bots could help with studying, like StudyBuddy.",
"Some were made to relate to children and teenagers, like Spleak.Others gave advice.",
"The more useful chat bots had features like the ability to play games, get sport scores, weather forecasts or financial stock information.",
"Users were able to talk to automated chat bots that could respond to natural human language.",
"They were primarily put into place as a marketing strategy and for unique advertising options.",
"It was used by advertisers to market products or build better consumer relations.Before the inclusions of such bots, the other bots DoorManBot and AIMOffline provided features that were provided by AOL for those who needed it.",
"ZolaOnAOL and ZoeOnAOL were short-lived bots that ultimately retired their features in favor of SmarterChild."
],
[
"URI scheme",
"AOL Instant Messenger's installation process automatically installed an extra URI scheme (\"protocol\") handler into some Web browsers, so URIs beginning \"aim:\" could open a new AIM window with specified parameters.",
"This was similar in function to the mailto: URI scheme, which created a new e-mail message using the system's default mail program.",
"For instance, a webpage might have included a link like the following in its HTML source to open a window for sending a message to the AIM user ''notarealuser'': Send MessageTo specify a message body, the message parameter was used, so the link location would have looked like this: aim:goim?screenname=notarealuser&message=This+is+my+messageTo specify an away message, the message parameter was used, so the link location would have looked like this: aim:goaway?message=Hello,+my+name+is+BillWhen placing this inside a URL link, an AIM user could click on the URL link and the away message \"Hello, my name is Bill\" would instantly become their away message.To add a buddy, the addbuddy message was used, with the \"screenname\" parameter aim:addbuddy?screenname=notarealuserThis type of link was commonly found on forum profiles to easily add contacts."
],
[
"Vulnerabilities",
"AIM had security weaknesses that have enabled exploits to be created that used third-party software to perform malicious acts on users' computers.",
"Although most were relatively harmless, such as being kicked off the AIM service, others performed potentially dangerous actions, such as sending viruses.",
"Some of these exploits relied on social engineering to spread by automatically sending instant messages that contained a Uniform Resource Locator (URL) accompanied by text suggesting the receiving user click on it, an action which leads to infection, ''i.e.",
"'', a trojan horse.",
"These messages could easily be mistaken as coming from a friend and contain a link to a Web address that installed software on the user's computer to restart the cycle.Users also have reported sudden additions of toolbars and advertisements from third parties in the newer version of AIM.",
"Multiple complaints about the lack of control of third party involvement have caused many users to stop using the service."
],
[
"Extra features",
"===iPhone application===On March 6, 2008, during Apple Inc.'s iPhone SDK event, AOL announced that they would be releasing an AIM application for iPhone and iPod Touch users.",
"The application was available for free from the App Store, but the company also provided a paid version, which displayed no advertisements.",
"Both were available from the App Store.",
"The AIM client for iPhone and iPod Touch supported standard AIM accounts, as well as MobileMe accounts.",
"There was also an express version of AIM accessible through the Safari browser on the iPhone and iPod Touch.In 2011, AOL launched an overhaul of their Instant Messaging service.",
"Included in the update was a brand new iOS application for iPhone and iPod Touch that incorporated all the latest features.",
"A brand new icon was used for the application, featuring the new cursive logo for AIM.",
"The user-interface was entirely redone for the features including: a new buddy list, group messaging, in-line photos and videos, as well as improved file-sharing.Version 5.0.5, updated in March 2012, it supported more social stream features, much like Facebook and Twitter, as well as the ability to send voice messages up to 60 seconds long.===iPad application===On April 3, 2010, Apple released the first generation iPad.",
"Along with this newly released device AOL released the AIM application for iPad.",
"It was built entirely from scratch for the new version of iOS with a specialized user-interface for the device.",
"It supported geolocation, Facebook status updates and chat, Myspace, Twitter, YouTube, Foursquare, and many other social networking platforms.===AIM Express===AIM Express ran in a pop-up browser window.",
"It was intended for use by people who are unwilling or unable to install a standalone application or those at computers that lack the AIM application.",
"AIM Express supported many of the standard features included in the stand-alone client, but did not provide advanced features like file transfer, audio chat, video conferencing, or buddy info.",
"It was implemented in Adobe Flash.",
"It was an upgrade to the prior AOL Quick Buddy, which was later available for older systems that cannot handle Express before being discontinued.",
"Express and Quick Buddy were similar to MSN Web Messenger and Yahoo!",
"Web Messenger.",
"This web version evolved into AIM.com's web-based messenger.===AIM Pages==='''AIM Pages''' was a free website released in May 2006 by AOL in replacement of AIMSpace.",
"Anyone who had an AIM user name and was at least 16 years of age could create their own web page (to display an online, dynamic profile) and share it with buddies from their AIM Buddy list.==== Layout ====AIM Pages included links to the email and Instant Message of the owner, along with a section listing the owners \"buddies\", which included AIM user names.",
"It was possible to create modules in a Module T microformat.",
"Video hosting sites like Netflix and YouTube could be added to ones AIM Page, as well as other sites like Amazon.com.",
"It was also possible to insert HTML code.The main focus of AIM Pages was the integration of external modules, like those listed above, into the AOL Instant Messenger experience.==== Discontinuation ====By late 2007, AIM Pages were discontinued.",
"After AIM Pages shutdown, links to AIM Pages were redirected to AOL Lifestream, AOL's new site aimed at collecting external modules in one place, independent of AIM buddies.",
"AOL Lifestream was shut down February 24, 2017.===AIM for Mac===AOL released an all-new AIM for the Mac on September 29, 2008, and the final build on December 15, 2008.The redesigned AIM for Mac is a full universal binary Cocoa API application that supports both Tiger and Leopard — Mac OS X 10.4.8 (and above) or Mac OS X 10.5.3 (and above).",
"On October 1, 2009, AOL released AIM 2.0 for Mac.===AIM real-time IM===This feature was available for AIM 7 and allowed for a user to see what the other is typing as it is being done.",
"It was developed and built with assistance from Trace Research and Development Centre at University of Wisconsin–Madison and Gallaudet University.",
"The application provides visually impaired users the ability to convert messages from text (words) to speech.",
"For the application to work users must have AIM 6.8 or higher, as it is not compatible with older versions of AIM software, AIM for Mac or iChat.===AIM to mobile (messaging to phone numbers)===This feature allows text messaging to a phone number (text messaging is less functional than instant messaging)."
],
[
"Discontinued features",
"===AIM Phoneline==='''AIM Phoneline''' was a Voice over IP PC-PC, PC-Phone and Phone-to-PC service provided via the AIM application.",
"It was also known to work with Apple's iChat Client.",
"The service was officially closed to its customers on January 13, 2009.The closing of the free service caused the number associated with the service to be disabled and not transferable for a different service.",
"AIM Phoneline website was recommending users switch to a new service named AIM Call Out, also discontinued now.Launched on May 16, 2006, AIM Phoneline provided users the ability to have several local numbers, allowing AIM users to receive free incoming calls.",
"The service allowed users to make calls to landlines and mobile devices through the use of a computer.",
"The service, however, was only free for receiving and AOL charged users $14.95 a month for an unlimited calling plan.",
"In order to use AIM Phoneline users had to install the latest free version of AIM Triton software and needed a good set of headphones with a boom microphone.",
"It could take several days after a user signed up before it started working.===AIM Call Out===AIM Call Out is a discontinued Voice over IP PC-PC, PC-Phone and Phone-to-PC service provided by AOL via its AIM application that replaced the defunct AIM Phoneline service in November 2007.It did not depend on the AIM client and could be used with only an AIM screenname via the WebConnect feature or a dedicated SIP device.",
"The AIM Call Out service was shut down on March 25, 2009."
],
[
"Security",
"On November 4, 2014, AIM scored one out of seven points on the Electronic Frontier Foundation's secure messaging scorecard.",
"AIM received a point for encryption during transit, but lost points because communications are not encrypted with a key to which the provider has no access, ''i.e.",
"'', the communications are not end-to-end encrypted, users can't verify contacts' identities, past messages are not secure if the encryption keys are stolen, (''i.e.",
"'', the service does not provide forward secrecy), the code is not open to independent review, (''i.e.",
"'', the code is not open-source), the security design is not properly documented, and there has not been a recent independent security audit.",
"BlackBerry Messenger (BBM), Ebuddy XMS, Hushmail, Kik Messenger, Skype, Viber, and Yahoo!",
"Messenger also scored one out of seven points."
],
[
"See also",
"* Comparison of cross-platform instant messaging clients* List of defunct instant messaging platforms"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"*"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Ackermann function"
],
[
"Introduction",
"In computability theory, the '''Ackermann function''', named after Wilhelm Ackermann, is one of the simplest and earliest-discovered examples of a total computable function that is not primitive recursive.",
"All primitive recursive functions are total and computable, but the Ackermann function illustrates that not all total computable functions are primitive recursive.After Ackermann's publication of his function (which had three non-negative integer arguments), many authors modified it to suit various purposes, so that today \"the Ackermann function\" may refer to any of numerous variants of the original function.",
"One common version is the two-argument '''Ackermann–Péter function''' developed by Rózsa Péter and Raphael Robinson.",
"Its value grows very rapidly; for example, results in , an integer of 19,729 decimal digits."
],
[
"History",
"In the late 1920s, the mathematicians Gabriel Sudan and Wilhelm Ackermann, students of David Hilbert, were studying the foundations of computation.",
"Both Sudan and Ackermann are credited with discovering total computable functions (termed simply \"recursive\" in some references) that are not primitive recursive.",
"Sudan published the lesser-known Sudan function, then shortly afterwards and independently, in 1928, Ackermann published his function (from Greek, the letter ''phi'').",
"Ackermann's three-argument function, , is defined such that for , it reproduces the basic operations of addition, multiplication, and exponentiation as:and for ''p'' > 2 it extends these basic operations in a way that can be compared to the hyperoperations::(Aside from its historic role as a total-computable-but-not-primitive-recursive function, Ackermann's original function is seen to extend the basic arithmetic operations beyond exponentiation, although not as seamlessly as do variants of Ackermann's function that are specifically designed for that purpose—such as Goodstein's hyperoperation sequence.",
")In ''On the Infinite'', David Hilbert hypothesized that the Ackermann function was not primitive recursive, but it was Ackermann, Hilbert's personal secretary and former student, who actually proved the hypothesis in his paper ''On Hilbert's Construction of the Real Numbers''.Rózsa Péter and Raphael Robinson later developed a two-variable version of the Ackermann function that became preferred by almost all authors.The generalized hyperoperation sequence, e.g.",
", is a version of Ackermann function as well.In 1963 R.C.",
"Buck based an intuitive two-variable variant on the hyperoperation sequence::Compared to most other versions Buck's function has no unessential offsets::Many other versions of Ackermann function have been investigated."
],
[
"Definition",
"=== Definition: as m-ary function ===Ackermann's original three-argument function is defined recursively as follows for nonnegative integers and ::Of the various two-argument versions, the one developed by Péter and Robinson (called \"the\" Ackermann function by most authors) is defined for nonnegative integers and as follows::The Ackermann function has also been expressed in relation to the hyperoperation sequence:::or, written in Knuth's up-arrow notation (extended to integer indices ):::::or, equivalently, in terms of Buck's function F: :::=== Definition: as iterated 1-ary function ===Define as the ''n''-th iterate of ::Iteration is the process of composing a function with itself a certain number of times.",
"Function composition is an associative operation, so .Conceiving the Ackermann function as a sequence of unary functions, one can set .The function then becomes a sequence of unary functions, defined from iteration::"
],
[
"Computation",
"The recursive definition of the Ackermann function can naturally be transposed to a term rewriting system (TRS).===TRS, based on 2-ary function===The definition of the '''2-ary''' Ackermann function leads to the obvious reduction rules :'''Example'''Compute The reduction sequence is Leftmost-outermost (one-step) strategy:Leftmost-innermost (one-step) strategy:To compute one can use a stack, which initially contains the elements .Then repeatedly the two top elements are replaced according to the rules:Schematically, starting from : '''WHILE''' stackLength 1 { '''POP''' 2 elements; '''PUSH''' 1 or 2 or 3 elements, applying the rules r1, r2, r3 }The pseudocode is published in .For example, on input ,the stack configurationsreflect the reductionS(0) is notated as 1,S(S(0)) is notated as 2,S(S(S(0))) is notated as 3,etc... \t\t \t\t\t\t\t \t\t \t\t\t\t\t \t\t \t\t\t\t\t \t\t \t\t\t\t\t \t\t \t\t\t\t\t \t\t \t\t\t\t\t \t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t'''Remarks'''*The leftmost-innermost strategy is implemented in 225 computer languages on Rosetta Code.",
"*For all the computation of takes no more than steps.",
"* pointed out that in the computation of the maximum length of the stack is , as long as .",
":Their own algorithm, inherently iterative, computes within time and within space.===TRS, based on iterated 1-ary function===The definition of the iterated '''1-ary''' Ackermann functions leads to different reduction rules:As function composition is associative, instead of rule r6 one can define:Like in the previous section the computation of can be implemented with a stack.Initially the stack contains the three elements .Then repeatedly the three top elements are replaced according to the rules:Schematically, starting from : '''WHILE''' stackLength 1 { '''POP''' 3 elements; '''PUSH''' 1 or 3 or 5 elements, applying the rules r4, r5, r6; }'''Example'''On input the successive stack configurations are:The corresponding equalities are:When reduction rule r7 is used instead of rule r6, the replacements in the stack will follow:The successive stack configurations will then be:The corresponding equalities are :'''Remarks'''*On any given input the TRSs presented so far converge in the same number of steps.",
"They also use the same reduction rules (in this comparison the rules r1, r2, r3 are considered \"the same as\" the rules r4, r5, r6/r7 respectively).",
"For example, the reduction of converges in 14 steps: 6 × r1, 3 × r2, 5 × r3.The reduction of converges in the same 14 steps: 6 × r4, 3 × r5, 5 × r6/r7.The TRSs differ in the order in which the reduction rules are applied.",
"*When is computed following the rules {r4, r5, r6}, the maximum length of the stack stays below .",
"When reduction rule r7 is used instead of rule r6, the maximum length of the stack is only .",
"The length of the stack reflects the recursion depth.",
"As the reduction according to the rules {r4, r5, r7} involves a smaller maximum depth of recursion, this computation is more efficient in that respect.===TRS, based on hyperoperators===As — or — showed explicitly, the Ackermann function can be expressed in terms of the hyperoperation sequence::or, after removal of the constant 2 from the parameter list, in terms of Buck's function :::Buck's function , a variant of Ackermann function by itself, can be computed with the following reduction rules::Instead of rule b6 one can define the rule :To compute the Ackermann function it suffices to add three reduction rules:These rules take care of the base case A(0,n), the alignment (n+3) and the fudge (-3).",
"'''Example'''Compute using reduction rule :using reduction rule : \t\t\t\t\t \t\t \t\t\t\t\t \t\t \t\t \t\t \t\t\t\t\t \t\t \t\t \t\t \t\t \t\t \t\t\t\t\t \t\t \t\t\t\t\t \t\t \t\t\t\t\t \t\t \t\t\t\t\t \t\t \t\t\t\t\t \t\t \t\t\t\t\t \t\t \t\t\t\t\t \t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\tThe matching equalities are*when the TRS with the reduction rule is applied::*when the TRS with the reduction rule is applied::'''Remarks'''*The computation of according to the rules {b1 - b5, b6, r8 - r10} is deeply recursive.",
"The maximum depth of nested s is .",
"The culprit is the order in which iteration is executed: .",
"The first disappears only after the whole sequence is unfolded.",
"*The computation according to the rules {b1 - b5, b7, r8 - r10} is more efficient in that respect.",
"The iteration simulates the repeated loop over a block of code.",
"The nesting is limited to , one recursion level per iterated function.",
"showed this correspondence.",
"*These considerations concern the recursion depth only.",
"Either way of iterating leads to the same number of reduction steps, involving the same rules (when the rules b6 and b7 are considered \"the same\").",
"The reduction of for instance converges in 35 steps: 12 × b1, 4 × b2, 1 × b3, 4 × b5, 12 × b6/b7, 1 × r9, 1 × r10.The ''modus iterandi'' only affects the order in which the reduction rules are applied.",
"*A real gain of execution time can only be achieved by not recalculating subresults over and over again.",
"Memoization is an optimization technique where the results of function calls are cached and returned when the same inputs occur again.",
"See for instance .",
"published a cunning algorithm which computes within time and within space.===Huge numbers===To demonstrate how the computation of results in many steps and in a large number::"
],
[
"Table of values",
"Computing the Ackermann function can be restated in terms of an infinite table.",
"First, place the natural numbers along the top row.",
"To determine a number in the table, take the number immediately to the left.",
"Then use that number to look up the required number in the column given by that number and one row up.",
"If there is no number to its left, simply look at the column headed \"1\" in the previous row.",
"Here is a small upper-left portion of the table:+ Values of ''A''(''m'', ''n'') 0 1 2 3 4 ''n'' 0 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 6 2 3 5 7 9 11 3 5 13 29 61 125 4 13 65533 265536 − 3 5 65533 6 ''m'' The numbers here which are only expressed with recursive exponentiation or Knuth arrows are very large and would take up too much space to notate in plain decimal digits.Despite the large values occurring in this early section of the table, some even larger numbers have been defined, such as Graham's number, which cannot be written with any small number of Knuth arrows.",
"This number is constructed with a technique similar to applying the Ackermann function to itself recursively.This is a repeat of the above table, but with the values replaced by the relevant expression from the function definition to show the pattern clearly:+ Values of ''A''(''m'', ''n'') 0 1 2 3 4 ''n'' 0 0+1 1+1 2+1 3+1 4+1 ''n'' + 1 1 ''A''(0, 1) ''A''(0, ''A''(1, 0))= ''A''(0, 2) ''A''(0, ''A''(1, 1))= ''A''(0, 3) ''A''(0, ''A''(1, 2))= ''A''(0, 4) ''A''(0, ''A''(1, 3))= ''A''(0, 5) ''A''(0, ''A''(1, ''n''−1)) 2 ''A''(1, 1) ''A''(1, ''A''(2, 0))= ''A''(1, 3) ''A''(1, ''A''(2, 1))= ''A''(1, 5) ''A''(1, ''A''(2, 2))= ''A''(1, 7) ''A''(1, ''A''(2, 3))= ''A''(1, 9) ''A''(1, ''A''(2, ''n''−1)) 3 ''A''(2, 1) ''A''(2, ''A''(3, 0))= ''A''(2, 5) ''A''(2, ''A''(3, 1))= ''A''(2, 13) ''A''(2, ''A''(3, 2))= ''A''(2, 29) ''A''(2, ''A''(3, 3))= ''A''(2, 61) ''A''(2, ''A''(3, ''n''−1)) 4 ''A''(3, 1) ''A''(3, ''A''(4, 0))= ''A''(3, 13) ''A''(3, ''A''(4, 1))= ''A''(3, 65533) ''A''(3, ''A''(4, 2)) ''A''(3, ''A''(4, 3)) ''A''(3, ''A''(4, ''n''−1)) 5 ''A''(4, 1) ''A''(4, ''A''(5, 0)) ''A''(4, ''A''(5, 1)) ''A''(4, ''A''(5, 2)) ''A''(4, ''A''(5, 3)) ''A''(4, ''A''(5, ''n''−1)) 6 ''A''(5, 1) ''A''(5, ''A''(6, 0)) ''A''(5, ''A''(6, 1)) ''A''(5, ''A''(6, 2)) ''A''(5, ''A''(6, 3)) ''A''(5, ''A''(6, ''n''−1))"
],
[
"Properties",
"=== General remarks ===*It may not be immediately obvious that the evaluation of always terminates.",
"However, the recursion is bounded because in each recursive application either decreases, or remains the same and decreases.",
"Each time that reaches zero, decreases, so eventually reaches zero as well.",
"(Expressed more technically, in each case the pair decreases in the lexicographic order on pairs, which is a well-ordering, just like the ordering of single non-negative integers; this means one cannot go down in the ordering infinitely many times in succession.)",
"However, when decreases there is no upper bound on how much can increase — and it will often increase greatly.",
"*For small values of ''m'' like 1, 2, or 3, the Ackermann function grows relatively slowly with respect to ''n'' (at most exponentially).",
"For , however, it grows much more quickly; even is about 2.00353, and the decimal expansion of is very large by any typical measure, about 2.12004.",
"*An interesting aspect is that the only arithmetic operation it ever uses is addition of 1.Its fast growing power is based solely on nested recursion.",
"This also implies that its running time is at least proportional to its output, and so is also extremely huge.",
"In actuality, for most cases the running time is far larger than the output; see above.",
"*A single-argument version that increases both and at the same time dwarfs every primitive recursive function, including very fast-growing functions such as the exponential function, the factorial function, multi- and superfactorial functions, and even functions defined using Knuth's up-arrow notation (except when the indexed up-arrow is used).",
"It can be seen that is roughly comparable to in the fast-growing hierarchy.",
"This extreme growth can be exploited to show that which is obviously computable on a machine with infinite memory such as a Turing machine and so is a computable function, grows faster than any primitive recursive function and is therefore not primitive recursive.=== Not primitive recursive ===The Ackermann function grows faster than any primitive recursive function and therefore is not itself primitive recursive.",
"The sketch of the proof is this: a primitive recursive function defined using up to k recursions must grow slower than , the (k+1)-th function in the fast-growing hierarchy, but the Ackermann function grows at least as fast as .Specifically, one shows that to every primitive recursive function there exists a non-negative integer such that for all non-negative integers ,:Once this is established, it follows that itself is not primitive recursive, since otherwise putting would lead to the contradiction The proof proceeds as follows: define the class of all functions that grow slower than the Ackermann function:and show that contains all primitive recursive functions.",
"The latter is achieved by showing that contains the constant functions, the successor function, the projection functions and that it is closed under the operations of function composition and primitive recursion."
],
[
"Use in computational complexity",
"The Ackermann function appears in the time complexity of some algorithms, such as vector addition systems and Petri net reachability, thus showing they are computationally infeasible for large instances.",
"The inverse of the Ackerman function appears in some time complexity results."
],
[
"Inverse",
"Since the function considered above grows very rapidly, its inverse function, ''f'', grows very slowly.",
"This '''inverse Ackermann function''' ''f''−1 is usually denoted by '''''α'''''.",
"In fact, ''α''(''n'') is less than 5 for any practical input size ''n'', since is on the order of .This inverse appears in the time complexity of some algorithms, such as the disjoint-set data structure and Chazelle's algorithm for minimum spanning trees.",
"Sometimes Ackermann's original function or other variations are used in these settings, but they all grow at similarly high rates.",
"In particular, some modified functions simplify the expression by eliminating the −3 and similar terms.A two-parameter variation of the inverse Ackermann function can be defined as follows, where is the floor function::This function arises in more precise analyses of the algorithms mentioned above, and gives a more refined time bound.",
"In the disjoint-set data structure, ''m'' represents the number of operations while ''n'' represents the number of elements; in the minimum spanning tree algorithm, ''m'' represents the number of edges while ''n'' represents the number of vertices.",
"Several slightly different definitions of exist; for example, is sometimes replaced by ''n'', and the floor function is sometimes replaced by a ceiling.Other studies might define an inverse function of one where m is set to a constant, such that the inverse applies to a particular row.",
"The inverse of the Ackermann function is primitive recursive."
],
[
"Use as benchmark",
"The Ackermann function, due to its definition in terms of extremely deep recursion, can be used as a benchmark of a compiler's ability to optimize recursion.",
"The first published use of Ackermann's function in this way was in 1970 by Dragoș Vaida and, almost simultaneously, in 1971, by Yngve Sundblad.Sundblad's seminal paper was taken up by Brian Wichmann (co-author of the Whetstone benchmark) in a trilogy of papers written between 1975 and 1982."
],
[
"See also",
"* Computability theory* Double recursion* Fast-growing hierarchy* Goodstein function* Primitive recursive function* Recursion (computer science)"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Bibliography",
"****************************"
],
[
"External links",
"* * * * An animated Ackermann function calculator* Ackerman function implemented using a for loop* * Ackermann functions.",
"Includes a table of some values.",
"* * describes several variations on the definition of ''A''.",
"* * * The Ackermann function written in different programming languages, (on Rosetta Code)* ) Some study and programming."
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Antarctic"
],
[
"Introduction",
"A map of the Antarctic region, including the Antarctic Convergence and the 60th parallel southThe Antarctic PlateThe '''Antarctic''' ( or , American English also or ; commonly ) is a polar region around Earth's South Pole, opposite the Arctic region around the North Pole.",
"The Antarctic comprises the continent of Antarctica, the Kerguelen Plateau, and other island territories located on the Antarctic Plate or south of the Antarctic Convergence.",
"The Antarctic region includes the ice shelves, waters, and all the island territories in the Southern Ocean situated south of the Antarctic Convergence, a zone approximately wide and varying in latitude seasonally.",
"The region covers some 20 percent of the Southern Hemisphere, of which 5.5 percent (14 million km2) is the surface area of the Antarctica continent itself.",
"All of the land and ice shelves south of 60°S latitude are administered under the Antarctic Treaty System.",
"Biogeographically, the Antarctic realm is one of eight biogeographic realms on Earth's land surface."
],
[
"Geography",
"An October 2006 NASA satellite image of the Antarctic without its periphery of unattached sea iceA map of the Antarctic voyages of Anthony de la Roché and others in the Southern OceanLocation of the Antarctic on a map of the EarthAs defined by the Antarctic Treaty System, the Antarctic region is everything south of the 60°S latitude.",
"The Treaty area covers Antarctica and the archipelagos of the Balleny Islands, Peter I Island, Scott Island, the South Orkney Islands, and the South Shetland Islands.",
"However, this area does not include the Antarctic Convergence, a transition zone where the cold waters of the Southern Ocean collide with the warmer waters of the north, forming a natural border to the region.",
"Because the Convergence changes seasonally, the Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources approximates the Convergence line by joining specified points along parallels of latitude and meridians of longitude.",
"The implementation of the convention is managed through an international commission headquartered in Hobart, Australia, by an efficient system of annual fishing quotas, licenses, and international inspectors on the fishing vessels, as well as satellite surveillance.The islands situated between 60°S latitude parallel to the south and the Antarctic Convergence to the north and their respective exclusive economic zones fall under the national jurisdiction of the countries that possess them: South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands (United Kingdom), Bouvet Island (Norway), and Heard and McDonald Islands (Australia).Kerguelen Islands (France; also an EU Overseas territory) are situated in the Antarctic Convergence area, while the Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego, Falkland Islands, Isla de los Estados, Hornos Island with Cape Horn, Diego Ramírez Islands, Campbell Island, Macquarie Island, Amsterdam and Saint Paul Islands, Crozet Islands, Prince Edward Islands, Gough Island, and Tristan da Cunha group remain north of the Convergence and thus outside the Antarctic region."
],
[
"Ecology",
"=== Antarctica ===A variety of animals live in Antarctica for at least some of the year, including:* Seals* Penguins* South Georgia pipits* Albatrosses* Antarctic petrels* Whales* Fish, such as Antarctic icefish, Antarctic toothfish* Squid, including the colossal squid* Antarctic krillMost of the Antarctica continent is permanently covered by ice and snow, leaving less than 1 percent of the land exposed.",
"There are only two species of flowering plant, Antarctic hair grass and Antarctic pearlwort, but a range of mosses, liverworts, lichens and macrofungi.=== Sub-Antarctic Islands ===Biodiversity among terrestrial flora and fauna is low on the islands: studies have theorized that the harsh climate was a major contributor towards species richness, but multiple correlations have been found with area, temperature, remoteness of islands, and food chain stability.",
"For example, herbivorous insects are poor in number due to low plant richness, and likewise, indigenous bird numbers are related to insects, which are a major food source.",
"* Isla de los Estados (Argentina)* Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego (Chile)"
],
[
"Conservation",
"The Antarctic Unit at the port in Ushuaia, ArgentinaMoubray Bay and Mount Herschel in Eastern AntarcticaThe Antarctic hosts the world's largest protected area comprising 1.07 million km2, the South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands Marine Protection Area created in 2012.The latter exceeds the surface area of another vast protected territory, the Greenland National Park’s .",
"(While the Ross Sea Marine Protection Area established in 2016 is still larger at 1.55 million km2, its protection is set to expire in 35 years.)",
"To protect the area, all Antarctic ships over 500 tonnes are subject to mandatory regulations under the Polar Code, adopted by the International Maritime Organization (in force since 1 January 2017)."
],
[
"Society",
"The Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station, the geographic South Pole, with its signpost in the backgroundUshuaia in Argentina is the most active gateway to Antarctica.=== People ===The first recorded sighting of Antarctica is credited to the Spaniard Gabriel de Castilla, who reported seeing distant southern snow-capped mountains in 1603.The first Antarctic land discovered was the island of South Georgia, visited by the English merchant Anthony de la Roché in 1675.Although myths and speculation about a ''Terra Australis'' (\"Southern Land\") date back to antiquity, the first confirmed sighting of the continent of Antarctica is commonly accepted to have occurred in 1820 by the Russian expedition of Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen and Mikhail Lazarev on ''Vostok'' and ''Mirny''.The Australian James Kerguelen Robinson (1859–1914) was the first human born in the Antarctic, on board the sealing ship ''Offley'' in the Gulf of Morbihan (Royal Sound then), Kerguelen Island on 11 March 1859.The first human born and raised on an Antarctic island was Solveig Gunbjørg Jacobsen born on 8 October 1913 in Grytviken, South Georgia.South Georgia Museum, GrytvikenEmilio Marcos Palma (born 7 January 1978) is an Argentine man who was the first documented person born on the continent of Antarctica at the Esperanza Base.",
"His father, Captain Jorge Palma, was head of the Argentine Army detachment at the base.",
"While ten people have been born in Antarctica since, Palma's birthplace remains the southernmost.",
"In late 1977, Silvia Morella de Palma, who was then seven months pregnant, was airlifted to Esperanza Base, in order to complete her pregnancy in the base.",
"The airlift was a part of the Argentine solutions to the sovereignty dispute over territory in Antarctica.",
"Emilio was automatically granted Argentine citizenship by the government since his parents were both Argentine citizens, and he was born in the claimed Argentine Antarctica.",
"Palma can be considered to be the first native Antarctican.The Antarctic region had no indigenous population when first discovered, and its present inhabitants comprise a few thousand transient scientific and other personnel working on tours of duty at the several dozen research stations maintained by various countries.",
"However, the region is visited by more than 40,000 tourists annually, the most popular destinations being the Antarctic Peninsula area (especially the South Shetland Islands) and South Georgia Island.In December 2009, the growth of tourism, with consequences for both the ecology and the safety of the travellers in its great and remote wilderness, was noted at a conference in New Zealand by experts from signatories to the Antarctic Treaty.",
"The definitive results of the conference were presented at the Antarctic Treaty states' meeting in Uruguay in May 2010.=== Time zones ===Because Antarctica surrounds the South Pole, it is theoretically located in all time zones.",
"For practical purposes, time zones are usually based on territorial claims or the time zone of a station's owner country or supply base."
],
[
"List of offshore islands",
"=== North of 60°S latitude ====== South of 60°S latitude ==="
],
[
"See also",
"* Antarctic Circle* Antarctic ice sheet* History of Antarctica"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* Krupnik, Igor; Michael A. Lang; Scott E. Miller (eds).",
"''Smithsonian at the Poles: Contributions to International Polar Year Science''.",
"Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press, 2009."
],
[
"External links",
"* British Services Antarctic Expedition 2012* Committee for Environmental Protection of Antarctica* Secretariat of the Antarctic Treaty* CCAMLR Commission* Antarctic Heritage Trusts* International Association of Antarctica Tour Operators* Map of the Antarctic Convergence* The South Atlantic and Subantarctic Islands* Ushuaia is the most popular gateway to Antarctica"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Albanians"
],
[
"Introduction",
"The '''Albanians''' ( ; , ) are an ethnic group native to the Balkan Peninsula who share a common Albanian ancestry, culture, history and language.",
"They primarily live in Albania, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia as well as in Croatia, Greece, Italy and Turkey.",
"They also constitute a large diaspora with several communities established across Europe, the Americas and Oceania.Albanians have Paleo-Balkanic origins.",
"Exclusively attributing these origins to the Illyrians, Thracians or other Paleo-Balkan people is still a matter of debate among historians and ethnologists.The first mention of the ethnonym ''Albanoi'' occurred in the 2nd century AD by Ptolemy describing an Illyrian tribe who lived around present-day central Albania.",
"The first certain reference to Albanians as an ethnic group comes from 11th century chronicler Michael Attaleiates who describes them as living in the theme of Dyrrhachium.The Shkumbin River roughly demarcates the Albanian language between Gheg and Tosk dialects.",
"Christianity in Albania was under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Rome until the 8th century AD.",
"Then, dioceses in Albania were transferred to the patriarchate of Constantinople.",
"In 1054, after the Great Schism, the north gradually became identified with Roman Catholicism and the south with Eastern Orthodoxy.",
"In 1190 Albanians established the Principality of Arbanon in central Albania with the capital in Krujë.The Albanian diaspora has its roots in migration from the Middle Ages initially across Southern Europe and eventually across wider Europe and the New World.",
"Between the 13th and 18th centuries, sizeable numbers migrated to escape various social, economic or political difficulties.",
"One population, the Arvanites, settled in Southern Greece between the 13th and 16th centuries.",
"Another population, the Arbëreshë, settled across Sicily and Southern Italy between the 11th and 16th centuries.",
"Smaller populations such as the Arbanasi settled in Southern Croatia and pockets of Southern Ukraine in the 18th century.By the 15th century, the expanding Ottoman Empire overpowered the Balkan Peninsula, but faced successful rebellion and resistance by the League of Lezhë, a union of Albanian principalities led by Gjergj Kastrioti Skanderbeg.",
"By the 17th and 18th centuries, a substantial number of Albanians converted to Islam, which offered them equal opportunities and advancement within the Ottoman Empire.",
"Thereafter, Albanians attained significant positions and culturally contributed to the broader Muslim world.",
"Innumerable officials and soldiers of the Ottoman State were of Albanian origin, including more than 40 Grand Viziers, and under the Köprülü, in particular, the Ottoman Empire reached its greatest territorial extension.",
"Between the second half of the 18th century and the first half of the 19th century Albanian Pashaliks were established by Kara Mahmud pasha of Scutari, Ali pasha of Yanina, and Ahmet Kurt pasha of Berat, while the Albanian wālī Muhammad Ali established a dynasty that ruled over Egypt and Sudan until the middle of the 20th century, a period in which Albanians formed a substantial community in Egypt.During the 19th century, cultural developments, widely attributed to Albanians having gathered both spiritual and intellectual strength, conclusively led to the Albanian Renaissance.",
"In 1912 during the Balkan Wars, Albanians declared the independence of their country.",
"The demarcation of the new Albanian state was established following the Treaty of Bucharest and left about half of the ethnic Albanian population outside of its borders, partitioned between Greece, Montenegro and Serbia.",
"After the Second World War up until the Revolutions of 1991, Albania was governed by a communist government under Enver Hoxha where Albania became largely isolated from the rest of Europe.",
"In neighbouring Yugoslavia, Albanians underwent periods of discrimination and systematic oppression that concluded with the War of Kosovo and eventually with Kosovar independence."
],
[
"Ethnonym",
"The Albanians () and their country Albania () have been identified by many ethnonyms.",
"The most common native ethnonym is \"Shqiptar\", plural \"Shqiptarë\"; the name \"Albanians\" (Byzantine Greek: ''Albanoi/Arbanitai/Arbanites''; Latin: ''Albanenses/Arbanenses'') was used in medieval documents and gradually entered European Languages from which other similar derivative names emerged, many of which were or still are in use, such as English \"Albanians\"; Italian \"Albanesi\"; German \"Albaner\"; Greek \"Arvanites\", \"Alvanitis\" (Αλβανίτης) plural: \"Alvanites\" (Αλβανίτες), \"Alvanos\" (Αλβανός) plural: \"Alvanoi\" (Αλβανοί); Turkish \"Arnaut\", \"Arnavut\"; South Slavic languages \"Arbanasi\" (Арбанаси), \"Albanci\" (Албанци); Aromanian \"Arbinesh\" and so on.The term \"Albanoi\" (Αλβανοί) is first encountered on the works of Ptolemy (200-118 BCE) also is encountered twice in the works of Byzantine historian Michael Attaliates, and the term \"Arvanitai\" (Αρβανίται) is used once by the same author.",
"He referred to the \"Albanoi\" as having taken part in a revolt against the Byzantine Empire in 1043, and to the \"Arbanitai\" as subjects of the Duke of Dyrrachium (modern Durrës).",
"These references have been disputed as to whether they refer to the people of Albania.",
"Historian E. Vranoussi believes that these \"Albanoi\" were Normans from Sicily.",
"She also notes that the same term (as \"Albani\") in medieval Latin meant \"foreigners\".The reference to \"Arvanitai\" from Attaliates regarding the participation of Albanians in a rebellion around 1078 is undisputed.",
"In later Byzantine usage, the terms \"Arbanitai\" and \"Albanoi\" with a range of variants were used interchangeably, while sometimes the same groups were also called by the classicising name Illyrians.",
"The first reference to the Albanian language dates to the latter 13th century (around 1285).The national ethnonym ''Albanian'' and its variants are derived from ''Albanoi'', first mentioned as an Illyrian tribe in the 2nd century CE by Ptolemy with their centre at the city of Albanopolis, located in modern-day central Albania, somewhere in the hinterland of Durrës.",
"Linguists believe that the ''alb'' part in the root word originates from an Indo-European term for a type of mountainous topography, from which other words such as ''alps'' are derived.",
"Through the root word ''alban'' and its rhotacized equivalents ''arban'', ''albar'', and ''arbar'', the term in Albanian became rendered as ''Arbëneshë/Arbëreshë'' for the people and ''Arbënia/Arbëria'' for the country.",
"The Albanian language was referred to as ''Arbnisht'' and ''Arbërisht''.",
"While the exonym Albania for the general region inhabited by the Albanians does have connotations to Classical Antiquity, the Albanian language employs a different ethnonym, with modern Albanians referring to themselves as ''Shqip(ë)tarë'' and to their country as ''Shqipëria''.",
"Two etymologies have been proposed for this ethnonym: one, derived from the etymology from the Albanian word for eagle (shqipe, var., shqiponjë).",
"In Albanian folk etymology, this word denotes a bird totem, dating from the times of Skanderbeg as displayed on the Albanian flag.",
"The other is within scholarship that connects it to the verb 'to speak' (''me shqiptue'') from the Latin \"''excipere''\".",
"In this instance the Albanian endonym like ''Slav'' and others would originally have been a term connoting \"those who speak intelligibly, the same language\".",
"The words ''Shqipëri'' and ''Shqiptar'' are attested from 14th century onward, but it was only at the end of 17th and beginning of the early 18th centuries that the placename ''Shqipëria'' and the ethnic demonym ''Shqiptarë'' gradually replaced ''Arbëria'' and ''Arbëreshë'' amongst Albanian speakers.",
"That era brought about religious and other sociopolitical changes.",
"As such a new and generalised response by Albanians based on ethnic and linguistic consciousness to this new and different Ottoman world emerging around them was a change in ethnonym.=== Historical records ===Little is known about the Albanian people prior to the 11th century, though a text compiled around the beginning of the 11th century in the Bulgarian language contains a possible reference to them.",
"It is preserved in a manuscript written in the Serbo-Croatian Language traced back to the 17th century but published in the 20th century by Radoslav Grujic.",
"It is a fragment of a once longer text that endeavours to explain the origins of peoples and languages in a question-and-answer form similar to a catechism.The fragmented manuscript differentiated the world into 72 languages and three religious categories including Christians, half-believers and non-believers.",
"Grujic dated it to the early 11th century and, if this and the identification of the ''Arbanasi'' as Albanians are correct, it would be the earliest written document referring to the Balkan Albanians as a people or language group.It can be seen that there are various languages on earth.",
"Of them, there are five Orthodox languages: Bulgarian, Greek, Syrian, Iberian (Georgian) and Russian.",
"Three of these have Orthodox alphabets: Greek, Bulgarian and Iberian (Georgian).",
"There are twelve languages of half-believers: Alamanians, Franks, Magyars (Hungarians), Indians, Jacobites, Armenians, Saxons, Lechs (Poles), '''Arbanasi''' (Albanians), Croatians, Hizi and Germans.Michael Attaleiates (1022–1080) mentions the term ''Albanoi'' twice and the term ''Arbanitai'' once.",
"The term ''Albanoi'' is used first to describe the groups which rebelled in southern Italy and Sicily against the Byzantines in 1038–40.The second use of the term ''Albanoi'' is related to groups which supported the revolt of George Maniakes in 1042 and marched with him throughout the Balkans against the Byzantine capital, Constantinople.",
"The term ''Arvanitai'' is used to describe a revolt of Bulgarians (Boulgaroi) and ''Arbanitai'' in the theme of Dyrrhachium in 1078–79.It is generally accepted that ''Arbanitai'' refers to the ethnonym of medieval Albanians.",
"As such, it is considered to be the first attestation of Albanians as an ethnic group in Byzantine historiography.",
"The use of the term ''Albanoi'' in 1038–49 and 1042 as an ethnonym related to Albanians have been a subject of debate.",
"In what has been termed the \"Vranoussi-Ducellier debate\", Alain Ducellier proposed that both uses of the term referred to medieval Albanians.",
"Era Vranoussi counter-suggested that the first use referred to Normans, while the second didn't have an ethnic connotation necessarily and could be a reference to the Normans as \"foreigners\" (aubain) in Epirus which Maniakes and his army traversed.",
"This debate has never been resolved.",
"A newer synthesis about the second use of the term ''Albanoi'' by Pëllumb Xhufi suggests that the term ''Albanoi'' may have referred to Albanians of the specific district of Arbanon, while ''Arbanitai'' to Albanians in general regardless of the specific region they inhabited."
],
[
"Language",
"dialects of the Albanian language in Southern EuropeThe majority of the Albanian people speak the Albanian language which is an independent branch within the Indo-European family of languages.",
"It is a language isolate to any other known living language in Europe and indeed no other language in the world has been conclusively associated to its branch.",
"Its origin remains conclusively unknown but it is believed it has descended from an ancient Paleo-Balkan language.The Albanian language is spoken by approximately 5 million people throughout the Balkan Peninsula as well as by a more substantial number by communities around the Americas, Europe and Oceania.",
"Numerous variants and dialects of Albanian are used as an official language in Albania, Kosovo and North Macedonia.",
"The language is also spoken in other countries whence it is officially recognised as a minority language in such countries as Croatia, Italy, Montenegro, Romania and Serbia.There are two principal dialects of the Albanian language traditionally represented by Gheg and Tosk.",
"The ethnogeographical dividing line is traditionally considered to be the Shkumbin river, with Gheg spoken in the north of it and Tosk in the south.",
"Dialects of linguistic minorities spoken in Croatia (Arbanasi and Istrian), Kosovo, Montenegro and northwestern North Macedonia are classified as Gheg, while those spoken in Greece, southwestern North Macedonia and Italy as Tosk.Albanian in the Paleo-Balkanic branch as suggested by Brian D. Joseph and Adam Hyllested in \"The Indo-European Language Family\"(2022).The Arbëresh and Arvanitika dialects of the Albanian language, are spoken by the Arbëreshë and Arvanites in Southern Italy and Southern Greece, respectively.",
"They retain elements of medieval Albanian vocabulary and pronunciation that are no longer used in modern Albanian; however, both varieties are classified as endangered languages in the UNESCO ''Red Book of Endangered Languages''.",
"The Cham dialect is spoken by the Cham Albanians, a community that originates from Chameria in what is currently north-western Greece and southern Albania; the use of the Cham dialect in Greece is declining rapidly, while Cham communities in Albania and the diaspora have preserved it.Most of the Albanians in Albania and the Former Yugoslavia are polyglot and have the ability to understand, speak, read, or write a foreign language.",
"As defined by the Institute of Statistics of Albania, 39.9% of the 25 to 64 years old Albanians in Albania are able to use at least one foreign language including English (40%), Italian (27.8%) and Greek (22.9%).The origin of the Albanian language remains a contentious subject that has given rise to numerous hypotheses.",
"The hypothesis of Albanian being one of the descendant of the Illyrian languages (Messapic language) is based on geography where the languages were spoken however not enough archaeological evidence is left behind to come therefore to a definite conclusion.",
"Another hypothesis associates the Albanian language with the Thracian language.",
"This theory takes exception to the territory, since the language was spoken in an area distinct from Albania, and no significant population movements have been recorded in the period when the shift from one language to the other is supposed to have occurred."
],
[
"History",
"=== Late Antiquity ===ShurdhahThe Komani-Kruja culture is an archaeological culture attested from late antiquity to the Middle Ages in central and northern Albania, southern Montenegro and similar sites in the western parts of North Macedonia.",
"It consists of settlements usually built below hillforts along the Lezhë (Praevalitana)-Dardania and Via Egnatia road networks which connected the Adriatic coastline with the central Balkan Roman provinces.",
"Its type site is Komani and its fort on the nearby Dalmace hill in the Drin river valley.",
"Kruja and Lezha represent significant sites of the culture.",
"The population of Komani-Kruja represents a local, western Balkan people which was linked to the Roman Justinianic military system of forts.",
"The development of Komani-Kruja is significant for the study of the transition between the classical antiquity population of Albania to the medieval Albanians who were attested in historical records in the 11th century.",
"Winnifrith (2020) recently described this population as the survival of a \"Latin-Illyrian\" culture which emerged later in historical records as Albanians and Vlachs (Eastern Romance-speaking people).",
"In Winnifrith's narrative, the geographical conditions of northern Albania favored the continuation of the Albanian language in hilly and mountainous areas as opposed to lowland valleys.=== Middle Ages ===The city of Krujë served as the royal seat of the Principality of Arbanon and later as the noble residence of the Kastrioti family.The Albanian people maintain a very chequered and tumultuous history behind them, a fact explained by their geographical position in the Southeast of Europe at the cultural and political crossroad between the east and west.",
"The issue surrounding the origin of the Albanian people has long been debated by historians and linguists for centuries.",
"Many scholars consider the Albanians, in terms of linguistic evidences, the descendants of ancient populations of the Balkan Peninsula, either the Illyrians, Thracians or another Paleo-Balkan group.The first certain attestation of medieval Albanians as an ethnic group is in Byzantine historiography in the work of Michael Attaleiates (1022–1080).",
"Attaleiates mentions the term ''Albanoi'' twice and the term ''Arbanitai'' once.",
"The term ''Albanoi'' is used first to describe the groups which rebelled in southern Italy and Sicily against the Byzantines in 1038–40.The second use of the term ''Albanoi'' is related to groups which supported the revolt of George Maniakes in 1042 and marched with him throughout the Balkans against the Byzantine capital, Constantinople.",
"The term ''Arvanitai'' is used to describe a revolt of Bulgarians (Boulgaroi) and ''Arbanitai'' in the theme of Dyrrhachium in 1078–79.It is generally accepted that ''Arbanitai'' refers to the ethnonym of medieval Albanians.",
"The use of the term ''Albanoi'' in 1038–49 and 1042 as an ethnonym related to Albanians have been a subject of debate.",
"In what has been termed the \"Ducellier-Vrannousi\" debate, Alain Ducellier proposed that both uses of the term referred to medieval Albanians.",
"Era Vrannousi counter-suggested that the first use referred to Normans, while the second didn't have an ethnic connotation necessarily and could be a reference to the Normans as \"foreigners\" (aubain) in Epirus which Maniakes and his army traversed.",
"The debate has never been resolved.",
"A newer synthesis about the second use of the term ''Albanoi'' by Pëllumb Xhufi suggests that the term ''Albanoi'' may have referred to Albanians of the specific district of Arbanon, while ''Arbanitai'' to Albanians in general regardless of the specific region they inhabited.",
"The name reflects the Albanian endonym Arbër/n + esh which itself derives from the same root as the name of the AlbanoiHistorically known as the ''Arbër'' or ''Arbën'' by the 11th century and onwards, they traditionally inhabited the mountainous area to the west of Lake Ochrida and the upper valley of the Shkumbin river.",
"Though it was in 1190 when they established their first independent entity, the Principality of Arbër (Arbanon), with its seat based in Krujë.",
"Immediately after the decline of the Progon dynasty in 1216, the principality came under Gregorios Kamonas and next his son-in-law Golem.",
"Finally, the Principality was dissolved in ca.",
"1255 by the Empire of Nicea followed by an unsuccessful rebellion between 1257 and 1259 supported by the Despotate of Epirus.",
"In the meantime Manfred, King of Sicily profited from the situation and launched an invasion into Albania.",
"His forces, led by Philippe Chinard, captured Durrës, Berat, Vlorë, Spinarizza, their surroundings and the southern coastline of Albania from Vlorë to Butrint.",
"In 1266 after defeating Manfred's forces and killing him, the Treaty of Viterbo of 1267 was signed, with Charles I, King of Sicily acquiring rights on Manfred's dominions in Albania.",
"Local noblemen such as Andrea Vrana refused to surrender Manfred's former domains, and in 1271 negotiations were initiated.In 1272 the Kingdom of Albania was created after a delegation of Albanian noblemen from Durrës signed a treaty declaring union with the Kingdom of Sicily under Charles.",
"Charles soon imposed military rule, new taxes, took sons of Albanian noblemen hostage to ensure loyalty, and confiscated lands for Angevin nobles.",
"This led to discontent among Albanian noblemen, several of whom turned to Byzantine Emperor Michael VIII.",
"In late 1274, Byzantine forces helped by local Albanian noblemen capture Berat and Butrint.",
"Charles' attempt to advance towards Constantinople failed at the Siege of Berat (1280–1281).",
"A Byzantine counteroffensive ensued, which drove the Angevins out of the interior by 1281.The Sicilian Vespers rebellion further weakened the position of Charles, who died in 1285.By the end of the 13th century, most of Albania was under Byzantine Emperor Andronikos II Palaiologos.",
"In 1296 Serbian king Stephen Milutin captured Durrës.",
"In 1299 Andronikos II married his daughter Simonis to Milutin and the lands he had conquered were considered as dowry.",
"In 1302, Philip I, Prince of Taranto, grandson of Charles, claimed his rights on the Albanian kingdom and gained the support of local Albanian Catholics who preferred him over the Orthodox Serbs and Greeks, as well as the support of Pope Benedict XI.",
"In the summer of 1304, the Serbs were expelled from the city of Durrës by the locals who submitted themselves to Angevin rule.Prominent Albanian leaders during this time were the Thopia family, ruling in an area between the Mat and Shkumbin rivers, and the Muzaka family in the territory between the Shkumbin and Vlorë.",
"In 1279, Gjon I Muzaka, who remained loyal to the Byzantines and resisted Angevin conquest of Albania, was captured by the forces of Charles but later released following pressure from Albanian nobles.",
"The Muzaka family continued to remain loyal to the Byzantines and resisted the expansion of the Serbian Kingdom.",
"In 1335 the head of the family, Andrea II Muzaka, gained the title of Despot and other Muzakas pursued careers in the Byzantine government in Constantinople.",
"Andrea II soon endorsed an anti-Byzantine revolt in his domains between 1335–1341 and formed an alliance with Robert, Prince of Taranto in 1336.In 1336, Serbian king Stefan Dušan captured Durrës, including the territory under the control of the Muzaka family.",
"Although Angevins managed to recapture Durazzo, Dušan continued his expansion, and in the period of 1337–45 he had captured Kanina and Valona in southern Albania.",
"Around 1340 forces of Andrea II defeated the Serbian army at the Pelister mountain.",
"After the death of Stefan Dušan in 1355 the Serbian Empire disintegrated, and Karl Thopia captured Durrës while the Muzaka family of Berat regained control over parts of southeastern Albania and over Kastoria that Andrea II captured from Prince Marko after the Battle of Marica in 1371.The kingdom reinforced the influence of Catholicism and the conversion to its rite, not only in the region of Durrës but in other parts of the country.",
"A new wave of Catholic dioceses, churches and monasteries were founded, papal missionaries and a number of different religious orders began spreading into the country.",
"Those who were not Catholic in central and northern Albania converted and a great number of Albanian clerics and monks were present in the Dalmatian Catholic institutions.Around 1230 the two main centers of Albanian settlements were around Devoll river in what is now central Albania and the other around the region known as Arbanon.",
"Albanian presence in Croatia can be traced back to the beginning of the Late Middle Ages.",
"In this period, there was a significant Albanian community in Ragusa with a number of families of Albanian origin inclusively the Sorgo family who came from the Cape of Rodon in central Albania, across Kotor in eastern Montenegro, to Dalmatia.",
"By the 13th century, Albanian merchants were trading directly with the peoples of the Republic of Ragusa in Dalmatia which increased familiarity between Albanians and Ragusans.",
"The upcoming invasion of Albania by the Ottoman Empire and the death of Skanderbeg caused many Christian Albanians to flee to Dalmatia and surrounding countries.In the 14th century a number of Albanian principalities were created.",
"These included Principality of Kastrioti, Principality of Dukagjini, Princedom of Albania, and Principality of Gjirokastër.",
"At the beginning of the 15th century these principalities became stronger, especially because of the fall of the Serbian Empire.",
"Some of these principalities were united in 1444 under the anti-Ottoman military alliance called League of Lezha.Albanians were recruited all over Europe as a light cavalry known as ''stratioti''.",
"The stratioti were pioneers of light cavalry tactics during the 15th century.",
"In the early 16th century heavy cavalry in the European armies was principally remodeled after Albanian stradioti of the Venetian army, Hungarian hussars and German mercenary cavalry units (Schwarzreitern).=== Ottoman Empire ===Prior to the Ottoman conquest of Albania, the political situation of the Albanian people was characterised by a fragmented conglomeration of scattered kingdoms and principalities such as the Principalities of Arbanon, Kastrioti and Thopia.",
"Before and after the fall of Constantinople, the Ottoman Empire continued an extended period of conquest and expansion with its borders going deep into the Southeast Europe.",
"As a consequence thousands of Albanians from Albania, Epirus and Peloponnese escaped to Calabria, Naples, Ragusa and Sicily, whereby others sought protection at the often inaccessible Mountains of Albania.Under the leadership of Gjergj Kastrioti Skanderbeg, a former governor of the Ottoman Sanjak of Dibra, a prosperous and longstanding revolution erupted with the formation of the League of Lezhë in 1444 up until the Siege of Shkodër ending in 1479, multiple times defeating the mightiest power of the time led by Sultans Murad II and Mehmed II.",
"Skanderbeg managed to gather several of the Albanian principals, amongst them the Arianitis, Dukagjinis, Zaharias and Thopias, and establish a centralised authority over most of the non-conquered territories and proclaiming himself the Lord of Albania (''Dominus Albaniae'' in Latin).",
"Skanderbeg consistently pursued the aim relentlessly but rather unsuccessfully to create a European coalition against the Ottomans.",
"His unequal fight against them won the esteem of Europe and financial and military aid from the Papacy and Naples, Venice and Ragusa.The Albanians, then predominantly Christian, were initially considered as an inferior class of people and as such were subjected to heavy taxes such as the ''Devshirme'' system that allowed the state to collect a requisite percentage of Christian adolescents from the Balkans and elsewhere to compose the Janissary.",
"Since the Albanians were seen as strategically important, they made up a significant proportion of the Ottoman military and bureaucracy.",
"They were therefore to be found within the imperial services as vital military and administrative retainers from Egypt to Algeria and the rest of the Maghreb.Albanian pashaliks in 1815–1821.In the late 18th century, Ali Pasha Tepelena created the autonomous region of the Pashalik of Yanina within the Ottoman Empire which was never recognised as such by the High Porte.",
"The territory he properly governed incorporated most of southern Albania, Epirus, Thessaly and southwestern Macedonia.",
"During his rule, the town of Janina blossomed into a cultural, political and economic hub for both Albanians and Greeks.The ultimate goal of Ali Pasha Tepelena seems to have been the establishment of an independent rule in Albania and Epirus.",
"Thus, he obtained control of Arta and took control over the ports of Butrint, Preveza and Vonitsa.",
"He also gained control of the pashaliks of Elbasan, Delvina, Berat and Vlorë.",
"His relations with the High Porte were always tense though he developed and maintained relations with the British, French and Russians and formed alliances with them at various times.In the 19th century, the Albanian wālī Muhammad Ali established a dynasty that ruled over Egypt and Sudan until the middle of the 20th century.",
"After a brief French invasion led by Napoleon Bonaparte and the Ottomans and Mameluks competing for power there, he managed collectively with his Albanian troops to become the Ottoman viceroy in Egypt.",
"As he revolutionised the military and economic spheres of Egypt, his empire attracted Albanian people contributing to the emergence of the Albanian diaspora in Egypt initially formed by Albanian soldiers and mercenaries.",
"''Albanian Chief'', lithography by Alphonse-Léon Noël, 1828.Islam arrived in the lands of the Albanian people gradually and grew widespread between at least the 17th and 18th centuries.",
"The new religion brought many transformations into Albanian society and henceforth offered them equal opportunities and advancement within the Ottoman Empire.With the advent of increasing suppression on Catholicism, the Ottomans initially focused their conversions on the Catholic Albanians of the north in the 17th century and followed suit in the 18th century on the Orthodox Albanians of the south.",
"At this point, the urban centers of central and southern Albania had largely adopted the religion of the growing Muslim Albanian elite.",
"Many mosques and tekkes were constructed throughout those urban centers and cities such as Berat, Gjirokastër, Korçë and Shkodër started to flourish.",
"In the far north, the spread of Islam was slower due to Catholic Albanian resistance and the inaccessible and rather remote mountainous terrain.The motives for conversion to Islam are subject to differing interpretations according to scholars depending on the context though the lack of sources does not help when investigating such issues.",
"Reasons included the incentive to escape high taxes levied on non-Muslims subjects, ecclesiastical decay, coercion by Ottoman authorities in times of war, and the privileged legal and social position Muslims within the Ottoman administrative and political machinery had over that of non-Muslims.As Muslims, the Albanians attained powerful positions in the Ottoman administration including over three dozen Grand Viziers of Albanian origin, among them Zagan Pasha, Bayezid Pasha and members of the Köprülü family, and regional rulers such as Muhammad Ali of Egypt and Ali Pasha of Tepelena.",
"The Ottoman sultans Bayezid II and Mehmed III were both Albanian on their maternal side.Areas such as Albania, western Macedonia, southern Serbia, Kosovo, parts of northern Greece and southern Montenegro in Ottoman sources were referred to as ''Arnavudluk'' or Albania.=== Albanian Renaissance ===Naum Veqilharxhi was one of the earliest figures of the early Albanian Renaissance.The Albanian Renaissance characterised a period wherein the Albanian people gathered both spiritual and intellectual strength to establish their rights for an independent political and social life, culture and education.",
"By the late 18th century and the early 19th century, its foundation arose within the Albanian communities in Italy and Romania and was frequently linked to the influences of the Romanticism and Enlightenment principles.Albania was under the rule of the Ottoman Empire for almost five centuries and the Ottoman authorities suppressed any expression of unity or national conscience by the Albanian people.",
"A number of thoroughly intellectual Albanians, among them Naum Veqilharxhi, Girolamo de Rada, Dora d'Istria, Thimi Mitko, Naim and Sami Frashëri, made a conscious effort to awaken feelings of pride and unity among their people by working to develop Albanian literature that would call to mind the rich history and hopes for a more decent future.The Albanians had poor or often no schools or other institutions in place to protect and preserve their cultural heritage.",
"The need for schools was preached initially by the increasing number of Albanians educated abroad.",
"The Albanian communities in Italy and elsewhere were particularly active in promoting the Albanian cause, especially in education which finally resulted with the foundation of the Mësonjëtorja in Korçë, the first secular school in the Albanian language.Naim Frashëri was a well known rilindas and is considered to be the pioneer of modern Albanian literature.The Turkish yoke had become fixed in the nationalist mythologies and psyches of the people in the Balkans, and their march toward independence quickened.",
"Due to the more substantial of Islamic influence, the Albanians internal social divisions, and the fear that they would lose their Albanian territories to the emerging neighbouring states, Serbia, Montenegro, Bulgaria and Greece, were among the last peoples in the Balkans to desire division from the Ottoman Empire.The national awakening as a coherent political movement emerged after the Treaty of San Stefano, according to which Albanian-inhabited territories were to be ceded to the neighbouring states, and focused on preventing that partition.",
"It was the impetus for the nation-building movement, which was based more on fear of partition than national identity.",
"Even after the declaration of independence, national identity was fragmented and possibly non-existent in much of the newly proposed country.",
"The state of disunity and fragmentation would remain until the communist period following Second World War, when the communist nation-building project would achieve greater success in nation-building and reach more people than any previous regime, thus creating Albanian national communist identity.=== Communism in Albania ===Albanian partisans, with their leader Enver Hoxha in the center, after the liberation of Tirana on November 17, 1944.Enver Hoxha of the Communist Party of Labour took power in Albania in 1946.Albania established an alliance with the Eastern Bloc which provided Albania with many advantages in the form of economic assistance and military protection from the Western Bloc during the Cold War.The Albanians experienced a period of several beneficial political and economic changes.",
"The government defended the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Albania, diversified the economy through a programme of industrialisation which led to a higher standard of living and followed improvements in areas such as health, education and infrastructure.It subsequently followed a period wherein the Albanians lived within an extreme isolation from the rest of the world for the next four decades.",
"By 1967, the established government had officially proclaimed Albania to be the first atheistic state in the world as they beforehand confiscated churches, monasteries and mosques, and any religious expression instantly became grounds for imprisonment.Protests coinciding with the emerging revolutions of 1989 began to break out in various cities throughout Albania including Shkodër and Tirana which eventually lead to the fall of communism.",
"Significant internal and external migration waves of Albanians to such countries as Greece and Italy followed.Bunkerisation is arguably the most visible and memorable legacy of communism in Albania.",
"Nearly 175,000 reinforced concrete bunkers were built on strategic locations across Albania's territory including near borders, within towns, on the seashores or mountains.",
"These bunkers were never used for their intended purpose or for sheltered the population from attacks or an invasion by a neighbor.",
"However, they were abandoned after the breakup of communism and have been sometimes reused for a variety of purposes.=== Independence of Kosovo ===Members of the Kosovo Liberation Army during the Kosovo War.Kosovo declared independence from Serbia on 17 February 2008, after years of strained relations between the Serb and predominantly Albanian population of Kosovo.",
"It has been officially recognised by Australia, Canada, the United States and major European Union countries, while Serbia refuse to recognise Kosovo's independence, claiming it as Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija under United Nations Security Council Resolution 1244.The overwhelming majority of Kosovo's population is ethnically Albanian with nearly 1.7 million people.",
"Their presence as well as in the adjacent regions of Toplica and Morava is recorded since the Middle Ages.",
"As the Serbs expelled many Albanians from the wider Toplica and Morava regions in Southern Serbia, which the 1878 Congress of Berlin had given to the Principality of Serbia, many of them settled in Kosovo.The Newborn monument in Pristina was unveiled at the celebration of the Independence of Kosovo.After being an integral section of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, Kosovo including its Albanian population went through a period of discrimination, economic and political persecution.",
"Rights to use the Albanian language were guaranteed by the constitution of the later formed Socialist Yugoslavia and was widely used in Macedonia and Montenegro prior to the dissolution of Yugoslavia.",
"In 1989, Kosovo lost its status as a federal entity of Yugoslavia with rights similar to those of the six other republics and eventually became part of Serbia and Montenegro.In 1998, tensions between the Albanian and Serb population of Kosovo culminated in the Kosovo War, which led to the external and internal displacement of hundreds of thousands of Kosovo Albanians.",
"Serbian paramilitary forces committed war crimes in Kosovo, although the government of Serbia claims that the army was only going after suspected Albanian terrorists.",
"NATO launched a 78-day air campaign in 1999, which eventually led to an end to the war."
],
[
"Distribution",
"=== Balkans ===American ethnographic map of the Balkan Peninsula, 1914; Albanian-inhabited areas are colored in light orange.Approximately five million Albanians are geographically distributed across the Balkan Peninsula with about half this number living in Albania, Kosovo, North Macedonia and Montenegro as well as to a more lesser extent in Croatia and Serbia.",
"There are also significant Albanian populations in Greece.Approximately 1.8 million Albanians are concentrated in the partially recognised Republic of Kosovo.",
"They are geographically distributed south of the municipality of North Mitrovica and constitute the overall majority ethnic group of the territory.In Montenegro, the Albanian population is currently estimated to be around 30,000 forming one of the constituent ethnic minority groups of the country.",
"They predominantly live in the coastal region of Montenegro around the municipalities of Ulcinj and Bar but also Tuz and around Plav in the northern region as well as in the capital city of Podgorica in the central region.The historical settlement of the Arbanasi people is presently a neighborhood of Zadar in Croatia.In North Macedonia, there are more than approximately 500,000 Albanians constituting the largest ethnic minority group in the country.",
"The vast majority of the Albanians are chiefly concentrated around the municipalities of Tetovo and Gostivar in the northwestern region, Struga and Debar in the southwestern region as well as around the capital of Skopje in the central region.In Croatia, the number of Albanians stands at approximately 17.500 mostly concentrated in the counties of Istria, Split-Dalmatia and most notably in the capital city of Zagreb.",
"The Arbanasi people who historically migrated to Bulgaria, Croatia and Ukraine live in scattered communities across Bulgaria, Croatia and Southern Ukraine.In Serbia, the Albanians are an officially recognised ethnic minority group with a population of around 70,000.They are significantly concentrated in the municipalities of Bujanovac and Preševo in the Pčinja District.",
"In Romania, the number of Albanians is unofficially estimated from 500 to 10,000 mainly distributed in Bucharest.",
"They are recognised as an ethnic minority group and are respectively represented in Parliament of Romania.=== Italy ===Giovanni Francesco Albani was of Albanian origin and served as the Pope from 1700 to 1721.The Italian Peninsula across the Adriatic Sea has attracted Albanian people for more than half a millennium often due to its immediate proximity.",
"Albanians in Italy later became important in establishing the fundamentals of the Albanian Renaissance and maintaining the Albanian culture.",
"The Arbëreshë people came sporadically in several small and large cycles initially as ''Stratioti'' mercenaries in service of the kingdoms of Naples and Sicily and the Republic of Venice.",
"Larger migration waves occurred after the death of Skanderbeg and the capture of Krujë and Shkodër by the Ottomans to escape the forthcoming political and religious changes.Arbëreshë in traditional costume in the Piana degli Albanesi.Today, ''Arbëreshë'' constitute one of the largest ethnolinguistic minority groups and their language is recognized and protected constitutionally under the provisions of the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages.",
"The total number of Arbëreshës is approximately 260,000 scattered across Sicily, Calabria and Apulia.",
"There are Italian Albanians in the Americas especially in such countries as Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Canada and the United States.After 1991, a mass migration of Albanians towards Italy occurred.",
"Between 2015 and 2016, the number of Albanian migrants who held legal permits of residence in Italy was numbered to be around 480,000 and 500,000.Tuscany, Lombardy and Emilia-Romagna represent the regions with the strongest presence of the modern Albanian population in Italy.",
"As of 2022, 433,000 Albanian migrants who held legal permits of residence lived in Italy and were the second largest migrant community in Italy after Romanians.",
"As of 2018, an additional ca.",
"200,000 Albanian migrants have obtained Italian citizenship (children born in Italy not included).As of 2012, 41.5% of the Albanian in Italy population were counted as Muslim, 38.9% as Christian including 27.7% as Roman Catholic and 11% as Eastern Orthodox and 17.8% as Irreligious.=== Greece ===Painting of Albanian palikars displayed in the British Museum, LondonThe Arvanites and Albanians of Western Thrace are a group descended from Tosks who migrated to southern and central Greece between the 13th and 16th centuries.",
"They are Greek Orthodox Christians, and though they traditionally speak a dialect of Tosk Albanian known as Arvanitika, they have fully assimilated into the Greek nation and do not identify as Albanians.",
"Arvanitika is in a state of attrition due to language shift towards Greek and large-scale internal migration to the cities and subsequent intermingling of the population during the 20th century.The Cham Albanians were a group that formerly inhabited a region of Epirus known as Chameria, nowadays Thesprotia in northwestern Greece.",
"Many Cham Albanians converted to Islam during the Ottoman era.",
"Muslim Chams were expelled from Greece during World War II, by an anti-communist resistance group (EDES).",
"The causes of the expulsion were multifaceted and remain a matter of debate among historians.",
"Different narratives in historiography argue that the causes involved pre-existing Greek policies which targeted the minority and sought its elimination, the Cham collaboration with the Axis forces and local property disputes which were instrumentalized after WWII.",
"The estimated number of Cham Albanians expelled from Epirus to Albania and Turkey varies: figures include 14,000, 19,000, 20,000, 25,000 and 30,000.According to Cham reports this number should be raised to c. 35,000.Large-scale migration from Albania to Greece occurred after 1991.During this period, at least 500,000 Albanians have migrated and relocated to Greece.",
"Despite the lack of exact statistics, it is estimated that at least 700,000 Albanians have moved to Greece during the last 25 years.",
"The Albanian government estimates 500,000 Albanians in Greece at the very least without accounting for their children.",
"The 2011 Greece census indicated that Albanians consisted the biggest group of migrants in Greece, numbered roughly 480,000, but taking into consideration the current population of Greece (11 million) and the fact that the census failed to account for illegal foreigners, it was estimated that Albanians consist of 5% of the population (at least 550,000).",
"By 2005, around 600,000 Albanians lived in Greece, forming the largest immigrant community in the country.",
"They are economic migrants whose migration began in 1991, following the collapse of the Socialist People's Republic of Albania.",
", in total, there might have been more than 500,000 Albanian-born migrants and their children who received Greek citizenship over the years.",
"In recent years, many Albanian workers and their families have left Greece in search of better opportunities elsewhere in Europe.",
"As of 2022, there c. 292,000 Albanian immigrants are holders of legal permits to live and work in Greece, down from c. 423,000 in 2021.Cham Albanians in Filiates in 1915, by Fred Boissonas.Albanians in Greece have a long history of Hellenisation, assimilation and integration.",
"Many ethnic Albanians have been naturalised as Greek nationals, others have self-declared as Greek since arrival and a considerable number live and work across both countries seasonally hence the number of Albanians in the country has often fluctuated."
],
[
"Diaspora",
"Diaspora based Albanians may self identify as Albanian, use hybrid identification or identify with their nationality, often creating an obstacle in establishing a total figure of the population.=== Europe ===Albanians in Vienna celebrating the declaration of independence of Kosovo.During the end of the 20th and the beginning of the 21st centuries, the conflicts in the Balkans and the Kosovo War set in motion large population movements of Albanians to Central, Western and Northern Europe.",
"The gradual collapse of communism in Albania triggered as well a new wave of migration and contributed to the emergence of a new diaspora, mainly in Southern Europe, in such countries as Greece and Italy.In Central Europe, there are approximately 200,000 Albanians in Switzerland with the particular concentration in the cantons of Zürich, Basel, Lucerne, Bern and St. Gallen.",
"The neighbouring Germany is home to around 250,000 to 300,000 Albanians while in Austria there are around 40,000 to 80,000 Albanians concentrated in the states of Vienna, Styria, Salzburg, Lower and Upper Austria.In Western Europe, the Albanian population of approximately 10,000 people living in the Benelux countries is in comparison to other regions relatively limited.",
"There are more than 6,000 Albanian people living in Belgium and 2,800 in the nearby Netherlands.",
"The most lesser number of Albanian people in the Benelux region is to be found in Luxembourg with a population of 2,100.Within Northern Europe, Sweden possesses the most sizeable population of Albanians in Scandinavia however there is no exact answer to their number in the country.",
"The populations also tend to be lower in Norway, Finland and Denmark with more than 18,000, 10,000 and 8,000 Albanians respectively.",
"The population of Albanians in the United Kingdom is officially estimated to be around 39,000 whiles in Ireland there are less than 2,500 Albanians.=== Asia and Africa ===Painting of an Arnaut by Jean-Léon Gérôme, 1870s.The Albanian diaspora in Africa and Asia, in such countries as Egypt, Syria or Turkey, was predominantly formed during the Ottoman period through economic migration and early years of the Republic of Turkey through migration due to sociopolitical discrimination and violence experienced by Albanians in Balkans.In Turkey, the exact numbers of the Albanian population of the country are difficult to correctly estimate.",
"According to a 2008 report, there were approximately 1.300,000 people of Albanian descent living in Turkey.",
"As of that report, more than 500,000 Albanian descendants still recognise their ancestry and or their language, culture and traditions.Sentinel in Cairo'' by Charles Bargue, 1877.There are also other estimates that range from being 3 to 4 million people up to a total of 5 million in number, although most of these are Turkish citizens of either full or partial Albanian ancestry being no longer fluent in Albanian, comparable to the German Americans.",
"This was due to various degrees of either linguistic and or cultural assimilation occurring amongst the Albanian diaspora in Turkey.",
"Albanians are active in the civic life of Turkey.In Egypt there are 18,000 Albanians, mostly Tosk speakers.",
"Many are descendants of the Janissaries of Muhammad Ali Pasha, an Albanian who became Wāli, and self-declared Khedive of Egypt and Sudan.",
"In addition to the dynasty that he established, a large part of the former Egyptian and Sudanese aristocracy was of Albanian origin.",
"Albanian Sunnis, Bektashis and Orthodox Christians were all represented in this diaspora, whose members at some point included major Renaissance figures (''Rilindasit''), including Thimi Mitko, Spiro Dine, Andon Zako Çajupi, Milo Duçi, Fan Noli and others who lived in Egypt for a time.",
"With the ascension of Gamal Abdel Nasser in Egypt and rise of Arab nationalism, the last remnants of Albanian community there were forced to leave.",
"Albanians have been present in Arab countries such as Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Jordan, and for about five centuries as a legacy of Ottoman Turkish rule.=== Americas and Oceania ===Albanian Orthodox Cathedral of St. George Historic District in South Boston, Massachusetts.The first Albanian migration to North America began in the 19th and 20th centuries not long after gaining independence from the Ottoman Empire.",
"However the Arbëreshë people from Southern Italy were the first Albanian people to arrive in the New World, many of them migrating after the wars that accompanied the Risorgimento.Since then several Albanian migration waves have occurred throughout the 20th century as for instance after the Second World War with Albanians mostly from Yugoslavia rather than from Communist Albania, then after the Breakup of Communist Albania in 1990 and finally following the Kosovo War in 1998.The most sizeable Albanian population in the Americas is predominantly to be found in the United States.",
"New York metropolitan area in the State of New York is home to the most sizeable Albanian population of the United States.",
"As of 2017, there are approximately 205,000 Albanians in the country with the main concentration in the states of New York, Michigan, Massachusetts and Illinois.",
"The number could be higher counting the Arbëreshë people as well; they are often distinguishable from other Albanian Americans with regard to their Italianized names, nationality and a common religion.In Canada, there are approximately 39,000 Albanians in the country, including 36,185 Albanians from Albania and 2,870 Albanians from Kosovo, predominantly distributed in a multitude of provinces such as Ontario, Quebec, Alberta and British Columbia.",
"Canada's largest cities such as Toronto, Montreal and Edmonton were besides the United States a major centre of Albanian migration to North America.",
"Toronto is home to around 17,000 Albanians.Albanian immigration to Australia began in the late 19th century and most took place during the 20th century.People who planned to immigrate chose Australia after the US introduced immigration quotas on southern Europeans.",
"Most were from southern Albania, of Muslim and Orthodox backgrounds and tended to live in Victoria and Queensland, with smaller numbers in Western and Northern Australia.Orthodox Albanian wedding in Bagnoo, New South Wales (1944)Italy's annexation of Albania marked a difficult time for Albanian Australians as many were thought by Australian authorities to pose a fascist threat.",
"Post-war, the numbers of Albanian immigrants slowed due to immigration restrictions placed by the communist government in Albania.Albanians from southwestern Yugoslavia (modern North Macedonia) arrived and settled in Melbourne in the 1960s-1970s.",
"Other Albanian immigrants from Yugoslavia came from Montenegro and Serbia.",
"The immigrants were mostly Muslims, but also Catholics among them including the relatives of the renowned Albanian nun and missionary Mother Teresa.",
"Albanian refugees from Kosovo settled in Australia following the aftermath of the Kosovo conflict.In the early twenty first century, Victoria has the highest concentration of Albanians and smaller Albanian communities exist in Western Australia, South Australia, Queensland, New South Wales and the Northern Territory.",
"In 2016, approximately 4,041 persons resident in Australia identified themselves as having been born in Albania and Kosovo, while 15,901 persons identified themselves as having Albanian ancestry, either alone or in combination with another ancestry.Albanian migration to New Zealand occurred mid twentieth century following the Second World War.",
"A small group of Albanian refugees originating mainly from Albania and the rest from Yugoslavian Kosovo and Macedonia settled in Auckland.",
"During the Kosovo crisis (1999), up to 400 Kosovo Albanian refugees settled in New Zealand.",
"In the twenty first century, Albanian New Zealanders number 400-500 people and are mainly concentrated in Auckland."
],
[
"Culture",
"=== Traditions ======= Tribal social structure ====Map of the northern Albanian tribal regions in the mid 20th century.The Albanian tribes () form a historical mode of social organization ('''''farefisní''''') in Albania and the southwestern Balkans characterized by a common culture, often common patrilineal kinship ties tracing back to one progenitor and shared social ties.",
"The '''''fis''''' (; commonly translated as \"tribe\", also as \"clan\" or \"kin\" community) stands at the center of Albanian organization based on kinship relations, a concept which can be found among southern Albanians also with the term '''''farë''''' ().",
"Inherited from ancient Illyrian social structures, Albanian tribal society emerged in the early Middle Ages as the dominant form of social organization among Albanians.",
"It also remained in a less developed system in southern Albania where large feudal estates and later trade and urban centres began to develop at the expense of tribal organization.",
"One of the most particular elements of the Albanian tribal structure is its dependence on the ''Kanun'', a code of Albanian oral customary laws.",
"Most tribes engaged in warfare against external forces like the Ottoman Empire.",
"Some also engaged in limited inter-tribal struggle for the control of resources.Picture of members of the Albanian Shkreli tribe, 1890s.Until the early years of the 20th century, the Albanian tribal society remained largely intact until the rise to power of communist regime in 1944, and is considered as the only example of a tribal social system structured with tribal chiefs and councils, blood feuds and oral customary laws, surviving in Europe until the middle of the 20th century.",
"Members of the tribes of northern Albania believe their history is based on the notions of resistance and isolationism.",
"Some scholars connect this belief with the concept of \"negotiated peripherality\".",
"Throughout history the territory northern Albanian tribes occupy has been contested and peripheral so northern Albanian tribes often exploited their position and negotiated their peripherality in profitable ways.",
"This peripheral position also affected their national program which significance and challenges are different from those in southern Albania.==== Kanun ====The Kanun of Lekë Dukagjini, a Medieval Albanian lord, transcribed by Shtjefën Gjeçovi.The Kanun is a set of Albanian traditional customary laws, which has directed all the aspects of the Albanian tribal society.",
"For at least the last five centuries and until today, Albanian customary laws have been kept alive only orally by the tribal elders.",
"The success in preserving them exclusively through oral systems highlights their universal resilience and provides evidence of their likely ancient origins.",
"Strong pre-Christian motifs mixed with motifs from the Christian era reflect the stratification of the Albanian customary law across various historical ages.",
"Over time, Albanian customary laws have undergone their historical development, they have been changed and supplemented with new norms, in accordance with certain requirements of socio-economic development.",
"''Besa'' and ''nderi'' (honour) are of major importance in Albanian customary law as the cornerstone of personal and social conduct.",
"The Kanun is based on four pillars – Honour (), Hospitality (), Right Conduct () and Kin Loyalty ().==== Besa ====Besa (pledge of honor) is an Albanian cultural precept, usually translated as \"faith\" or \"oath\", that means \"to keep the promise\" and \"word of honor\".",
"The concept is based upon faithfulness toward one's word in the form of loyalty or as an allegiance guarantee.",
"Besa contains mores toward obligations to the family and a friend, the demand to have internal commitment, loyalty and solidarity when conducting oneself with others and secrecy in relation to outsiders.",
"The besa is also the main element within the concept of the ancestor's will or pledge (''amanet'') where a demand for faithfulness to a cause is expected in situations that relate to unity, national liberation and independence that transcend a person and generations.The concept of besa is included in the Kanun, the customary law of the Albanian people.",
"The besa was an important institution within the tribal society of the Albanian tribes, who swore oaths to jointly fight against invaders, and in this aspect the besa served to uphold tribal autonomy.",
"The besa was used toward regulating tribal affairs between and within the Albanian tribes.=== Culinary arts ===''Bukë, kripë e zemër'' is a traditional welcoming custom traced back to medieval Albanian law.",
"The Albanian code of honour, called ''Besa'', resulted to look after guests as an act of hospitality.The traditional cuisine of the Albanians is diverse and has been greatly influenced by traditions and their varied environment in the Balkans and turbulent history throughout the course of the centuries.",
"There is a considerable diversity between the Mediterranean and Balkan-influenced cuisines of Albanians in the Western Balkan nations and the Italian and Greek-influenced cuisines of the Arbëreshës and Chams.",
"The enjoyment of food has a high priority in the lives of Albanian peoples especially when celebrating religious festivals such as Ramadan, Eid, Christmas, Easter, Hanukkah or NovruzIngredients include many varieties of fruits such as lemons, oranges, figs and olives, herbs such as basil, lavender, mint, oregano, rosemary and thyme and vegetables such as garlic, onion, peppers, potatoes and tomatoes.",
"Albanian peoples who live closer to the Mediterranean Sea, Prespa Lake and Ohrid Lake are able to complement their diet with fish, shellfish and other seafood.",
"Otherwise, lamb is often considered the traditional meat for different religious festivals.",
"Poultry, beef and pork are also in plentiful supply.Tavë Kosi is a national dish in Albania consisting of garlic lamb and rice baked under a thick, tart veil of yogurt.",
"Fërgesë is another national dish and is made with peppers, tomatoes and cottage cheese.",
"Pite is a baked pastry with a filling of a mixture of spinach and gjizë or mish.",
"Desserts include Flia, consisting of multiple crepe-like layers brushed with crea; petulla, a traditionally fried dough, and Krofne, similar to Berliner.=== Visual arts ======= Painting ====Kolë Idromeno is considered the most renowned painter of the Albanian Renaissance.The earliest preserved relics of visual arts of the Albanian people are sacred in nature and represented by numerous frescoes, murals and icons which has been created with an admirable use of color and gold.",
"They reveal a wealth of various influences and traditions that converged in the historical lands of the Albanian people throughout the course of the centuries.The rise of the Byzantines and Ottomans during the Middle Ages was accompanied by a corresponding growth in Christian and Islamic art often apparent in examples of architecture and mosaics throughout Albania.",
"The Albanian Renaissance proved crucial to the emancipation of the modern Albanian culture and saw unprecedented developments in all fields of literature and arts whereas artists sought to return to the ideals of Impressionism and Romanticism.Medieval icon by Kostandin and Athanas Zografi in the Monastery of Ardenica.",
"It illustrates the seven saints Clement, Naum, Sava, Angelar, Gorazd, Cyril, Method and the Albanian Jan Kukuzeli.Onufri, founder of the Berat School, Kolë Idromeno, David Selenica, Kostandin Shpataraku and the Zografi Brothers are the most eminent representatives of Albanian art.",
"Albanians in Italy and Croatia have been also active among others the Renaissance influenced artists such as Marco Basaiti, Viktor Karpaçi and Andrea Nikollë Aleksi.",
"In Greece, Eleni Boukouras is noted as being the first great female painter of post independence Greece.In 1856, Pjetër Marubi arrived in Shkodër and established the first photography museum in Albania and probably the entire Balkans, the Marubi Museum.",
"The collection of 150,000 photographs, captured by the Albanian-Italian Marubi dynasty, offers an ensemble of photographs depicting social rituals, traditional costumes, portraits of Albanian history.The Kulla, a traditional Albanian dwelling constructed completely from natural materials, is a cultural relic from the medieval period particularly widespread in the southwestern region of Kosovo and northern region of Albania.",
"The rectangular shape of a Kulla is produced with irregular stone ashlars, river pebbles and chestnut woods, however, the size and number of floors depends on the size of the family and their financial resources.==== Literature ====The Meshari is currently the earliest published book in the Albanian language written by Gjon Buzuku.The roots of literature of the Albanian people can be traced to the Middle Ages with surviving works about history, theology and philosophy dating from the Renaissance.The earliest known use of written Albanian is a baptismal formula (1462) written by the Archbishop of Durrës Paulus Angelus.",
"In 1555, a Catholic clergyman Gjon Buzuku from the Shestan region published the earliest known book written in Albanian titled ''Meshari'' (The Missal) regarding Catholic prayers and rites containing archaic medieval language, lexemes and expressions obsolete in contemporary Albanian.",
"Other Christian clergy such as Luca Matranga in the Arbëresh diaspora published (1592) in the Tosk dialect while other notable authors were from northern Albanian lands and included Pjetër Budi, Frang Bardhi, and Pjetër Bogdani.In the 17th century and onwards, important contributions were made by the Arbëreshë people of Southern Italy who played an influential role in encouraging the Albanian Renaissance.",
"Notable among them was figures such as Demetrio Camarda, Gabriele Dara, Girolamo de Rada, Giulio Variboba and Giuseppe Serembe who produced inspiring nationalist literature and worked to systematise the Albanian language.The biography of Marin Barleti on Skanderbeg in Latin was translated into many different European languages.The Bejtexhinj in the 18th century emerged as the result of the influences of Islam and particularly Sufism orders moving towards Orientalism.",
"Individuals such as Nezim Frakulla, Hasan Zyko Kamberi, Shahin and Dalip Frashëri compiled literature infused with expressions, language and themes on the circumstances of the time, the insecurities of the future and their discontent at the conditions of the feudal system.The Albanian Renaissance in the 19th century is remarkable both for its valuable poetic achievement and for its variety within the Albanian literature.",
"It drew on the ideas of Romanticism and Enlightenment characterised by its emphasis on emotion and individualism as well as the interaction between nature and mankind.",
"Dora d'Istria, Girolamo de Rada, Naim Frashëri, Naum Veqilharxhi, Sami Frashëri and Pashko Vasa maintained this movement and are remembered today for composing series of prominent works.The 20th century was centred on the principles of Modernism and Realism and characterised by the development to a more distinctive and expressive form of Albanian literature.",
"Pioneers of the time include Asdreni, Faik Konica, Fan Noli, Lasgush Poradeci, Migjeni who chose to portray themes of contemporary life and most notably Gjergj Fishta who created the epic masterpiece Lahuta e Malcís.After World War II, Albania emerged as a communist state and Socialist realism became part of the literary scene.",
"Authors and poets emerged such as Sejfulla Malëshova, Dritero Agolli and Ismail Kadare who has become an internationally acclaimed novelist and others who challenged the regime through various sociopolitical and historic themes in their works.",
"Martin Camaj wrote in the diaspora while in neighbouring Yugoslavia, the emergence of Albanian cultural expression resulted in sociopolitical and poetic literature by notable authors like Adem Demaçi, Rexhep Qosja, Jusuf Buxhovi.",
"The literary scene of the 21st century remains vibrant producing new novelists, authors, poets and other writers.=== Performing arts ======= Apparel ====Lord Byron dressed in the traditional Albanian costume traditionally consisting of the Fustanella and a Dollama decorated with filigree, 1813.The Albanian people have incorporated various natural materials from their local agriculture and livestock as a source of attire, clothing and fabrics.",
"Their traditional apparel was primarily influenced by nature, the lifestyle and has continuously changed since ancient times.",
"Different regions possesses their own exceptional clothing traditions and peculiarities varied occasionally in colour, material and shape.The traditional costume of Albanian men includes a white skirt called Fustanella, a white shirt with wide sleeves, and a thin black jacket or vest such as the Xhamadan or Xhurdia.",
"In winter, they add a warm woolen or fur coat known as Flokata or Dollama made from sheepskin or goat fur.",
"Another authentic piece is called Tirq which is a tight pair of felt trousers mostly white, sometimes dark brown or black.The Albanian women's costumes are much more elaborate, colorful and richer in ornamentation.",
"In all the Albanian regions the women's clothing often has been decorated with filigree ironwork, colorful embroidery, a lot of symbols and vivid accessories.",
"A unique and ancient dress is called Xhubleta, a bell shaped skirt reaching down to the calves and worn from the shoulders with two shoulder straps at the upper part.Different traditional handmade shoes and socks were worn by the Albanian people.",
"Opinga, leather shoes made from rough animal skin, were worn with Çorape, knitted woolen or cotton socks.",
"Headdresses remain a contrasting and recognisable feature of Albanian traditional clothing.",
"Albanian men wore hats of various designs, shape and size.",
"A common headgear is a Plis and Qylafë, in contrast, Albanian women wore a Kapica adorned with jewels or embroidery on the forehead, and a Lëvere or Kryqe which usually covers the head, shoulders and neck.",
"Wealthy Albanian women wore headdresses embellished with gems, gold or silver.==== Music ====Dua Lipa is the first Albanian to ever win a Grammy Award.For the Albanian people, music is a vital component to their culture and characterised by its own peculiar features and diverse melodic pattern reflecting the history, language and way of life.",
"It rather varies from region to another with two essential stylistic differences between the music of the Ghegs and Tosks.",
"Hence, their geographic position in Southeast Europe in combination with cultural, political and social issues is frequently expressed through music along with the accompanying instruments and dances.Albanian polyphonic singersAn Albanian bashi-bazouk singing and playing an oud.",
"Painting by Jean-Léon Gérôme, 1868.Albanian folk music is contrasted by the heroic tone of the Ghegs and the relaxed sounds of the Tosks.",
"Traditional iso-polyphony perhaps represents the most noble and essential genre of the Tosks which was proclaimed a Masterpiece of the Intangible Heritage of Humanity by UNESCO.",
"Ghegs in contrast have a reputation for a distinctive variety of sung epic poetry often about the tumultuous history of the Albanian people.There are a number of internationally acclaimed singers of ethnic Albanian origin such as Ava Max, Bebe Rexha, Dua Lipa, Era Istrefi, Rita Ora, and rappers such as Action Bronson, Dardan, Gashi and Loredana Zefi.",
"Notable singers of Albanian origin from the former Yugoslavia include Selma Bajrami and Zana Nimani.In international competitions, Albania participated in the Eurovision Song Contest for the first time in 2004.Albanians have also represented other countries in the contest: Anna Oxa for Italy in 1989, Adrian Gaxha for North Macedonia in 2008, Ermal Meta for Italy in 2018, Eleni Foureira for Cyprus in 2018, as well as Gjon Muharremaj for Switzerland in 2020 and 2021.Kosovo has never participated, but is currently applying to become a member of the EBU and therefore debut in the contest."
],
[
"Religion",
"The Great Mosque of Tirana, Albania.Many different spiritual traditions, religious faiths and beliefs are practised by the Albanian people who historically have succeeded to coexist peacefully over the centuries in Southeast Europe.",
"They are traditionally both Christians and Muslims—Catholics and Orthodox, Sunnis and Bektashis and—but also to a lesser extent Evangelicals, Protestants and Jews, constituting one of the most religiously diverse peoples of Europe.Christianity in Albania was under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Rome until the 8th century.",
"Then, dioceses in Albania were transferred to the patriarchate of Constantinople.",
"In 1054 after the schism, the north became identified with the Roman Catholic Church.",
"Since that time all churches north of the Shkumbin river were Catholic and under the jurisdiction of the Pope.",
"Various reasons have been put forward for the spread of Catholicism among northern Albanians.",
"Traditional affiliation with the Latin Church and Catholic missions in central Albania in the 12th century fortified the Catholic Church against Orthodoxy, while local leaders found an ally in Catholicism against Slavic Orthodox states.",
"After the Ottoman conquest of the Balkans, Christianity began to be overtaken by Islam, and Catholicism and Orthodoxy continued to be practiced with less frequency.Catholic Cathedral of Saint Mother Teresa in Prishtina, Kosovo.During the modern era, the monarchy and communism in Albania as well as the socialism in Kosovo, historically part of Yugoslavia, followed a systematic secularisation of its people.",
"This policy was chiefly applied within the borders of both territories and produced a secular majority of its population.All forms of Christianity, Islam and other religious practices were prohibited except for old non-institutional pagan practices in the rural areas, which were seen as identifying with the national culture.",
"The current Albanian state has revived some pagan festivals, such as the Spring festival () held yearly on 14 March in the city of Elbasan.",
"It is a national holiday.Tekke in Tetovo, North Macedonia.The communist regime which ruled Albania after World War II persecuted and suppressed religious observance and institutions, and entirely banned religion to the point where Albania was officially declared to be the world's first atheist state.",
"Religious freedom returned to Albania following the regime's change in 1992.Albanian Sunni Muslims are found throughout the country, Albanian Orthodox Christians as well as Bektashis are concentrated in the south, while Roman Catholics are found primarily in the north of the country.According to the 2011 Census, which has been recognised as unreliable by the Council of Europe, in Albania, 58.79% of the population adheres to Islam, making it the largest religion in the country.",
"Christianity is practiced by 16.99% of the population, making it the second largest religion in the country.",
"The remaining population is either irreligious or belongs to other religious groups.",
"Before World War II, there was given a distribution of 70% Muslims, 20% Eastern Orthodox, and 10% Roman Catholics.",
"Today, Gallup Global Reports 2010 shows that religion plays a role in the lives of only 39% of Albanians, and ranks Albania the thirteenth least religious country in the world.For part of its history, Albania has also had a Jewish community.",
"Members of the Jewish community were saved by a group of Albanians during the Nazi occupation.",
"Many left for Israel –1992 when the borders were opened after the fall of the communist regime, but about 200 Jews still live in Albania.",
"Religion Albanians in Albania Albanians in Kosovo Albanians in North Macedonia Albanians in Montenegro Albanians in Serbia Albanians in Croatia Albanians in Italy'''Islam'''''' 21% to 82%''''''88.8''' to '''95.60''''''98.62''''''73.15''''''71.06''''''54.78''''''41.49'''''Sunni''''56.70''——————''Bektashi''''2.09'' to ''7.5'' — — — - — -'''Christians''''''9 to 28.64''''''3.69''' to '''6.20''''''1.37''''''26.37''''''19.54''''''40.69''''''38.85'''''Catholic''''3%'' to ''13.82''''2.20'' to ''5.80''''1.37''''26.13''''16.84''''40.59''''27.67''''Orthodox''''6'' to ''13.08''''1.48''—''0.12''''2.60''''0.01''''11.02''''Protestants''''0.14'' to ''1.74''''0.16'' — -''0.03'' — —''Other Christians''''0.07''——''0.12''''0.07''''0.09''—'''Unaffiliated''' or '''Irreligious''''''24.21% to 62.7%'''Atheist''2.50% to 9%''''0.07'' to ''2.9''—''0.11''''2.95''''1.80''''17.81''Prefer to not answer''1% to 13.79%''0.550.192.361.58——Agnostic''5.58''0.02Believers without denomination5.49—————Not relevant/not stated2.430.060.160.364.82—'''Other religion''''''1.19'''0.031.85"
],
[
"See also",
"* Culture of Albania* Geography of Albania* History of Albania* List of Albanians"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References",
"=== Citations ====== Cited sources ===* * * * Note 95* * * * * ** * * ** * * * ** * * * ***** * * * * * * * * * ** * * * * * * * * * * ** * * * * * ** ** * * * * * * * ←* ** * * * * * **"
],
[
"External links",
"* Books about Albania and the Albanian people (scribd.com)—Reference of books (and some journal articles) about Albania and the Albanian people; their history, language, origin, culture, literature, and so on public domain books, fully accessible online.",
"* Albanians in the Balkans—U.S.",
"Institute of Peace Report, November 2001* ''The Albanians and Their Territories'' by The Academy of Sciences of the PSR of Albania"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Association for Computing Machinery"
],
[
"Introduction",
"The '''Association for Computing Machinery''' ('''ACM''') is a US-based international learned society for computing.",
"It was founded in 1947 and is the world's largest scientific and educational computing society.",
"The ACM is a non-profit professional membership group, reporting nearly 110,000 student and professional members .",
"Its headquarters are in New York City.The ACM is an umbrella organization for academic and scholarly interests in computer science (informatics).",
"Its motto is \"Advancing Computing as a Science & Profession\"."
],
[
"History",
"In 1947, a notice was sent to various people:On January 10, 1947, at the Symposium on Large-Scale Digital Calculating Machinery at the Harvard computation Laboratory, Professor Samuel H. Caldwell of Massachusetts Institute of Technology spoke of the need for an association of those interested in computing machinery, and of the need for communication between them....After making some inquiries during May and June, we believe there is ample interest to start an informal association of many of those interested in the new machinery for computing and reasoning.",
"Since there has to be a beginning, we are acting as a temporary committee to start such an association::E. C. Berkeley, Prudential Insurance Co. of America, Newark, N. J.:R. V. D. Campbell, Raytheon Manufacturing Co., Waltham, Mass.",
":, Bureau of Standards, Washington, D.C.:H. E. Goheen, Office of Naval Research, Boston, Mass.:J.",
"W. Mauchly, Electronic Control Co., Philadelphia, Pa.:T. K. Sharpless, Moore School of Elec.",
"Eng., Philadelphia, Pa.:R. Taylor, Mass.",
"Inst.",
"of Tech., Cambridge, Mass.:C.",
"B. Tompkins, Engineering Research Associates, Washington, D.C.",
"The committee (except for Curtiss) had gained experience with computers during World War II: Berkeley, Campbell, and Goheen helped build Harvard Mark I under Howard H. Aiken, Mauchly and Sharpless were involved in building ENIAC, Tompkins had used \"the secret Navy code-breaking machines\", and Taylor had worked on Bush's Differential analyzers.The ACM was then founded in 1947 under the name ''Eastern Association for Computing Machinery'', which was changed the following year to the Association for Computing Machinery.",
"The ACM History Committee since 2016 has published the A.M.Turing Oral History project, the ACM Key Award Winners Video Series, and the India Industry Leaders Video project."
],
[
"Activities",
"ACM headquarters are located at 1601 Broadway, Times Square, New York City.ACM is organized into over 180 local professional chapters and 38 Special Interest Groups (SIGs), through which it conducts most of its activities.",
"Additionally, there are over 680 student chapters.",
"The first student chapter was founded in 1961 at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.Many of the SIGs, such as SIGGRAPH, SIGDA, SIGPLAN, SIGCSE and SIGCOMM, sponsor regular conferences, which have become famous as the dominant venue for presenting innovations in certain fields.",
"The groups also publish a large number of specialized journals, magazines, and newsletters.ACM also sponsors other computer science related events such as the worldwide ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest (ICPC), and has sponsored some other events such as the chess match between Garry Kasparov and the IBM Deep Blue computer."
],
[
"Services",
"===Publications===Proceedings for the 1970 ACM National ConferenceACM publishes over 50 journals including the prestigious ''Journal of the ACM'', and two general magazines for computer professionals, ''Communications of the ACM'' (also known as ''Communications'' or ''CACM'') and ''Queue''.",
"Other publications of the ACM include:*''ACM XRDS'', formerly \"Crossroads\", was redesigned in 2010 and is the most popular student computing magazine in the US.",
"*''ACM Interactions'', an interdisciplinary HCI publication focused on the connections between experiences, people and technology, and the third largest ACM publication.",
"*''ACM Computing Surveys'' (CSUR)*''Computers in Entertainment'' (CIE)*''ACM Journal on Emerging Technologies in Computing Systems'' (JETC) *''ACM Special Interest Group: Computers and Society'' (SIGCAS)*A number of journals, specific to subfields of computer science, titled ''ACM Transactions''.",
"Some of the more notable transactions include:**''ACM Transactions on Algorithms'' (TALG)**''ACM Transactions on Embedded Computing Systems'' (TECS)**''ACM Transactions on Computer Systems'' (TOCS)**''IEEE/ACM Transactions on Computational Biology and Bioinformatics'' (TCBB)**''ACM Transactions on Computational Logic'' (TOCL)**''ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction'' (TOCHI)**''ACM Transactions on Database Systems'' (TODS)**''ACM Transactions on Graphics'' (TOG)**''ACM Transactions on Mathematical Software'' (TOMS)**''ACM Transactions on Multimedia Computing, Communications, and Applications'' (TOMM)**''IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking'' (TON)**''ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems'' (TOPLAS)**Games: Research and PracticeAlthough ''Communications'' no longer publishes primary research, and is not considered a prestigious venue, many of the great debates and results in computing history have been published in its pages.ACM has made almost all of its publications available to paid subscribers online at its Digital Library and also has a Guide to Computing Literature.",
"ACM also offers insurance, online courses, and other services to its members.In 1997, ACM Press published ''Wizards and Their Wonders: Portraits in Computing'' (), written by Christopher Morgan, with new photographs by Louis Fabian Bachrach.",
"The book is a collection of historic and current portrait photographs of figures from the computer industry.===Portal and Digital Library===The '''ACM Portal''' is an online service of the ACM.",
"Its core are two main sections: '''ACM Digital Library''' and the ''ACM Guide to Computing Literature''.The ACM Digital Library was launched in October 1997.It is the full-text collection of all articles published by the ACM in its articles, magazines and conference proceedings.",
"The Guide is a bibliography in computing with over one million entries.The ACM Digital Library contains a comprehensive archive starting in the 1950s of the organization's journals, magazines, newsletters and conference proceedings.",
"Online services include a forum called Ubiquity and Tech News digest.",
"There is an extensive underlying bibliographic database containing key works of all genres from all major publishers of computing literature.",
"This secondary database is a rich discovery service known as The ACM Guide to Computing Literature.ACM adopted a hybrid Open Access (OA) publishing model in 2013.Authors who do not choose to pay the OA fee must grant ACM publishing rights by either a copyright transfer agreement or a publishing license agreement.ACM was a \"green\" publisher before the term was invented.",
"Authors may post documents on their own websites and in their institutional repositories with a link back to the ACM Digital Library's permanently maintained Version of Record.All metadata in the Digital Library is open to the world, including abstracts, linked references and citing works, citation and usage statistics, as well as all functionality and services.",
"Other than the free articles, the full-texts are accessed by subscription.There is also a mounting challenge to the ACM's publication practices coming from the open access movement.",
"Some authors see a subscription business model as less relevant and publish on their home pages or on unreviewed sites like arXiv.",
"Other organizations have sprung up which do their peer review entirely free and online, such as ''Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research'', ''Journal of Machine Learning Research'' and the ''Journal of Research and Practice in Information Technology''.ACM has made its publications from 1951 to 2000 open access through its digital library on 7 April 2022 as part of its 75th anniversary of the organisation."
],
[
"Membership grades",
"In addition to student and regular members, ACM has several advanced membership grades to recognize those with multiple years of membership and \"demonstrated performance that sets them apart from their peers\".The number of Fellows, Distinguished Members, and Senior Members cannot exceed 1%, 10%, and 25% of the total number of professional members, respectively.===Fellows===The ACM Fellows Program was established by Council of the Association for Computing Machinery in 1993 \"to recognize and honor outstanding ACM members for their achievements in computer science and information technology and for their significant contributions to the mission of the ACM.\"",
"There are 1,310 Fellows out of about 100,000 members.===Distinguished Members===In 2006, ACM began recognizing two additional membership grades, one which was called Distinguished Members.",
"Distinguished Members (Distinguished Engineers, Distinguished Scientists, and Distinguished Educators) have at least 15 years of professional experience and 5 years of continuous ACM membership and \"have made a significant impact on the computing field\".",
"In 2006 when the Distinguished Members first came out, one of the three levels was called \"Distinguished Member\" and was changed about two years later to \"Distinguished Educator\".",
"Those who already had the Distinguished Member title had their titles changed to one of the other three titles.List of Distinguished Members of the Association for Computing Machinery ===Senior Members===Also in 2006, ACM began recognizing Senior Members.",
"According to the ACM, \"The Senior Members Grade recognizes those ACM members with at least 10 years of professional experience and 5 years of continuous Professional Membership who have demonstrated performance through technical leadership, and technical or professional contributions\".",
"Senior membership also requires 3 letters of reference===Distinguished Speakers===While not technically a membership grade, the ACM recognizes distinguished speakers on topics in computer science.",
"A distinguished speaker is appointed for a three-year period.",
"There are usually about 125 current distinguished speakers.",
"The ACM website describes these people as 'Renowned International Thought Leaders'.",
"The distinguished speakers program (DSP) has been in existence for over 20 years and serves as an outreach program that brings renowned experts from Academia, Industry and Government to present on the topic of their expertise.",
"The DSP is overseen by a committee"
],
[
"Chapters",
"ACM has three kinds of chapters: Special Interest Groups, Professional Chapters, and Student Chapters., ACM has professional & SIG Chapters in 56 countries., there exist ACM student chapters in 41 countries.===Special Interest Groups===* SIGACCESS: Accessible Computing* SIGACT: Algorithms and Computation Theory* SIGAda: Ada Programming Language* SIGAI: Artificial Intelligence* SIGAPP: Applied Computing* SIGARCH: Computer Architecture* SIGBED: Embedded Systems* SIGBio: Bioinformatics * SIGCAS: Computers and Society* SIGCHI: Computer–Human Interaction* SIGCOMM: Data Communication* SIGCSE: Computer Science Education* SIGDA: Design Automation* SIGDOC: Design of Communication* SIGecom: Electronic Commerce* SIGEVO: Genetic and Evolutionary Computation* SIGGRAPH: Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques* SIGHPC: High Performance Computing* SIGIR: Information Retrieval* SIGITE: Information Technology Education* SIGKDD: Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining* SIGLOG: Logic and Computation* SIGMETRICS: Measurement and Evaluation* SIGMICRO: Microarchitecture* SIGMIS: Management Information Systems* SIGMM: Multimedia* SIGMOBILE: Mobility of Systems, Users, Data and Computing* SIGMOD: Management of Data* SIGOPS: Operating Systems* SIGPLAN: Programming Languages* SIGSAC: Security, Audit, and Control* SIGSAM: Symbolic and Algebraic Manipulation* SIGSIM: Simulation and Modeling* SIGSOFT: Software Engineering* SIGSPATIAL: Spatial Information* SIGUCCS: University and College Computing Services* SIGWEB: Hypertext, Hypermedia, and Web"
],
[
"Conferences",
"ACM and its Special Interest Groups (SIGs) sponsors numerous conferences worldwide.",
"ACM Conferences page has an up-to-date complete list while a partial list is shown below.",
"Most of the SIGs also have an annual conference.",
"ACM conferences are often very popular publishing venues and are therefore very competitive.",
"For example, SIGGRAPH 2007 attracted about 30000 attendees, while CIKM 2005 and RecSys 2022 had paper acceptance rates of only accepted 15% and 17% respectively.",
"* AIES: Conference on AI, Ethics, and Society* ASPLOS: International Conference on Architectural Support for Programming Languages and Operating Systems* CHI: Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems* CIKM: Conference on Information and Knowledge Management* COMPASS: International Conference on Computing and Sustainable Societies* DAC: Design Automation Conference* DEBS: Distributed Event Based Systems* FAccT: Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency* FCRC: Federated Computing Research Conference* GECCO: Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference* HT: Hypertext: Conference on Hypertext and Hypermedia* JCDL: Joint Conference on Digital Libraries* MobiHoc: International Symposium on Mobile Ad Hoc Networking and Computing* SC: Supercomputing Conference* SIGCOMM: ACM SIGCOMM Conference* SIGCSE: SIGCSE Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education* SIGGRAPH: International Conference on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques* RecSys: ACM Conference on Recommender Systems* TAPIA: Richard Tapia Celebration of Diversity in Computing Conference The ACM is a co–presenter and founding partner of the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing (GHC) with the Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology.Some conferences are hosted by ACM student branches; this includes Reflections Projections, which is hosted by UIUC ACM.",
"In addition, ACM sponsors regional conferences.",
"Regional conferences facilitate increased opportunities for collaboration between nearby institutions and they are well attended.For additional non-ACM conferences, see this list of computer science conferences.==Awards==The ACM presents or co–presents a number of awards for outstanding technical and professional achievements and contributions in computer science and information technology.",
"* ACM A. M. Turing Award* ACM – AAAI Allen Newell Award* ACM Athena Lecturer Award* ACM/CSTA Cutler-Bell Prize in High School Computing* ACM Distinguished Service Award* ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award* ACM Eugene L. Lawler Award* ACM Fellowship, awarded annually since 1993* ACM Gordon Bell Prize* ACM Grace Murray Hopper Award* ACM – IEEE CS George Michael Memorial HPC Fellowships* ACM – IEEE CS Ken Kennedy Award* ACM – IEEE Eckert-Mauchly Award* ACM India Doctoral Dissertation Award* ACM Karl V. Karlstrom Outstanding Educator Award* ACM Paris Kanellakis Theory and Practice Award* ACM Policy Award* ACM Presidential Award* ACM Prize in Computing (formerly: ACM – Infosys Foundation Award in the Computing Sciences)* ACM Programming Systems and Languages Paper Award* ACM Student Research Competition* ACM Software System Award* International Science and Engineering Fair* Outstanding Contribution to ACM Award* SIAM/ACM Prize in Computational Science and EngineeringOver 30 of ACM's Special Interest Groups also award individuals for their contributions with a few listed below.",
"* ACM Alan D. Berenbaum Distinguished Service Award* ACM Maurice Wilkes Award* ISCA Influential Paper Award"
],
[
"Leadership",
"The President of ACM for 2022–2024 is Yannis Ioannidis, Professor at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens.",
"He is successor of Gabriele Kotsis (2020–2022), Professor at the Johannes Kepler University Linz; Cherri M. Pancake (2018–2020), professor emeritus at Oregon State University and Director of the Northwest Alliance for Computational Science and Engineering (NACSE); Vicki L. Hanson (2016–2018), Distinguished Professor at the Rochester Institute of Technology and visiting professor at the University of Dundee; Alexander L. Wolf (2014–2016), Dean of the Jack Baskin School of Engineering at the University of California, Santa Cruz; Vint Cerf (2012–2014), American computer scientist and Internet pioneer; Alain Chesnais (2010–2012); and Dame Wendy Hall of the University of Southampton, UK (2008–2010).ACM is led by a council consisting of the president, vice-president, treasurer, past president, SIG Governing Board Chair, Publications Board Chair, three representatives of the SIG Governing Board, and seven Members-At-Large.",
"This institution is often referred to simply as \"Council\" in ''Communications of the ACM''."
],
[
"Infrastructure",
"ACM has numerous boards, committees, and task forces which run the organization:# ACM Council# ACM Executive Committee# Digital Library Board# Education Board# Practitioner Board# Publications Board# SIG Governing Board# DEI Council# ACM Technology Policy Council# ACM Representatives to Other Organizations# Computer Science Teachers Association"
],
[
"ACM Council on Women in Computing",
"ACM-W, the ACM council on women in computing, supports, celebrates, and advocates internationally for the full engagement of women in computing.",
"ACM–W's main programs are regional celebrations of women in computing, ACM-W chapters, and scholarships for women CS students to attend research conferences.",
"In India and Europe these activities are overseen by ACM-W India and ACM-W Europe respectively.",
"ACM-W collaborates with organizations such as the Anita Borg Institute, the National Center for Women & Information Technology (NCWIT), and Committee on the Status of Women in Computing Research (CRA-W).The ACM-W gives an annual Athena Lecturer Award to honor outstanding women researchers who have made fundamental contributions to computer science.",
"This program began in 2006.Speakers are nominated by SIG officers."
],
[
"Partner organizations",
"ACM's primary partner has been the IEEE Computer Society (IEEE-CS), which is the largest subgroup of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE).",
"The IEEE focuses more on hardware and standardization issues than theoretical computer science, but there is considerable overlap with ACM's agenda.",
"They have many joint activities including conferences, publications and awards.",
"ACM and its SIGs co-sponsor about 20 conferences each year with IEEE-CS and other parts of IEEE.",
"Eckert-Mauchly Award and Ken Kennedy Award, both major awards in computer science, are given jointly by ACM and the IEEE-CS.",
"They occasionally cooperate on projects like developing computing curricula.ACM has also jointly sponsored on events with other professional organizations like the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM)."
],
[
"Criticism",
"In December 2019, the ACM co-signed a letter with over one hundred other publishers to President Donald Trump saying that an open access mandate would increase costs to taxpayers or researchers and hurt intellectual property.",
"This was in response to rumors that he was considering issuing an executive order that would require federally funded research be made freely available online immediately after being published.",
"It is unclear how these rumors started.",
"Many ACM members opposed the letter, leading ACM to issue a statement clarifying that they remained committed to open access, and they wanted to see communication with stakeholders about the potential mandate.",
"The statement did not significantly assuage criticism from ACM members.The SoCG conference, while originally an ACM conference, parted ways with ACM in 2014 because of problems when organizing conferences abroad."
],
[
"See also",
"* ACM Classification Scheme* Franz Alt, former president* Edmund Berkeley, co-founder* Computer science* Computing* Bernard Galler, former president* Fellows of the ACM (by year)* Fellows of the ACM (category)* Grace Murray Hopper Award* Presidents of the Association for Computing Machinery* Timeline of computing hardware before 1950* Turing Award* List of academic databases and search engines"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"*** ACM portal for publications* ACM Digital Library* Association for Computing Machinery Records, 1947-2009, Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota.",
"* ACM Upsilon Phi Epsilon honor society"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Anabaptism"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Anabaptism''' (from Neo-Latin , from the Greek : 're-' and 'baptism', , earlier also ) is a Christian movement which traces its origins to the Radical Reformation.",
"Anabaptists believe that baptism is valid only when candidates freely confess their faith in Christ and request to be baptized.",
"Commonly referred to as believer's baptism, it is opposed to baptism of infants, who are not able to make a conscious decision to be baptized.The early Anabaptists formulated their beliefs in a confession of faith called the Schleitheim Confession.",
"In 1527, Michael Sattler presided over a meeting at Schleitheim (in the Canton of Schaffhausen, on the Swiss-German border), where Anabaptist leaders drew up the Schleitheim Confession of Faith (doc.",
"29).",
"Sattler was arrested and executed soon afterwards.",
"Anabaptist groups varied widely in their specific beliefs, but the Schleitheim Confession represents foundational Anabaptist beliefs as well as any single document can.Anabaptists trace their heritage to the Radical Reformation of the 16th century.",
"Other Christian groups with different roots also practice believer's baptism, such as Baptists, but these groups are not Anabaptist.",
"The Amish, Hutterites, and Mennonites are direct descendants of the early Anabaptist movement.",
"Schwarzenau Brethren, River Brethren, Bruderhof, and the Apostolic Christian Church are Anabaptist denominations that developed well after the Radical Reformation, following their example.",
"Though all Anabaptists share the same core theological beliefs, there are differences in the way of life between them; Old Order Anabaptist groups include the Old Order Amish, the Old Order Mennonites, Old Order River Brethren, and the Old Order German Baptist Brethren.",
"In between the assimilated mainline denominations (such as Mennonite Church USA and the Church of the Brethren) and Old Order groups are Conservative Anabaptist groups.",
"Conservative Anabaptists such as the Dunkard Brethren Church, Conservative Mennonites and Beachy Amish have retained traditional religious practices and theology, while allowing for some modern conveniences and advanced technology.Emphasizing an adherence to the beliefs of early Christianity, as a whole, Anabaptists are distinguished by their keeping of practices that often include nonconformity to the world, \"the love feast with feet washing, laying on of hands, anointing with oil, and the holy kiss, as well as turning the other cheek, no oaths, going the second mile, giving a cup of cold water, reconciliation, repeated forgiveness, humility, non-violence, and sharing possessions.",
"\"The name Anabaptist means \"one who baptizes again\".",
"Their persecutors named them this, referring to the practice of baptizing persons when they converted or declared their faith in Christ even if they had been baptized as infants, and many call themselves \"Radical Reformers\".",
"Anabaptists require that baptismal candidates be able to make a confession of faith that is freely chosen and so rejected baptism of infants.",
"The New Testament teaches to repent and then be baptized, and infants are not able to repent and turn away from sin to a life of following Jesus.",
"The early members of this movement did not accept the name Anabaptist, claiming that infant baptism was not part of scripture and was therefore null and void.",
"They said that baptizing self-confessed believers was their first true baptism:Anabaptists were heavily persecuted by state churches, both Magisterial Protestants and Roman Catholics, beginning in the 16th century and continuing thereafter, largely because of their interpretation of scripture, which put them at odds with official state church interpretations and local government control.",
"Anabaptism was never established by any state and therefore never enjoyed any associated privileges.",
"Most Anabaptists adhere to a literal interpretation of the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew 5–7, which teaches against hate, killing, violence, taking oaths, participating in use of force or any military actions, and against participation in civil government.",
"Anabaptists view themselves as primarily citizens of the kingdom of God, not of earthly governments.",
"As committed followers of Jesus, they seek to pattern their life after his.Some former groups who practiced rebaptism, now extinct, believed otherwise and complied with these requirements of civil society.",
"They were thus technically Anabaptists, even though conservative Amish, Mennonites, Hutterites, and many historians consider them outside true biblical Anabaptism.",
"Conrad Grebel wrote in a letter to Thomas Müntzer in 1524: \"True Christian believers are sheep among wolves, sheep for the slaughter ...",
"Neither do they use worldly sword or war, since all killing has ceased with them.\""
],
[
"Lineage",
"=== Medieval forerunners ===Anabaptists are considered to have begun with the Radical Reformation in the 16th century, but historians classify certain people and groups as their forerunners because of a similar approach to the interpretation and application of the Bible.",
"For instance, Petr Chelčický, a 15th-century Bohemian reformer, taught most of the beliefs considered integral to Anabaptist theology.",
"Medieval antecedents may include the Brethren of the Common Life, the Hussites, Dutch Sacramentists, and some forms of monasticism.",
"The Waldensians also represent a faith similar to the Anabaptists.Medieval dissenters and Anabaptists who held to a literal interpretation of the Sermon on the Mount share in common the following affirmations:* The believer must not swear oaths or refer disputes between believers to law-courts for resolution, in accordance with .",
"* The believer must not bear arms or offer forcible resistance to wrongdoers, nor wield the sword.",
"No Christian has the ''jus gladii'' (the right of the sword).",
"* Civil government (i.e.",
"\"Caesar\") belongs to the world.",
"The believer belongs to God's kingdom, so must not fill any office nor hold any rank under government, which is to be passively obeyed.",
"* Sinners or unfaithful ones are to be excommunicated, and excluded from the sacraments and from intercourse with believers unless they repent, according to and , but no force is to be used towards them.=== Zwickau prophets and the German Peasants' War ===Twelve Articles of the Peasants pamphlet of 1525On December 27, 1521, three \"prophets\" appeared in Wittenberg from Zwickau who were influenced by (and, in turn, influencing) Thomas MüntzerThomas Dreschel, Nicholas Storch, and Mark Thomas Stübner.",
"They preached an apocalyptic, radical alternative to Lutheranism.",
"Their preaching helped to stir the feelings concerning the social crisis which erupted in the German Peasants' War in southern Germany in 1525 as a revolt against feudal oppression.",
"Under the leadership of Müntzer, it became a war against all constituted authorities and an attempt to establish by revolution an ideal Christian commonwealth, with absolute equality among persons and the community of goods.",
"The Zwickau prophets were not Anabaptists (that is, they did not practise \"rebaptism\"); nevertheless, the prevalent social inequities and the preaching of men such as these have been seen as laying the foundation for the Anabaptist movement.",
"The social ideals of the Anabaptist movement coincided closely with those of leaders in the German Peasants' War.",
"Studies have found a very low percentage of subsequent sectarians to have taken part in the peasant uprising.=== Views on origins ===Research on the origins of the Anabaptists has been tainted both by the attempts of their enemies to slander them and by the attempts of their supporters to vindicate them.",
"It was long popular to classify all Anabaptists as Munsterites and radicals associated with the Zwickau prophets, Jan Matthys, John of Leiden, and Thomas Müntzer.",
"Those desiring to correct this error tended to over-correct and deny all connections between the larger Anabaptist movement and the most radical elements.The modern era of Anabaptist historiography arose with Roman Catholic scholar Carl Adolf Cornelius' publication of (The History of the Münster Uprising) in 1855.Baptist historian Albert Henry Newman (1852–1933), who Harold S. Bender said occupied \"first position in the field of American Anabaptist historiography\", made a major contribution with his ''A History of Anti-Pedobaptism'' (1897).Three main theories on origins of the Anabaptists are the following:* The movement began in a single expression in Zürich and spread from there (monogenesis);* It developed through several independent movements (polygenesis); and* It was a continuation of true New Testament Christianity (apostolic succession or church perpetuity).==== Monogenesis ====A number of scholars (e.g.",
"Harold S. Bender, William Estep, Robert Friedmann) consider the Anabaptist movement to have developed from the Swiss Brethren movement of Conrad Grebel, Felix Manz, George Blaurock, et al.",
"They generally argue that Anabaptism had its origins in Zürich, and that the Anabaptism of the Swiss Brethren was transmitted to southern Germany, Austria, the Netherlands, and northern Germany, where it developed into its various branches.",
"The monogenesis theory usually rejects the Münsterites and other radicals from the category of true Anabaptists.",
"In the monogenesis view the time of origin is January 21, 1525, when Conrad Grebel baptized George Blaurock, and Blaurock in turn baptized several others immediately.",
"These baptisms were the first \"re-baptisms\" known in the movement.",
"This continues to be the most widely accepted date posited for the establishment of Anabaptism.==== Polygenesis ====James M. Stayer, , and Klaus Deppermann disputed the idea of a single origin of Anabaptists in a 1975 essay entitled \"From Monogenesis to Polygenesis\", suggesting that February 24, 1527, at Schleitheim is the proper date of the origin of Anabaptism.",
"On this date the Swiss Brethren wrote a declaration of belief called the Schleitheim Confession.",
"The authors of the essay noted the agreement among previous Anabaptist historians on polygenesis, even when disputing the date for a single starting point: \"Hillerbrand and Bender (like Holl and Troeltsch) were in agreement that there was a single dispersion of Anabaptism …, which certainly ran through Zurich.",
"The only question was whether or not it went back further to Saxony.\"",
"After criticizing the standard polygenetic history, the authors found six groups in early Anabaptism which could be collapsed into three originating \"points of departure\": \"South German Anabaptism, the Swiss Brethren, and the Melchiorites\".",
"According to their polygenesis theory, South German–Austrian Anabaptism \"was a diluted form of Rhineland mysticism\", Swiss Anabaptism \"arose out of Reformed congregationalism\", and Dutch Anabaptism was formed by \"Social unrest and the apocalyptic visions of Melchior Hoffman\".",
"As examples of how the Anabaptist movement was influenced from sources other than the Swiss Brethren movement, mention has been made of how Pilgram Marpeck's of 1542 was deeply influenced by the of 1533 by Münster theologian Bernhard Rothmann.",
"Melchior Hoffman influenced the Hutterites when they used his commentary on the Apocalypse shortly after he wrote it.Others who have written in support of polygenesis include and Walter Klaassen, who established links between Thomas Müntzer and Hans Hut.",
"In another work, Gottfried Seebaß and Werner Packull showed the influence of Thomas Müntzer on the formation of South German Anabaptism.",
"Similarly, author Steven Ozment linked Hans Denck and Hans Hut with Thomas Müntzer, Sebastian Franck, and others.",
"Author Calvin Pater showed how Andreas Karlstadt influenced Swiss Anabaptism in various areas, including his view of Scripture, doctrine of the church, and views on baptism.Several historians, including Thor Hall, Kenneth Davis, and Robert Kreider, have also noted the influence of Humanism on Radical Reformers in the three originating points of departure to account for how this brand of reform could develop independently from each other.",
"Relatively recent research, begun in a more advanced and deliberate manner by Andrew P. Klager, also explores how the influence and a particular reading of the Church Fathers contributed to the development of distinctly Anabaptist beliefs and practices in separate regions of Europe in the early 16th century, including by Menno Simons in the Netherlands, Conrad Grebel in Switzerland, Thomas Müntzer in central Germany, Pilgram Marpeck in the Tyrol, Peter Walpot in Moravia, and especially Balthasar Hubmaier in southern Germany, Switzerland, and Moravia.==== Apostolic succession ====Baptist successionists have, at times, pointed to 16th-century Anabaptists as part of an apostolic succession of churches (\"church perpetuity\") from the time of Christ.",
"This view is held by some Baptists, some Mennonites, and a number of \"true church\" movements.The opponents of the Baptist successionism theory emphasize that these non-Catholic groups clearly differed from each other, that they held some heretical views, or that the groups had no connection with one another and had origins that were separate both in time and in place.A different strain of successionism is the theory that the Anabaptists are of Waldensian origin.",
"Some hold the idea that the Waldensians are part of the apostolic succession, while others simply believe they were an independent group out of whom the Anabaptists arose.",
"Ludwig Keller, Thomas M. Lindsay, Henry Clay Vedder, Delbert Grätz, John T. Christian and Thieleman J. van Braght (author of ''Martyrs Mirror'') all held, in varying degrees, the position that the Anabaptists were of Waldensian origin."
],
[
"History",
" Schleitheim Confession printed in 1550, displayed in the Anabaptist Room of the Local History Museum in Schleitheim, Switzerland.Spread of the early anabaptists in Central Europe=== Switzerland ===Anabaptism in Switzerland began as an offshoot of the church reforms instigated by Ulrich Zwingli.",
"As early as 1522, it became evident that Zwingli was on a path of reform preaching when he began to question or criticize such Catholic practices as tithes, the mass, and even infant baptism.",
"Zwingli had gathered a group of reform-minded men around him, with whom he studied classical literature and the scriptures.",
"However, some of these young men began to feel that Zwingli was not moving fast enough in his reform.",
"The division between Zwingli and his more radical disciples became apparent in an October 1523 disputation held in Zurich.",
"When the discussion of the mass was about to be ended without making any actual change in practice, Conrad Grebel stood up and asked \"what should be done about the mass?\"",
"Zwingli responded by saying the council would make that decision.",
"At this point, Simon Stumpf, a radical priest from Höngg, answered saying, \"The decision has already been made by the Spirit of God.",
"\"This incident illustrated clearly that Zwingli and his more radical disciples had different expectations.",
"To Zwingli, the reforms would only go as fast as the city Council allowed them.",
"To the radicals, the council had no right to make that decision, but rather the Bible was the final authority of church reform.",
"Feeling frustrated, some of them began to meet on their own for Bible study.",
"As early as 1523, William Reublin began to preach against infant baptism in villages surrounding Zurich, encouraging parents to not baptize their children.Seeking fellowship with other reform-minded people, the radical group wrote letters to Martin Luther, Andreas Karlstadt, and Thomas Müntzer.",
"Felix Manz began to publish some of Karlstadt's writings in Zurich in late 1524.By this time the question of infant baptism had become agitated and the Zurich council had instructed Zwingli to meet weekly with those who rejected infant baptism \"until the matter could be resolved\".",
"Zwingli broke off the meetings after two sessions, and Felix Manz petitioned the council to find a solution, since he felt Zwingli was too hard to work with.",
"The council then called a meeting for January 17, 1525.Dissatisfaction with the outcome of a disputation in 1525 prompted Swiss Brethren to part ways with Huldrych Zwingli.The Council ruled in this meeting that all who continued to refuse to baptize their infants should be expelled from Zurich if they did not have them baptized within one week.",
"Since Conrad Grebel had refused to baptize his daughter Rachel, born on January 5, 1525, the Council decision was extremely personal to him and others who had not baptized their children.",
"Thus, when sixteen of the radicals met on Saturday evening, January 21, 1525, the situation seemed particularly dark.",
"The Hutterian Chronicle records the event:Afterwards Blaurock was baptized, he in turn baptized others at the meeting.",
"Even though some had rejected infant baptism before this date, these baptisms marked the first re-baptisms of those who had been baptized as infants and thus, technically, Swiss Anabaptism was born on that day.=== Tyrol ===Anabaptism appears to have come to Tyrol through the labors of George Blaurock.",
"Similar to the German Peasants' War, the Gaismair uprising set the stage by producing a hope for social justice.",
"Michael Gaismair had tried to bring religious, political, and economical reform through a violent peasant uprising, but the movement was squashed.",
"Although little hard evidence exists of a direct connection between Gaismair's uprising and Tyrolian Anabaptism, at least a few of the peasants involved in the uprising later became Anabaptists.",
"While a connection between a violent social revolution and non-resistant Anabaptism may be hard to imagine, the common link was the desire for a radical change in the prevailing social injustices.",
"Disappointed with the failure of armed revolt, Anabaptist ideals of an alternative peaceful, just society probably resonated on the ears of the disappointed peasants.Before Anabaptism proper was introduced to South Tyrol, Protestant ideas had been propagated in the region by men such as Hans Vischer, a former Dominican.",
"Some of those who participated in conventicles where Protestant ideas were presented later became Anabaptists.",
"As well, the population in general seemed to have a favorable attitude towards reform, be it Protestant or Anabaptist.",
"George Blaurock appears to have preached itinerantly in the Puster Valley region in 1527, which most likely was the first introduction of Anabaptist ideas in the area.",
"Another visit through the area in 1529 reinforced these ideas, but he was captured and burned at the stake in Klausen on September 6, 1529.Jacob Hutter was one of the early converts in South Tyrol, and later became a leader among the Hutterites, who received their name from him.",
"Hutter made several trips between Moravia and Tyrol, and most of the Anabaptists in South Tyrol ended up emigrating to Moravia because of the fierce persecution unleashed by Ferdinand I.",
"In November 1535, Hutter was captured near Klausen and taken to Innsbruck where he was burned at the stake on February 25, 1536.By 1540 Anabaptism in South Tyrol was beginning to die out, largely because of the emigration to Moravia of the converts because of incessant persecution.=== Low Countries and northern Germany ===Menno SimonsMelchior Hoffman is credited with the introduction of Anabaptist ideas into the Low Countries.",
"Hoffman had picked up Lutheran and Reformed ideas, but on April 23, 1530 he was \"re-baptized\" at Strasbourg and within two months had gone to Emden and baptized about 300 persons.",
"For several years Hoffman preached in the Low Countries until he was arrested and imprisoned at Strasbourg, where he died about 10 years later.",
"Hoffman's apocalyptic ideas were indirectly related to the Münster Rebellion, even though he was \"of a different spirit\".",
"Obbe and Dirk Philips had been baptized by disciples of Jan Matthijs, but were opposed to the violence that occurred at Münster.",
"Obbe later became disillusioned with Anabaptism and withdrew from the movement in about 1540, but not before ordaining David Joris, his brother Dirk, and Menno Simons, the latter from whom the Mennonites received their name.",
"David Joris and Menno Simons parted ways, with Joris placing more emphasis on \"spirit and prophecy\", while Menno emphasized the authority of the Bible.",
"For the Mennonite side, the emphasis on the \"inner\" and \"spiritual\" permitted compromise to \"escape persecution\", while to the Joris side, the Mennonites were under the \"dead letter of the Scripture\".Because of persecution and expansion, some of the Low Country Mennonites emigrated to Vistula delta, a region settled by Germans but under Polish rule until it became part of Prussia in 1772.There they formed the Vistula delta Mennonites integrating some other Mennonites mainly from Northern Germany.",
"In the late 18th century, several thousand of them migrated from there to Ukraine (which at the time was part of Russia) forming the so-called Russian Mennonites.",
"Beginning in 1874, many of them emigrated to the prairie states and provinces of the United States and Canada.",
"In the 1920s, the conservative faction of the Canadian settlers went to Mexico and Paraguay.",
"Beginning in the 1950s, the most conservative of them started to migrate to Bolivia.",
"In 1958, Mexican Mennonites migrated to Belize.",
"Since the 1980s, traditional Russian Mennonites migrated to Argentina.",
"Smaller groups went to Brazil and Uruguay.",
"In 2015, some Mennonites from Bolivia settled in Peru.",
"In 2018, there are more than 200,000 of them living in colonies in Central and South America.=== Moravia, Bohemia and Silesia ===Although Moravian Anabaptism was a transplant from other areas of Europe, Moravia soon became a center for the growing movement, largely because of the greater religious tolerance found there.",
"Hans Hut was an early evangelist in the area, with one historian crediting him with baptizing more converts in two years than all the other Anabaptist evangelists put together.",
"The coming of Balthasar Hübmaier to Nikolsburg was a definite boost for Anabaptist ideas to the area.",
"With the great influx of religious refugees from all over Europe, many variations of Anabaptism appeared in Moravia, with Jarold Zeman documenting at least ten slightly different versions.",
"Soon, one-eyed Jacob Wiedemann appeared at Nikolsburg, and began to teach the pacifistic convictions of the Swiss Brethren, on which Hübmaier had been less authoritative.",
"This would lead to a division between the (sword-bearing) and the (staff-bearing).",
"Wiedemann and those with him also promoted the practice of community of goods.",
"With orders from the lords of Liechtenstein to leave Nikolsburg, about 200 withdrew to Moravia to form a community at Austerlitz.Persecution in South Tyrol brought many refugees to Moravia, many of whom formed into communities that practised community of goods.",
"Jacob Hutter was instrumental in organizing these into what became known as the Hutterites.",
"But others came from Silesia, Switzerland, German lands, and the Low Countries.",
"With the passing of time and persecution, all the other versions of Anabaptism would die out in Moravia leaving only the Hutterites.",
"Even the Hutterites would be dissipated by persecution, with a remnant fleeing to Transylvania, then to Ukraine, and finally to North America in 1874.=== South and central Germany, Austria and Alsace ===Thomas Müntzer led the German peasants against the landownersSouth German Anabaptism had its roots in German mysticism.",
"Andreas Karlstadt, who first worked alongside Martin Luther, is seen as a forerunner of South German Anabaptism because of his reforming theology that rejected many Catholic practices, including infant baptism.",
"However, Karlstadt is not known to have been \"rebaptized\", nor to have taught it.",
"Hans Denck and Hans Hut, both with German Mystical background (in connection with Thomas Müntzer) both accepted \"rebaptism\", but Denck eventually backed off from the idea under pressure.",
"Hans Hut is said to have brought more people into early Anabaptism than all the other Anabaptist evangelists of his time put together.",
"However, there may have been confusion about what his baptism (at least some of the times it was done by making the sign of the Tau on the forehead) may have meant to the recipient.",
"Some seem to have taken it as a sign by which they would escape the apocalyptical revenge of the Turks that Hut predicted.",
"Hut even went so far as to predict a 1528 coming of the kingdom of God.",
"When the prediction failed, some of his converts became discouraged and left the Anabaptist movement.",
"The large congregation of Anabaptists at Augsburg fell apart (partly because of persecution) and those who stayed with Anabaptist ideas were absorbed into Swiss and Moravia Anabaptist congregations.",
"Pilgram Marpeck was another notable leader in early South German Anabaptism who attempted to steer between the two extremes of Denck's inner Holiness and the legalistic standards of the other Anabaptists.=== Persecutions and migrations ===Felix Manz was executed by drowning within two years of his rebaptismBirching of Anabaptist martyr Ursula, Maastricht, 1570; engraving by Jan Luyken from ''Martyrs Mirror''Roman Catholics and Protestants alike persecuted the Anabaptists, resorting to torture and execution in attempts to curb the growth of the movement.",
"The Protestants under Zwingli were the first to persecute the Anabaptists, with Felix Manz becoming the first Anabaptist martyr in 1527.On May 20 or 21, 1527, Roman Catholic authorities executed Michael Sattler.",
"King Ferdinand declared drowning (called the ''third baptism'') \"the best antidote to Anabaptism\".",
"The Tudor regime, even the Protestant monarchs (Edward VI of England and Elizabeth I of England), persecuted Anabaptists as they were deemed too radical and therefore a danger to religious stability.The burning of a 16th-century Dutch Anabaptist, Anneken Hendriks, who was charged with heresy.The persecution of Anabaptists was condoned by the ancient laws of Theodosius I and Justinian I which were passed against the Donatists, and decreed the death penalty for anyone who practised rebaptism.",
"''Martyrs Mirror'', by Thieleman J. van Braght, describes the persecution and execution of thousands of Anabaptists in various parts of Europe between 1525 and 1660.Continuing persecution in Europe was largely responsible for the mass emigrations to North America by the Amish, Hutterites, and Mennonites.",
"Unlike Calvinists, Anabaptists failed to gain recognition in the Peace of Westphalia of 1648 and as a result, they continued to be persecuted in Europe long after that treaty was signed.Anabaptism stands out among other groups of martyrs, in that Anabaptist martyrologies feature women more prominently, \"making up thirty per cent of the martyr stories, compared to five to ten per cent in the other accounts.\""
],
[
"Beliefs and practices",
"Anabaptist beliefs were codified in the Schleitheim Confession in 1527, which best represents the beliefs of the various denominations of Anabaptism (inclusive of Mennonites, Amish, Hutterites, Bruderhof, Schwarzenau Brethren, River Brethren and Apostolic Christians).Anabaptist denominations, such as the Mennonites, teach that \"True faith entails a new birth, a spiritual regeneration by God's grace and power; 'believers' are those who have become the spiritual children of God.\"",
"In Anabaptist theology, the pathway to salvation is \"marked not by a forensic understanding of salvation by 'faith alone', but by the entire process of repentance, self-denial, faith rebirth and obedience.\"",
"Those who wish to tarry this path receive baptism after the New Birth.",
"Anabaptists heavily emphasize the importance of obedience in the salvation journey of a believer.As a whole, Anabaptists emphasize an adherence to the beliefs of early Christianity and are thus distinguished by their keeping of practices that often include the observance of feetwashing, the holy kiss, and communion (with these three ordinances being practiced collectively in the lovefeast in the Schwarzenau Brethren and River Brethren traditions), Christian headcovering, nonconformity to the world, nonresistance, forgiveness, and sharing possessions, which in certain communities (as with the Bruderhof) takes on the form of communal living.Anabaptists view themselves as a separate branch of Christianity, not being a part of Catholicism, Protestantism, Oriental Orthodoxy or Eastern Orthodoxy."
],
[
"Types",
"Different types exist among the Anabaptists, although the categorizations tend to vary with the scholar's viewpoint on origins.",
"Estep claims that in order to understand Anabaptism, one must \"distinguish between the Anabaptists, inspirationists, and rationalists\".",
"He classes the likes of Blaurock, Grebel, Balthasar Hubmaier, Manz, Marpeck, and Simons as Anabaptists.",
"He groups Müntzer, Storch, et al.",
"as inspirationists, and anti-trinitarians such as Michael Servetus, Juan de Valdés, Sebastian Castellio, and Faustus Socinus as rationalists.",
"Mark S. Ritchie follows this line of thought, saying, \"The Anabaptists were one of several branches of 'Radical' reformers (i.e.",
"reformers that went further than the mainstream Reformers) to arise out of the Renaissance and Reformation.",
"Two other branches were Spirituals or Inspirationists, who believed that they had received direct revelation from the Spirit, and rationalists or anti-Trinitarians, who rebelled against traditional Christian doctrine, like Michael Servetus.",
"\"Those of the polygenesis viewpoint use ''Anabaptist'' to define the larger movement, and include the inspirationists and rationalists as true Anabaptists.",
"James M. Stayer used the term ''Anabaptist'' for those who ''rebaptized'' persons already \"baptized\" in infancy.",
"Walter Klaassen was perhaps the first Mennonite scholar to define ''Anabaptists'' that way in his 1960 Oxford dissertation.",
"This represents a rejection of the previous standard held by Mennonite scholars such as Bender and Friedmann.Another method of categorization acknowledges regional variations, such as Swiss Brethren (Grebel, Manz), Dutch and Frisian Anabaptism (Menno Simons, Dirk Philips), and South German Anabaptism (Hübmaier, Marpeck).Historians and sociologists have made further distinctions between radical Anabaptists, who were prepared to use violence in their attempts to build a New Jerusalem, and their pacifist brethren, later broadly known as Mennonites.",
"Radical Anabaptist groups included the Münsterites, who occupied and held the German city of Münster in 1534–1535, and the Batenburgers, who persisted in various guises as late as the 1570s."
],
[
"Spirituality",
"Memorial plate at Schipfe quarter in Zürich for the Anabaptists executed in the early 16th century by the Zürich city government=== Charismatic manifestations ===Within the inspirationist wing of the Anabaptist movement, it was not unusual for charismatic manifestations to appear, such as dancing, falling under the power of the Holy Spirit, \"prophetic processions\" (at Zurich in 1525, at Munster in 1534 and at Amsterdam in 1535), and speaking in tongues.",
"In Germany some Anabaptists, \"excited by mass hypnosis, experienced healings, glossolalia, contortions and other manifestations of a camp-meeting revival\".",
"The Anabaptist congregations that later developed into the Mennonite and Hutterite churches tended not to promote these manifestations, but did not totally reject the miraculous.",
"Pilgram Marpeck, for example, wrote against the exclusion of miracles: \"Nor does Scripture assert this exclusion ... God has a free hand even in these last days.\"",
"Referring to some who had been raised from the dead, he wrote: \"Many of them have remained constant, enduring tortures inflicted by sword, rope, fire and water and suffering terrible, tyrannical, unheard-of deaths and martyrdoms, all of which they could easily have avoided by recantation.",
"Moreover one also marvels when he sees how the faithful God (Who, after all, overflows with goodness) raises from the dead several such brothers and sisters of Christ after they were hanged, drowned, or killed in other ways.",
"Even today, they are found alive and we can hear their own testimony ...",
"Cannot everyone who sees, even the blind, say with a good conscience that such things are a powerful, unusual, and miraculous act of God?",
"Those who would deny it must be hardened men.\"",
"The Hutterite Chronicle and the ''Martyrs Mirror'' record several accounts of miraculous events, such as when a man named Martin prophesied while being led across a bridge to his execution in 1531: \"this once yet the pious are led over this bridge, but no more hereafter\".",
"Just \"a short time afterwards such a violent storm and flood came that the bridge was demolished\".=== Holy Spirit leadership ===The Anabaptists insisted upon the \"free course\" of the Holy Spirit in worship, yet still maintained it all must be judged according to the Scriptures.",
"The Swiss Anabaptist document titled \"Answer of Some Who Are Called (Ana-)Baptists – Why They Do Not Attend the Churches\".",
"One reason given for not attending the state churches was that these institutions forbade the congregation to exercise spiritual gifts according to \"the Christian order as taught in the gospel or the Word of God in 1 Corinthians 14\".",
"\"When such believers come together, 'Everyone of you (note every one) hath a psalm, hath a doctrine, hath a revelation, hath an interpretation', and so on.",
"When someone comes to church and constantly hears only one person speaking, and all the listeners are silent, neither speaking nor prophesying, who can or will regard or confess the same to be a spiritual congregation, or confess according to 1 Corinthians 14 that God is dwelling and operating in them through His Holy Spirit with His gifts, impelling them one after another in the above-mentioned order of speaking and prophesying.\""
],
[
"Today",
"=== Anabaptists ===Evangelical Mennonite Church in Altkirch, Association of Evangelical Mennonite Churches of France.Praise team at The Meeting Place in Winnipeg, Canadian Conference of Mennonite Brethren Churches.Amish children on their way to schoolThe major branches of Anabaptist Christianity today include the Amish, Schwarzenau Brethren, River Brethren, Hutterites, Mennonites, Apostolic Christian Church, and Bruderhof.",
"Within many of these traditions (Amish, Mennonite, Schwarzenau Brethren and River Brethren) are three subsets: (1) Old Order Anabaptists (2) Conservative Anabaptists and (3) Mainline Anabaptists; for example, among Schwarzenau Brethren are the Old Order German Baptist Brethren (who use horse and buggy for transportation and do not use electricity), the Dunkard Brethren (who adhere to traditional theological beliefs and wear plain dress, but use modern conveniences), and the Church of the Brethren (who are largely a mainline group where members are indistinguishable in dress from the general population).Although many see the more well-known Anabaptist groups (Amish, Hutterites and Mennonites) as ethnic groups, only the Amish and the Hutterites today are composed mainly of descendants of the European Anabaptists, while Mennonites come from diverse backgrounds, with only a minority being classed as ethnic Mennonites.",
"Brethren groups have mostly lost their ethnic distinctiveness.In 2018, there were 2.13 million baptized Anabaptists in 86 countries.The Bruderhof Communities were founded in Germany by Eberhard Arnold in 1920, establishing and organisationally joining the Hutterites in 1930.The group moved to England after the Gestapo confiscated their property in 1933, and they subsequently moved to Paraguay in order to avoid military conscription, and after World War II, they moved to the United States.The Goshen College Music Center in Goshen, Indiana, Mennonite Church USA.Groups which are derived from the Schwarzenau Brethren, often called German Baptists, while not directly descended from the 16th-century Radical Reformation, are considered Anabaptist due to their adherence to Anabaptist doctrine.",
"The modern-day Brethren movement is a combination of Anabaptism and Radical Pietism.=== Neo-Anabaptists ===Neo-Anabaptism is a late twentieth and early twenty-first century theological movement within American evangelical Christianity which draws inspiration from theologians who are located within the Anabaptist tradition but are ecclesiastically outside it.",
"Neo-Anabaptists have been noted for their \"low church, counter-cultural, prophetic-stance-against-empire ethos\" as well as for their focus on pacifism, social justice and poverty.",
"The works of Mennonite theologians Ron Sider and John Howard Yoder are frequently cited as having a strong influence on the movement.=== Relationship with Baptists ===Some similarities exist between Baptists and the Anabaptists, which is why some historians have advocated the view that General Baptist were influenced by Anabaptism.",
"The similarities between these groups include baptism of believers only, religious freedom, similar perspectives on free will, predestination and original sin along with congregationalism.",
"It is almost certain that the earliest Baptist church led by John Smyth and Thomas Helwys interacted with the Mennonites and that Smyth borrowed ideas from Anabaptism.",
"However, it has been debated if influences from Anabaptism ever found their way to the English General Baptists.",
"Those who held closer views with the Anabaptists switched to the Mennonite movement along with John Smyth himself, while those who identified as Baptists did so under Thomas Helwys, who disagreed with Smyth and the Mennonites on multiple issues, denying Melchiorite Christology and Anabaptist views of the civil magistrate.",
"These English General Baptists may have had secondary influences from Anabaptism, although it is a matter of debate among historians.",
"Despite the existing similarities between these two groups, the relationship between Baptists and Anabaptists was strained in 1624 when five existing Baptist churches of London issued a condemnation of the Anabaptists.",
"The theory that Anabaptism influenced Baptist theology has been believed by Philip Schaff, A.C. Underwood and William R. Estep.",
"Gourley wrote that among some contemporary Baptist scholars who emphasize the faith of the community over soul liberty, the Anabaptist influence theory is making a comeback.",
"John SmythPuritans of England and their Baptist branch arose independently, and although they may have been informed by Anabaptist theology, they clearly differentiate themselves from Anabaptists as seen in the London Baptist Confession of Faith A.D. 1644, \"Of those Churches which are commonly (though falsely) called Anabaptists\".",
"Moreover, Baptist historian Chris Traffanstedt maintains that Anabaptists share \"some similarities with the early General Baptists, but overall these similarities are slight and not always relational.",
"In the end, we must come to say that this group of Christians does not reflect the historical teaching of the Baptists\".",
"There have been some discussions on if Anabaptist theology influenced Particular Baptists in a limited sense.",
"This theory proposes that there existed a native Anabaptist population in England that may have given rise to ideas held by Particular Baptist theologians.",
"There exists some evidence of there being native English Anabaptists during this time, however many historians have rejected the idea that Anabaptist influences gave rise to the Particular Baptists, and there appears to be no concrete evidence of any Anabaptist influence in Particular Baptists.",
"According to Barrington Raymond White, the relationship between the English separatists and the radical Reformers was that of people coming to similar conclusions from their reading of the bible due to the context of a similar situation.In practice, Anabaptists have maintained a more literal obedience to the Sermon on the Mount, while Baptists generally do not require nonresistance, non-swearing of oaths, and no remarriage if the first legitimate spouse is living.",
"Traditional Anabaptists also require a head covering for women, modest apparel, practical separation from the world, and plain dress, which most Baptists no longer require.",
"However, some Anabaptists and General Baptists have improved their relations and sometimes have worked together."
],
[
"Influence on society",
"Common Anabaptist beliefs and practices of the 16th century continue to influence modern Christianity and Western society.",
"*Voluntary church membership and believer's baptism*Freedom of religion – liberty of conscience*Separation or nonconformity to the world*Nonresistance, interpreted as pacifism by modernized groups *Priesthood of all believersThe Anabaptists were early promoters of a free church and freedom of religion.",
"When it was introduced by the Anabaptists in the 15th and 16th centuries, religious freedom which was independent from the state was unthinkable to both clerical and governmental leaders.",
"Religious liberty was equated with anarchy; Kropotkin traces the birth of anarchist thought in Europe to these early Anabaptist communities.According to Estep:Anabaptist characters exist in popular culture, most notably Chaplain Tappman in Joseph Heller's novel ''Catch-22'', James (Jacques) in Voltaire's novella ''Candide'', Giacomo Meyerbeer's opera (1849), and the central character in the novel ''Q'', by the collective known as \"Luther Blissett\"."
],
[
"See also",
"* Adrianists* Amish Mennonite* Christian anarchism* Christian communism* Christian socialism* Clancularii* Conservative Mennonites* Donatists (first historical occurrence of re-baptism)* Funkite* List of Anabaptist churches* Martyrs Mirror* Melchior Rink, a central-German Anabaptist leader during the sixteenth-century* Old Order Mennonite* Peace churches* Plain people* Restorationism* Shtundists* Tabor College (Kansas)"
],
[
"References",
"=== Explanatory notes ====== Citations ====== General and cited sources ===* Carroll, J. M. (1931).",
"''The Trail of Blood: Following the Christians Down Through the Ages, or, the History of Baptist Churches from the Time of Christ, Their Founder, to the Present Day''.",
"Lexington, KY: Ashland Avenue Baptist Church.",
"56 p. + fold.",
"chart.",
"Without ISBN* .",
"* .",
"* * .",
"* * * Knox, Ronald.",
"''Enthusiasm: a Chapter in the History of Religion, with Special Reference to the XVII and XVIII Centuries''.",
"Oxford, Eng.",
": Oxford University Press, 1950.viii, 622 p.* .",
"* * .",
"* .",
"* .",
"* ."
],
[
"Further reading",
"* )* * * )* * * * Dipple, Geoffrey, ''Confessional Migration: Anabaptists – Mennonites, Hutterites, Baptists etc.",
"'', EGO – European History Online, Mainz: Institute of European History, 2015, retrieved: March 11, 2021 ( pdf).",
"* * * .",
"* Alt URL* * .",
"* .",
"* * * * *"
],
[
"External links",
"* * * Global Anabaptist Wiki* Pilgrim Ministry: Anabaptist church directory* Anabaptist History Complete Playlist (Parts 1–20) history of the movement from the Bible to present.",
"(YouTube videos, 27 hours)* * * The Rise and Fall of the Anabaptists, by E. Belfort Bax 1903"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Ans"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Ans''' or '''ANS''' or ''variation'', may refer to:"
],
[
"Places",
"* Ans, Belgium, a municipality in Belgium* Ans, Denmark, a village in Denmark* Angus, Scotland, UK; a council area by its Chapman code* Ainsdale railway station, England, UK (by station code ANS)* Andahuaylas Airport, Peru (by IATA airport code ANS)"
],
[
"People",
"* Ans (given name), a Dutch feminine given name* Anna Nicole Smith, American model and actress"
],
[
"Organizations",
"* Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States* Astronomical Netherlands Satellite, a Dutch satellite* American Name Society* American Nuclear Society* American Numismatic Society, formerly the American Numismatic and Archaeological Society* ANS Group of Companies, a news organization in Azerbaijan* , a Cambodian resistance group; see Coalition Government of Democratic Kampuchea* Audubon Naturalist Society, an American environmental organization"
],
[
"Chemistry and biology",
"* Adrenergic nervous system, adrenaline and noradrenaline neurotransmitters distribution in human body* 8-Anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonic acid, a fluorescent chemical compound used as a molecular probe* Anthocyanidin synthase, an enzyme in the leucocyanidin biosynthesis pathway* Approximate number system, a hypothesized physiological basis for the sense of number* Autonomic nervous system, part of the peripheral nervous system in the body"
],
[
"Technology",
"* , an unofficial file extension for ANSI art* Advanced Network and Services, a non-profit network service provider in the 1990s* American National Standards, defined by the American National Standards Institute* ''ans'', a variable in calculators referring to the most recent answer* ANS carriage control characters (or ASA control characters), for computer line printers* Asymmetric numeral systems, coding in data compression* Authoritative name server, a DNS server* Artificial neural system, or Artificial neural network* Air Navigation Services, as delivered by an Air Navigation Service Provider (ANSP)"
],
[
"Music",
"* ''ANS'' (album), a box set from the British band Coil* ANS synthesizer, a Russian photoelectric musical instrument"
],
[
"Other uses",
"* Al Ansar FC, a Lebanese association football club* Amman National School, in Amman, Jordan* Ansvarlig selskap, a Norwegian personal responsibility company model* ''Algemeen Nijmeegs Studentenblad'', a Dutch student magazine* ''Akademia Nauk Stosowanych'', a vocational university in Nowy Targ, Poland"
],
[
"See also",
"* * * * AN (disambiguation)* Answer (disambiguation), for which \"Ans.\"",
"may be an abbreviation"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Southeast Alaska"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Southeast Alaska highlighted on a mapMODIS photograph of Southeast Alaska, February 2002.Border lines with Yukon and British Columbia have been artificially added.",
"'''Southeast Alaska''', often abbreviated to '''Southeast''' or '''Southeastern''', and sometimes called the '''Alaska(n) Panhandle''', is the southeastern portion of the U.S. state of Alaska, bordered to the east and north by the northern half of the Canadian province of British Columbia (and a small part of Yukon).",
"The majority of Southeast Alaska is situated in '''Tlingit Aaní''', much of which is part of the Tongass National Forest, the United States' largest national forest.",
"In many places, the international border runs along the crest of the Boundary Ranges of the Coast Mountains (see Alaska boundary dispute).",
"The region is noted for its scenery and mild, rainy climate.The largest cities in the region are Juneau, Sitka, and Ketchikan.",
"This region is also home to Hyder, the easternmost town in Alaska."
],
[
"Geography",
"Southeast Alaska has a land area of , comprising much of the Alexander Archipelago.",
"The largest islands are, from North to South, Chichagof Island, Admiralty Island, Baranof Island, Kupreanof Island, Revillagigedo Island and Prince of Wales Island.",
"Major bodies of water of Southeast Alaska include Glacier Bay, Lynn Canal, Icy Strait, Chatham Strait, Stephens Passage, Frederick Sound, Sumner Strait, and Clarence Strait.The archipelago is the northern terminus of the Inside Passage, a protected waterway of convoluted passages between islands and fjords, beginning in Puget Sound in Washington state.",
"This was an important travel corridor for Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian Native peoples, as well as gold-rush era steamships.",
"In modern times it is an important route for Alaska Marine Highway ferries as well as cruise ships."
],
[
"Demographics",
"The City and Borough of Juneau, the most populous borough in Southeast Alaska.Ketchikan Gateway Borough, the second most populous borough in Southeast Alaska.Southeast Alaska is composed of seven entire boroughs and two census areas, in addition to the portion of the Yakutat Borough lying east of 141° West longitude.",
"Although it has only 6.14 percent of Alaska's land area, it is larger than the state of Maine, and almost as large as the state of Indiana.",
"The Southeast Alaskan coast is roughly as long as the west coast of Canada.The 2010 census population of Southeast Alaska was 71,616 inhabitants, representing approximately 10% of the state's total population.",
"About 45% of residents in the Southeast Alaska region were concentrated in the city of Juneau, the state capital.",
"As of 2018, the number of settlements in Southeast Alaska that have a population of at least 1,000 people has grown to nine.===Boroughs===* Haines Borough* Hoonah-Angoon Census Area* Juneau Borough* Ketchikan Gateway Borough* Petersburg Borough* Prince of Wales-Hyder Census Area* Sitka Borough* Skagway Borough* Wrangell Borough* Yakutat Borough (the part east of 141° W longitude; 12,506.53 km2 / 4,828.80 sq mi, or about 63.12 percent of the borough)===Major cities and towns===Populations are taken from the 2020 Census.",
"* Juneau - 32,255 inhabitants* Sitka - 8,458 inhabitants* Ketchikan - 8,192 inhabitants* Petersburg - 3,043 inhabitants* Wrangell - 2,127 inhabitants* Haines - 1,657 inhabitants* Metlakatla - 1,454 inhabitants* Skagway - 1,240 inhabitants* Craig - 1,036 inhabitants"
],
[
"National protected areas",
"The Tongass National Forest, near KetchikanSoutheast Alaska includes the Tongass National Forest (which manages Admiralty Island National Monument and Misty Fjords National Monument), Glacier Bay National Park, and Sitka National Historical Park.",
"Glacier Bay is the sixth largest national park in the United States.",
"On August 20, 1902, President Theodore Roosevelt established the Alexander Archipelago Forest Reserve, which formed the heart of the Tongass National Forest that covers most of the region.",
"* Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve* Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park* Sitka National Historical Park* Wrangell–St.",
"Elias National Park and Preserve (part, the most southeastern section only)* Admiralty Island National Monument* Misty Fjords National Monument"
],
[
"Climate",
"Köppen climate types in southeast AlaskaThe climate of Southeast Alaska is dominated by a mid-latitude oceanic climate (Köppen ''Cfb'') in the south, an oceanic, marine sub-polar climate (Köppen ''Cfc'') in the central region around Juneau, and a subarctic climate (Köppen ''Dfc'') to the far northwest and the interior highlands of the archipelago.",
"Southeast Alaska is also the only region in Alaska where the average daytime high temperature is above freezing during the winter months, except for in the southern parts of the Aleutian islands such as Unalaska."
],
[
"Ecology",
"Southeast Alaska is a temperate rain forest within the Pacific temperate rain forest zone, as classified by the World Wildlife Fund's ecoregion system, which extends from northern California to Prince William Sound.",
"The most common tree species are sitka spruce and western hemlock.Wildlife includes brown bears, black bears, endemic Alexander Archipelago wolf packs, Sitka black-tailed deer, humpback whales, orcas, five species of salmon, bald eagles, harlequin ducks, scoters, and marbled murrelets.The Ecological Atlas of Southeast Alaska, published by Audubon Alaska in 2016, offers an overview of the region's landscape, birds, wildlife, human uses, climate change, and more, synthesizing data from agencies and a variety of other sources."
],
[
"Culture",
"A totem pole at Sitka National Historical ParkThis area is the traditional homeland of the Tlingit, and home of a historic settling of Haida as well as a modern settlement of Tsimshian.",
"The region is closely connected to Seattle and the American Pacific Northwest economically and culturally."
],
[
"Industry",
"Major industries in Southeast Alaska include commercial fishing and tourism (primarily the cruise ship industry).=== Logging ===Logging has been an important industry in the past, but has been steadily declining with competition from other areas and the closure of the region's major pulp mills; the Alaska Forest Association described the situation as \"desperate\" in 2011.Its members include Alcan Forest Products (owned by Canadian Transpac Group, one of the top 5 log exporters in North America) and Viking Lumber, which is based in Craig, Alaska.",
"Debates over whether to expand logging in the federally owned Tongass are not uncommon.=== Mining ===Mining remains important in the northern area with the Juneau mining district and Admiralty mining district hosting active mines as of 2015.Gold was discovered in 1880 and played an important part in the early history of the region.In the 2010s, mines increasingly began to be explored and eventually completed in neighboring British Columbia, upstream of important rivers such as the Unuk and the Stikine, which became known as the transboundary mining issue.",
"In 2014, the dam breach at the Mount Polley mine focused attention on the issue, and an agreement between Canada and Alaska was drafted in 2015.The proposed Kerr Sulphurets Mitchell exploration is upstream of the Unuk.",
"Mines upstream of the Stikine include the Red Chris, which is owned by the same company (Imperial Metals) as the Mount Polley mine.=== Healthcare ===Major hospitals include Bartlett Regional Hospital in Juneau and PeaceHealth Ketchikan Medical Center in Ketchikan.",
"Southeast Alaska Regional Health Consortium,runs healthcare facilities across 27 communities as of 2022, including hospitals in Sitka and Wrangell; although it originally served Native Americans only, it has expanded access and combined with other local facilities over time.=== Shipbuilding ===Due to the fishing and ferries in the region, ship building and maintenance are economically significant.Ketchikan hosts a shipbuilding yard owned by Vigor Industrial.=== Tourism ===Tourists visit Southeast Alaska primarily in the summer, and most visit via cruise ships, which run from April 15 to October 30.In 2019, around 1.3 million people visited Alaska by cruise ship.The northbound Inside Passage cruise commonly starts from either Seattle or Vancouver, Canada and stops in various ports including Ketchikan, Juneau, and Skagway.",
"One-way trips will end in Whittier or Seward.An alternative Gulf of Alaska cruise starts in Whittier (Anchorage) and also passes through Southeast Alaska's Inside Passage.The cruise ship industry became prominent in the 1960s after cruise ship entrepreneur Stanley B. McDonald repurposed a transport ship named Princess Pat, founding Princess Cruises to do leisure cruises which expanded into Southeast Alaska by 1969.The TV series The Love Boat was set on a Princess cruise and featured episodes in Alaska; it also helped to popularize cruising generally which helped it grow rapidly between 1977 and 1987.Prior to Princess cruises, Chuck West created a tourism agency in 1947 under the name Arctic Alaska Tours which was renamed Westours, which originally arranged trips for travelers on steamships."
],
[
"History",
"The border between Alaska and the Canadian province of British Columbia was the subject of the Alaska boundary dispute, where the United States and the United Kingdom claimed different borderlines at the Alaskan panhandle.",
"While the British foreign affairs were in favor of support of the Canadian argument, the event resulted in what was thought of as a betrayal, leading to alienation of the British from the new nation of Canada."
],
[
"Transportation",
"Southeast Alaska and Alaska Marine Highway ferry routesDue to the extremely rugged, mountainous nature of Southeastern Alaska, almost all communities (with the exception of Hyder, Skagway, and Haines) have no road connections outside of their locale, so aircraft and boats are the major means of transport.",
"The Alaska Marine Highway passes through this region.===Air transportation===Alaska Airlines is by far the largest air carrier in the region, with Juneau's Juneau International Airport serving as the aerial hub for all of Southeast and Ketchikan's Ketchikan International Airport serving as a secondary hub for southern Southeast Alaska.",
"Alaska's bush airlines and air taxis serve many of the smaller and more isolated communities and villages in the regions.",
"Many communities are accessible by air only by floatplane, as proper runways are often difficult to construct on the steep island slopes.===Marine transportation===Southeast Alaska is primarily served by the state-run Alaska Marine Highway, which links Skagway, Haines, Hoonah, Juneau, Sitka, Petersburg, Wrangell, Ketchikan and other outlying communities with Prince Rupert, BC and Bellingham, Washington; and secondarily by the Prince of Wales Island-based Inter-Island Ferry Authority, which provides the only scheduled passenger and auto ferry service to the island.",
"A new Authority, the Rainforest Islands Ferry Authority, was created and in 2014 may possibly operate the North End route.",
"The Authority would connect Coffman Cove with Wrangell and Petersburg.",
"Small companies like Sitka-based Allen Marine and other independent operators in the Lynn Canal occasionally also offer marine passenger service.",
"Ship traffic in the area is seasonally busy with cruise ships."
],
[
"See also",
"* Alexander Archipelago* Alexander Archipelago wolf* Climate change in Alaska* List of edible plants and mushrooms of Southeast Alaska"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* The regional economy of southeast Alaska: final report, 2007 / prepared for Alaska Conservation Foundation; prepared by Steve Colt, Darcy Dugan, Ginny Fay (EcoSystems).",
"Hosted by Alaska State Publications Program.",
"* Southeast Alaska energy export study: final report, 2006 / prepared for The Southeast Conference; by D. Hittle & Associates, Inc., in association with Commonwealth Associates, Inc.",
"Hosted by the Alaska State Publications Program.",
"* Swan - Tyee intertie economic analysis, 2006 / prepared for the Four Dam Pool Power Agency; prepared by Commonwealth Associates, Inc.",
"Hosted by Alaska State Publications Program.",
"* The Economic Impacts of the Alaska Marine Highway System, January 2016 / Prepared for Alaska Marine Highway System; Prepared by McDowell Group"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Algemeen Nijmeegs Studentenblad"
],
[
"Introduction",
"The '''''Algemeen Nijmeegs Studentenblad''''' is an independent student magazine for the Radboud University Nijmegen.",
"Founded in 1985 by members of the local student union AKKU, it is now published by the Stichting Multimedia."
],
[
"Notable publications and controversies",
"In 1989 ANS started to publish the monthly comic strip DirkJan, before it moved to SjoSji.",
"The magazine has published controversial articles that attracted nation-wide media attention, such as on the benefits of marihuana consumption for studying.",
"In 2010 the University refused to distribute the magazine among freshmen because it did not endorse the editorial."
],
[
"External links",
"* http://www.ans-online.nl/ (Flash required)"
],
[
"References"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Interior Alaska"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Interior Alaska.Fall in Interior Alaska.",
"'''Interior Alaska''' is the central region of Alaska's territory, roughly bounded by the Alaska Range to the south and the Brooks Range to the north.",
"It is largely wilderness.",
"Mountains include Denali in the Alaska Range, the Wrangell Mountains, and the Ray Mountains.",
"The native people of the interior are Alaskan Athabaskans.",
"The largest city in the interior is Fairbanks, Alaska's second-largest city, in the Tanana Valley.",
"Other towns include North Pole, just southeast of Fairbanks, Eagle, Tok, Glennallen, Delta Junction, Nenana, Anderson, Healy and Cantwell.",
"The interior region has an estimated population of 113,154.__TOC__"
],
[
"Climate",
"Northern Lights and Big Dipper at Fairbanks, AK during September.Interior Alaska experiences extreme seasonal temperature variability.",
"Winter temperatures in Fairbanks average −12 °F (−24 °C) and summer temperatures average +62 °F (+17 °C).",
"Temperatures there have been recorded as low as −65 °F (−54 °C) in mid-winter, and as high as +99 °F (+37 °C) in summer.",
"Both the highest and lowest temperature records for the state were set in the Interior, with 100 °F (38 °C) in Fort Yukon and −80 °F (−62 °C) in Prospect Creek.",
"Temperatures within a given winter are highly variable as well; extended cold snaps of forty below zero can be followed by unseasonable warmth with temperatures above freezing due to chinook wind effects.Summers can be warm and dry for extended periods creating ideal fire weather conditions.",
"Weak thunderstorms produce mostly dry lightning, sparking wildfires that are mostly left to burn themselves out as they are often far from populated areas.",
"The 2004 season set a new record with over burned.Lakes and peaks of the Alaska Range seen from the Denali HighwayThe average annual precipitation in Fairbanks is 11.3 inches (287 mm).",
"Most of this comes in the form of snow during the winter.",
"Most storms in the interior of Alaska originate in the Gulf of Alaska, south of the state, though these storms often have limited precipitation due to a rain shadow effect caused by the Alaska Range.On clear winter nights, the aurora borealis can often be seen in the sky.",
"Like all subarctic regions, the months from May to July in the summer have no night, only a twilight during the night hours.",
"The months of November to January have little daylight.",
"Fairbanks receives an average 21 hours of daylight between May 10 and August 2 each summer, and an average of less than four hours of daylight between November 18 and January 24 each winter.The interior of Alaska is largely underlined by discontinuous permafrost, which grades to continuous permafrost as the Arctic Circle is approached.Image:Fires in Interior Alaska.jpg|Fires in Interior Alaska from July 7, 2009.Image:Hundreds of Thousands of Acres Burning in Interior Alaska (natural).jpg|The thick pall of smoke the fires were creating (August 2, 2009).Image:Hundreds of Thousands of Acres Burning in Interior Alaska.jpg|Visible, short wave and near-infrared image showing burned areas (brick red) and unburned vegetation (bright green) (August 2, 2009)."
],
[
"Alaska Natives",
"While the vast majority of indigenous Native people of Interior Alaska are Athabaskan Indians, large Yup'ik and Iñupiaq populations reside in Fairbanks.The federally recognized tribes of Interior Alaska: * Council of Athabascan Tribal Governments (CATG): Beaver Village, Birch Creek Tribe, Circle Native Community, Native Village of Fort Yukon, Native Village of Venetie Tribal Government (also known as Arctic Village and Village of Venetie).",
"* Tanana Chiefs Conference (TCC): Allakaket Village, Alatna Village, Village of Anaktuvuk Pass, Chalkyitsik Village, Village of Dot Lake, Native Village of Eagle, Evansville Village (also known as Bettles Field), Galena Village (also known as Louden Village), Healy Lake Village, Hughes Village, Huslia Village, Village of Kaltag, Koyukuk Native Village, Manley Hot Springs Village, Native Village of Minto, Nenana Native Association, Nikolai Village (Edzeno’ Native Council), Northway Village, Nulato Village, Rampart Village, Native Village of Ruby, Native Village of Stevens, Native Village of Tanacross, Telida Village, Native Village of Tetlin.",
"* Tanana Tribal Council: Native Village of Tanana.",
"* Other places in the Interior Service Area not Federally Recognized as Tribes: Alcan, Anderson, Big Delta, Canyon Village, Central, Chatanika, Chicken, Clear, Delta Junction, Fairbanks, Fox, Indian River, Kokrines, Lake Minchumina, Medfra, North Pole, Salcha, Tok, Toklat, Tolovana, Wiseman, Wood River."
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"And did those feet in ancient time"
],
[
"Introduction",
"William Blake\"'''And did those feet in ancient time'''\" is a poem by William Blake from the preface to his epic ''Milton: A Poem in Two Books'', one of a collection of writings known as the Prophetic Books.",
"The date of 1804 on the title page is probably when the plates were begun, but the poem was printed .",
"Today it is best known as the hymn \"'''Jerusalem'''\", with music written by Sir Hubert Parry in 1916.The famous orchestration was written by Sir Edward Elgar.",
"It is not to be confused with another poem, much longer and larger in scope and also by Blake, called ''Jerusalem The Emanation of the Giant Albion''.It is often assumed that the poem was inspired by the apocryphal story that a young Jesus, accompanied by Joseph of Arimathea, a tin merchant, travelled to what is now England and visited Glastonbury during his unknown years.",
"However, according to British folklore scholar A. W. Smith, \"there was little reason to believe that an oral tradition concerning a visit made by Jesus to Britain existed before the early part of the twentieth century\".",
"Instead, the poem draws on an older story, repeated in Milton's ''History of Britain'', that Joseph of Arimathea, alone, travelled to preach to the ancient Britons after the death of Jesus.",
"The poem's theme is linked to the Book of Revelation (3:12 and 21:2) describing a Second Coming, wherein Jesus establishes a New Jerusalem.",
"Churches in general, and the Church of England in particular, have long used Jerusalem as a metaphor for Heaven, a place of universal love and peace.In the most common interpretation of the poem, Blake asks whether a visit by Jesus briefly created heaven in England, in contrast to the \"dark Satanic Mills\" of the Industrial Revolution.",
"Blake's poem asks four questions rather than asserting the historical truth of Christ's visit.",
"The second verse is interpreted as an exhortation to create an ideal society in England, whether or not there was a divine visit."
],
[
"Text",
"The original text is found in the preface Blake wrote for inclusion with ''Milton, a Poem'', following the lines beginning \"The Stolen and Perverted Writings of Homer & Ovid: of Plato & Cicero, which all Men ought to contemn: ...\"'''Blake's poem'''Beneath the poem Blake inscribed a quotation from the Bible:===\"Dark Satanic Mills\"===Albion Flour Mills, Bankside, LondonThe phrase \"dark Satanic Mills\", which entered the English language from this poem, is often interpreted as referring to the early Industrial Revolution and its destruction of nature and human relationships.",
"That view has been linked to the fate of the Albion Flour Mills in Southwark, the first major factory in London.",
"The rotary steam-powered flour mill, built by Matthew Boulton, assisted by James Watt, could produce 6,000 bushels of flour per week.",
"The factory could have driven independent traditional millers out of business, but it was destroyed in 1791 by fire.",
"There were rumours of arson, but the most likely cause was a bearing that overheated due to poor maintenance.London's independent millers celebrated, with placards reading, \"Success to the mills of Albion but no Albion Mills.\"",
"Opponents referred to the factory as satanic, and accused its owners of adulterating flour and using cheap imports at the expense of British producers.",
"A contemporary illustration of the fire shows a devil squatting on the building.",
"The mill was a short distance from Blake's home.Blake's phrase resonates with a broader theme in his works; what he envisioned as a physically and spiritually repressive ideology based on a quantified reality.",
"Blake saw the cotton mills and collieries of the period as a mechanism for the enslavement of millions, but the concepts underpinning the works had a wider application:The first reference to Satan's \"mills\", next to images of megaliths (Milton: A Poem in Two Books, copy C, object 4)Another interpretation is that the phrase refers to the established Church of England, which, in contrast to Blake, preached a doctrine of conformity to the established social order and class system.",
"Stonehenge and other megaliths are featured in ''Milton'', suggesting they may relate to the oppressive power of priestcraft in general.",
"Peter Porter observed that many scholars argue that the \"mills are churches and not the factories of the Industrial Revolution everyone else takes them for\".",
"In 2007, the Bishop of Durham, N. T. Wright, explicitly recognised that element of English subculture when he acknowledged the view that \"dark satanic mills\" could refer to the \"great churches\".",
"In similar vein, the critic F. W. Bateson noted how \"the adoption by the Churches and women's organizations of this anti-clerical paean of free love is amusing evidence of the carelessness with which poetry is read\".An alternative theory is that Blake is referring to a mystical concept within his own mythology, related to the ancient history of England.",
"Satan's \"mills\" are referred to repeatedly in the main poem, and are first described in words which suggest neither industrialism nor ancient megaliths, but rather something more abstract: \"the starry Mills of Satan/ Are built beneath the earth and waters of the Mundane Shell...To Mortals thy Mills seem everything, and the Harrow of Shaddai / A scheme of human conduct invisible and incomprehensible\".===\"Chariots of fire\"===The line from the poem \"Bring me my Chariot of fire!\"",
"draws on the story of 2 Kings 2:11, where the Old Testament prophet Elijah is taken directly to heaven: \"And it came to pass, as they still went on, and talked, that, behold, there appeared a chariot of fire, and horses of fire, and parted them both asunder; and Elijah went up by a whirlwind into heaven.\"",
"The phrase has become a byword for divine energy, and inspired the title of the 1981 film ''Chariots of Fire'', in which the hymn \"Jerusalem\" is sung during the final scenes.",
"The plural phrase \"chariots of fire\" refers to 2 Kings 6:17.===\"Green and pleasant land\"===Blake lived in London for most of his life, but wrote much of ''Milton'' while living in a cottage, now Blake’s Cottage, in the village of Felpham in Sussex.",
"Amanda Gilroy argues that the poem is informed by Blake's \"evident pleasure\" in the Felpham countryside.",
"However, local people say that records from Lavant, near Chichester, state that Blake wrote \"And did those feet in ancient time\" in an east-facing alcove of the Earl of March public house.The phrase \"green and pleasant land\" has become a common term for an identifiably English landscape or society.",
"It appears as a headline, title or sub-title in numerous articles and books.",
"Sometimes it refers, whether with appreciation, nostalgia or critical analysis, to idyllic or enigmatic aspects of the English countryside.",
"In other contexts it can suggest the perceived habits and aspirations of rural middle-class life.",
"Sometimes it is used ironically, e.g.",
"in the Dire Straits song \"Iron Hand\".===Revolution===Several of Blake's poems and paintings express a notion of universal humanity: \"As all men are alike (tho' infinitely various)\".",
"He retained an active interest in social and political events for all his life, but was often forced to resort to cloaking social idealism and political statements in Protestant mystical allegory.",
"Even though the poem was written during the Napoleonic Wars, Blake was an outspoken supporter of the French Revolution, and Napoleon claimed to be continuing this revolution.",
"The poem expressed his desire for radical change without overt sedition.",
"In 1803 Blake was charged at Chichester with high treason for having \"uttered seditious and treasonable expressions\", but was acquitted.",
"The trial was not a direct result of anything he had written, but comments he had made in conversation, including \"Damn the King!",
"\".The poem is followed in the preface by a quotation from ''Numbers'' 11:29: \"Would to God that all the Lords people were prophets.\"",
"Christopher Rowland has argued that this includeseveryone in the task of speaking out about what they saw.",
"Prophecy for Blake, however, was not a prediction of the end of the world, but telling the truth as best a person can about what he or she sees, fortified by insight and an \"honest persuasion\" that with personal struggle, things could be improved.",
"A human being observes, is indignant and speaks out: it's a basic political maxim which is necessary for any age.",
"Blake wanted to stir people from their intellectual slumbers, and the daily grind of their toil, to see that they were captivated in the grip of a culture which kept them thinking in ways which served the interests of the powerful.The words of the poem \"stress the importance of people taking responsibility for change and building a better society 'in Englands green and pleasant land.'",
"\""
],
[
"Popularisation",
"The poem, which was little known during the century which followed its writing, was included in the patriotic anthology of verse ''The Spirit of Man,'' edited by the Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom, Robert Bridges, and published in 1916, at a time when morale had begun to decline because of the high number of casualties in World War I and the perception that there was no end in sight.Under these circumstances, Bridges, finding the poem an appropriate hymn text to \"brace the spirit of the nation to accept with cheerfulness all the sacrifices necessary,\" asked Sir Hubert Parry to put it to music for a Fight for Right campaign meeting in London's Queen's Hall.",
"Bridges asked Parry to supply \"suitable, simple music to Blake's stanzas – music that an audience could take up and join in\", and added that, if Parry could not do it himself, he might delegate the task to George Butterworth.The poem's idealistic theme or subtext accounts for its popularity across much of the political spectrum.",
"It was used as a campaign slogan by the Labour Party in the 1945 general election; Clement Attlee said they would build \"a new Jerusalem\".",
"It has been sung at conferences of the Conservative Party, at the Glee Club of the British Liberal Assembly, the Labour Party and by the Liberal Democrats.===Setting to music=======By Hubert Parry====In adapting Blake's poem as a unison song, Parry deployed a two-stanza format, each taking up eight lines of Blake's original poem.",
"He added a four-bar musical introduction to each verse and a coda, echoing melodic motifs of the song.",
"The word \"those\" was substituted for \"these\" before \"dark satanic mills\".Parry was initially reluctant to supply music for the campaign meeting, as he had doubts about the ultra-patriotism of Fight for Right; but knowing that his former student Walford Davies was to conduct the performance, and not wanting to disappoint either Robert Bridges or Davies, he agreed, writing it on 10 March 1916, and handing the manuscript to Davies with the comment, \"Here's a tune for you, old chap.",
"Do what you like with it.\"",
"Davies later recalled,Davies arranged for the vocal score to be published by Curwen in time for the concert at the Queen's Hall on 28 March and began rehearsing it.",
"It was a success and was taken up generally.But Parry began to have misgivings again about Fight for Right, and in May 1917 wrote to the organisation's founder Sir Francis Younghusband withdrawing his support entirely.",
"There was even concern that the composer might withdraw the song from all public use, but the situation was saved by Millicent Fawcett of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS).",
"The song had been taken up by the Suffragists in 1917 and Fawcett asked Parry if it might be used at a Suffrage Demonstration Concert on 13 March 1918.Parry was delighted and orchestrated the piece for the concert (it had originally been for voices and organ).",
"After the concert, Fawcett asked the composer if it might become the Women Voters' Hymn.",
"Parry wrote back, \"I wish indeed it might become the Women Voters' hymn, as you suggest.",
"People seem to enjoy singing it.",
"And having the vote ought to diffuse a good deal of joy too.",
"So they would combine happily\".Accordingly, he assigned the copyright to the NUWSS.",
"When that organisation was wound up in 1928, Parry's executors reassigned the copyright to the Women's Institutes, where it remained until it entered the public domain in 1968.The song was first called \"And Did Those Feet in Ancient Time\" and the early scores have this title.",
"The change to \"Jerusalem\" seems to have been made about the time of the 1918 Suffrage Demonstration Concert, perhaps when the orchestral score was published (Parry's manuscript of the orchestral score has the old title crossed out and \"Jerusalem\" inserted in a different hand).",
"However, Parry always referred to it by its first title.",
"He had originally intended the first verse to be sung by a solo female voice (this is marked in the score), but this is rare in contemporary performances.",
"Sir Edward Elgar re-scored the work for very large orchestra in 1922 for use at the Leeds Festival.",
"Elgar's orchestration has overshadowed Parry's own, primarily because it is the version usually used now for the Last Night of the Proms (though Sir Malcolm Sargent, who introduced it to that event in the 1950s, always used Parry's version).====By Wallen====In 2020 a new musical arrangement of the poem by Errollyn Wallen, a British composer born in Belize, was sung by South African soprano Golda Schultz at the Last Night of the Proms.",
"Parry's version was traditionally sung at the Last Night, with Elgar's orchestration; the new version, with different rhythms, dissonance, and reference to the blues, caused much controversy.",
"While the song was often considered to be patriotic, in reality ''Jerusalem'' has always been an anti-establishment tract.====Use as a hymn====Although Parry composed the music as a unison song, many churches have adopted \"Jerusalem\" as a four-part hymn; a number of English entities, including the BBC, the Crown, cathedrals, churches, and chapels regularly use it as an office or recessional hymn on Saint George's Day.However, some clergy in the Church of England, according to the BBC TV programme ''Jerusalem: An Anthem for England'', have said that the song is not technically a hymn as it is not a prayer to God; consequently, it is not sung in some churches in England.",
"It was sung as a hymn during the wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton in Westminster Abbey.Many schools use the song, especially public schools in Great Britain (it was used as the title music for the BBC's 1979 series ''Public School'' about Radley College), and several private schools in Australia, New Zealand, New England and Canada.",
"In Hong Kong, diverted version of \"Jerusalem\" is also used as the school hymn of St. Catherine's School for Girls, Kwun Tong and Bishop Hall Jubilee School.",
"\"Jerusalem\" was chosen as the opening hymn for the London Olympics 2012, although \"God Save the Queen\" was the anthem sung during the raising of the flag in salute to the Queen.",
"Some attempts have also been made to increase its use elsewhere with other words; examples include the state funeral of President Ronald Reagan in Washington National Cathedral on 11 June 2004, and the state memorial service for Australian Prime Minister Gough Whitlam on 5 November 2014.It has been sung on BBC's ''Songs Of Praise'' for many years; in a countrywide poll to find the UK's favourite hymn in 2019, it was voted top, relegating previous favourite \"How Great Thou Art\" into second place.====Proposal as English anthem====Upon hearing the orchestral version for the first time, King George V said that he preferred \"Jerusalem\" over the British national anthem \"God Save the King\".",
"\"Jerusalem\" is considered to be England's most popular patriotic song; ''The New York Times'' said it was \"fast becoming an alternative national anthem,\" and there have been calls to give it official status.",
"England has no official anthem and uses the British national anthem \"God Save the King\", also unofficial, for some national occasions, such as before English international football matches.",
"However, some sports, including rugby league, use \"Jerusalem\" as the English anthem.",
"\"Jerusalem\" is the official hymn of the England and Wales Cricket Board, although \"God Save the Queen\" has been sung before England's games on several occasions, including the 2010 ICC World Twenty20, the 2010–11 Ashes series and the 2019 ICC Cricket World Cup.",
"Questions in Parliament have not clarified the situation, as answers from the relevant minister say that since there is no official national anthem, each sport must make its own decision.As Parliament has not clarified the situation, Team England, the English Commonwealth team, held a public poll in 2010 to decide which anthem should be played at medal ceremonies to celebrate an English win at the Commonwealth Games.",
"\"Jerusalem\" was selected by 52% of voters over \"Land of Hope and Glory\" (used since 1930) and \"God Save the Queen\".In 2005 BBC Four produced ''Jerusalem: An Anthem For England'' highlighting the usages of the song/poem and a case was made for its adoption as the national anthem of England.",
"Varied contributions come from Howard Goodall, Billy Bragg, Garry Bushell, Lord Hattersley, Ann Widdecombe and David Mellor, war proponents, war opponents, suffragettes, trade unionists, public schoolboys, the Conservatives, the Labour Party, football supporters, the British National Party, the Women's Institute, London Gay Men's Chorus, London Community Gospel Choir, Fat Les and naturists."
],
[
"Cultural significance",
"===Enduring popularity===The popularity of Parry's setting has resulted in many hundreds of recordings being made, too numerous to list, of both traditional choral performances and new interpretations by popular music artists.",
"The song has also had a large cultural impact in Great Britain.",
"It is sung every year by an audience of thousands at the end of the Last Night of the Proms in the Royal Albert Hall and simultaneously in the ''Proms in the Park'' venues throughout the country.",
"Similarly, along with \"The Red Flag\", it is sung each year at the closing of the annual Labour Party conference.The song was used by the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (indeed Parry transferred the copyright to the NUWSS in 1918; the Union was wound up in 1928 after women won the right to vote).",
"During the 1920s many Women's Institutes (WI) started closing meetings by singing it, and this caught on nationally.",
"Although it was never adopted as the WI's official anthem, in practice it holds that position, and is an enduring element of the public image of the WI.A rendition of \"Jerusalem\" was included in the 1973 album ''Brain Salad Surgery'' by the progressive rock group Emerson, Lake & Palmer.",
"The arrangement of the hymn is notable for its use of the first polyphonic synthesizer, the Moog Apollo.",
"It was released as a single, but failed to chart in the United Kingdom.",
"An instrumental rendition of the hymn was included in the 1989 album \"The Amsterdam EP\" by Scottish rock band Simple Minds.",
"Iron Maiden singer Bruce Dickinson incorporated the full text of the poem into his 6:42 track ''Jerusalem'' (co-written with Roy Z), a part of his William Blake inspired 1998 solo album ''The Chemical Wedding''.",
"Dickinson performed the track live in 2023 as part of the ''Jon Lord'' ''Concerto for Group and Orchestra'' tour.",
"\"Jerusalem\" is traditionally sung before rugby league's Challenge Cup Final, along with \"Abide with Me\", and before the Super League Grand Final, where it is introduced as \"the rugby league anthem\".",
"Before 2008, it was the anthem used by the national side, as \"God Save the Queen\" was used by the Great Britain team: since the Lions were superseded by England, \"God Save the Queen\" has replaced \"Jerusalem\".",
"Since 2004, it has been the anthem of the England cricket team, being played before each day of their home test matches.It was also used in the opening ceremony of the 2012 Summer Olympics held in London and inspired several of the opening show segments directed by Danny Boyle.",
"It was included in the ceremony's soundtrack album, ''Isles of Wonder''.===Use in film, television and theatre===\"Bring me my Chariot of fire\" inspired the title of the film ''Chariots of Fire''.",
"A church congregation sings \"Jerusalem\" at the close of the film and a performance appears on the ''Chariots of Fire soundtrack'' performed by the Ambrosian Singers overlaid partly by a composition by Vangelis.",
"One unexpected touch is that \"Jerusalem\" is sung in four-part harmony, as if it were truly a hymn.",
"This is not authentic: Parry's composition was a unison song (that is, all voices sing the tune – perhaps one of the things that make it so \"singable\" by massed crowds) and he never provided any harmonisation other than the accompaniment for organ (or orchestra).",
"Neither does it appear in any standard hymn book in a guise other than Parry's own, so it may have been harmonised specially for the film.",
"The film's working title was \"Running\" until Colin Welland saw a television programme, ''Songs of Praise'', featuring the hymn and decided to change the title.The hymn has featured in many other films and television programmes including ''Four Weddings and a Funeral'', ''How to Get Ahead in Advertising'', ''The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner'', ''Saint Jack'', ''Calendar Girls'', Season 3: Episode 22 of ''Star Trek: Deep Space Nine'', ''Goodnight Mr. Tom'', ''Women in Love'', ''The Man Who Fell to Earth'', ''Shameless'', ''Jackboots on Whitehall'', ''Quatermass and the Pit'', ''Monty Python's Flying Circus'', and ''Collateral'' (UK TV series).",
"An extract was heard in the 2013 ''Doctor Who'' episode \"The Crimson Horror\" although that story was set in 1893, i.e., before Parry's arrangement.",
"A bawdy version of the first verse is sung by Mr Partridge in the third episode of Season 1 of ''Hi-de-Hi''.",
"A punk version is heard in Derek Jarman's 1977 film ''Jubilee''.",
"In an episode of ''Peep Show'', Jez (Robert Webb) records a track titled \"This Is Outrageous\" which uses the first and a version of the second line in a verse.",
"A modified version of the hymn, replacing the word \"England\" with \"Neo\", is used in ''Neo Yokio'' as the national anthem of the eponymous city state.In the theatre it appears in ''Jerusalem'', ''Calendar Girls'' and in ''Time and the Conways''."
],
[
"See also",
"* Civil religion* Romanticism and the Industrial Revolution"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* Comparisons of the Hand Painted copies of the Preface on the William Blake Archive* * And did those feet in ancient time at Hymnary.org* (Multiple versions)"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"The Bush (Alaska)"
],
[
"Introduction",
"In Alaska, '''the Bush''' typically refers to any region of the state that is not connected to the North American road network or does not have ready access to the state's ferry system.",
"A large proportion of Alaska Native populations live in the Bush, often depending on subsistence hunting and fishing.Geographically, the Bush comprises the Alaska North Slope; Northwest Arctic; West, including the Baldwin and Seward Peninsulas; the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta; Southwest Alaska; Bristol Bay; Alaska Peninsula; and remote areas of the Alaska Panhandle and Interior.",
"Some of the hub communities in the bush, which typically can be reached by larger, commercial airplanes, include Bethel, Dillingham, King Salmon, Nome, Utqiagvik, Kodiak Island, Kotzebue, and Unalaska-Dutch Harbor.Most parts of Alaska that are off the road or ferry system can be reached by small bush airplanes.",
"Travel between smaller communities or to and from hub communities is typically accomplished by snowmobiles, boats, or ATVs."
],
[
"References"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"A Little Night Music"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''''A Little Night Music''''' is a musical with music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and book by Hugh Wheeler.",
"Inspired by the 1955 Ingmar Bergman film ''Smiles of a Summer Night'', it involves the romantic lives of several couples.",
"Its title is a literal English translation of the German name for Mozart's Serenade No.",
"13, K. 525, ''Eine kleine Nachtmusik''.",
"The musical includes the popular song \"Send In the Clowns\", written for Glynis Johns.Since its original 1973 Broadway production, the musical has enjoyed professional productions in the West End, by opera companies, in a 2009 Broadway revival, and elsewhere, and it is a popular choice for regional groups.",
"It was adapted for film in 1977, with Harold Prince directing and Elizabeth Taylor, Len Cariou, Lesley-Anne Down, and Diana Rigg starring."
],
[
"Synopsis",
"===Act One===The setting is Sweden, around the year 1900.One by one, the Quintet – five singers who comment like a Greek chorus throughout the show – enter, tuning up.",
"Gradually, their vocalizing becomes an overture blending fragments of \"Remember,\" \"Soon,\" and \"The Glamorous Life.\"",
"The other characters enter waltzing, each uncomfortable with their partner (\"Night Waltz\").",
"After they drift back off, the aging and sardonic Madame Armfeldt, a wealthy former courtesan, and her solemn granddaughter, Fredrika, enter.",
"Madame Armfeldt tells the child that the summer night \"smiles\" three times: first on the young, second on fools, and third on the old.",
"Fredrika vows to watch the smiles occur.",
"Middle-aged, successful lawyer Fredrik Egerman has recently married an 18-year-old trophy wife, Anne, a naive girl who loves Fredrik but isn't attracted to him.",
"The two have been married for eleven months, and Anne still protects her virginity.",
"Upon coming home from work, Fredrik surprises Anne with tickets to a play, starring Desiree Armfeldt, a glamorous actress whom Anne greatly admires.",
"Anne giddily fantasizes about what it would be like to be as beautiful and beloved as Desiree, and starts talking at Fredrik about her day.",
"Fredrik, distracted by his lust, considers various ways he might seduce his wife but ultimately rules each one out and elects to take a nap instead (\"Now\").",
"Meanwhile, his son Henrik, a seminary student a year older than his stepmother, is frustrated and ignored (\"Later\").",
"Anne promises her husband that shortly she will consent to have sex even though she can't help recoiling at his touch (\"Soon\"), and all three of them lament at once.",
"The number concludes with Fredrik sighing Desiree's name in his sleep, which Anne overhears.",
"Anne's maidservant Petra, an experienced and forthright girl, slightly older than the teen herself, offers her worldly but crass advice.Desiree Armfeldt, although once prominent, is now a fading flower clinging onto what's left of her past fame.",
"Desiree tours in small, obscure towns with her theatre troupe.",
"Madam Armfeldt, Desiree's mother, has taken over the care of Desiree's daughter Fredrika.",
"Fredrika misses her mother, but Desiree continually delays seeing her, preferring, somewhat ironically, her life on tour (\"The Glamorous Life\").",
"As Fredrik and Anne take their seats at Desiree's play, Anne's previous excitement quickly devolves into anxiety, suspicious that Fredrik and Desiree have a romantic history that he never disclosed to her.",
"The play begins and Desiree immediately notices Fredrik in the audience, and the Quintet reveals their shared memories and passionate relationship (\"Remember\").",
"Desiree, ironically playing a sexually irresistible countess, exchanges amorous glances with Fredrik and delivers her lines in an overtly suggestive tone, confirming Anne's suspicions as true.",
"Anne, upset and overwhelmed, demands that Fredrik take her home.",
"Meanwhile, Petra tries to seduce a nervous and petulant Henrik.That night, as Fredrik remembers his past with Desiree, he sneaks out to see her.",
"The two have a happy but strained reunion, reflecting on their new lives.",
"Desiree sarcastically boasts of her own adultery, as she has been seeing the married dragoon, Count Carl-Magnus Malcolm.",
"Following, Fredrik tries to explain how much he loves Anne, fending off Desiree's interjecting quips, but he ultimately reveals his sexual frustration (\"You Must Meet My Wife\").",
"Upon learning that Fredrik has gone for eleven months without sex, she agrees to accommodate him as a favor for an old friend.Madam Armfeldt offers advice to young Fredrika.",
"The elderly woman reflects poignantly on her own checkered past and wonders what happened to prior refined styles of living (\"Liaisons\").",
"In Desiree's apartment, Count Carl-Magnus Malcolm proclaims his unannounced arrival in his usual booming tones.",
"Fredrik and Desiree fool the Count with an innocent explanation for their disheveled appearance, but he is still suspicious.",
"He boasts of his many duels and the various wounds he has suffered before demonstrating his skills in knife-throwing.",
"Fredrik responds sarcastically, causing the dragoon to dislike him immediately.",
"Carl-Magnus returns to his wife, Countess Charlotte.",
"Charlotte knows of her husband's infidelity, but Carl-Magnus is too absorbed in his suspicions of Desiree to talk to her (\"In Praise of Women\").",
"When she persuades him to blurt out the whole story, a twist is revealed—Charlotte's little sister is a schoolfriend of Anne's.Charlotte visits Anne and describes Fredrik's tryst with Desiree.",
"Anne is shocked and saddened, but Charlotte explains that such is the lot of a wife, and love brings pain (\"Every Day a Little Death\").",
"Meanwhile, Desiree asks Madam Armfeldt to host a party for Fredrik, Anne, and Henrik.",
"Madam Armfeldt reluctantly agrees and sends out a personal invitation; its receipt sends Anne into a frenzy, imagining Desiree further seducing Fredrik at the estate.",
"Anne does not want to accept the invitation, but Charlotte convinces her to do so to heighten the contrast between the older Desiree and the young and beautiful teenager.",
"Charlotte relates this to the Count, who (much to her chagrin) decides to visit the Armfeldts, uninvited, as well.",
"Carl-Magnus plans to challenge Fredrik to a duel, while Charlotte hopes to seduce the lawyer to make her husband jealous and end his philandering.",
"The act ends as all characters head to Madam Armfeldt's estate (\"A Weekend in the Country\").===Act Two===Madam Armfeldt's country estate is bathed in the golden glow of perpetual summer sunset at this high latitude (\"Night Waltz One and Two\").",
"Everyone arrives, each with their own amorous purposes and desires—even Petra, who catches the eye of Armfeldt's fetching manservant, Frid.",
"The women begin to quarrel with one another.",
"Fredrik is astonished to learn the name of Desiree's daughter.",
"Henrik meets Fredrika, and confesses to her he deeply loves Anne.",
"Meanwhile, in the garden, Fredrik and Carl-Magnus reflect on the difficulty of being annoyed with Desiree, contrasting her immoral actions with her physical beauty (\"It Would Have Been Wonderful\").",
"Dinner is served, and the female Quintet singers comment on the characters’ suspense regarding the coming meal (\"Perpetual Anticipation\").At dinner, Charlotte attempts to flirt with Fredrik and trades insults with Desiree.",
"Soon, everyone is shouting and scolding everyone else, except for Henrik, who finally speaks up.",
"He accuses the whole company of being amoral, and flees the scene.",
"Stunned, everyone reflects on the situation and wanders away.",
"Fredrika tells Anne of Henrik's secret love and the two dash off searching for him.",
"Meanwhile, Desiree meets Fredrik and asks if he still wants to be \"rescued\" from his life.",
"Fredrik answers honestly that he loves Desiree but cannot bring himself to hurt Anne.",
"Hurt and bitter, Desiree can only reflect on the nature of her life and relationship with Fredrik (\"Send In the Clowns\").",
"Anne finds Henrik, who is attempting to commit suicide.",
"The clumsy boy cannot complete the task, and Anne tells him she loves him, too.",
"The pair begins to kiss, which leads to Anne's first sexual encounter.",
"Meanwhile, not far away, Frid sleeps in Petra's lap.",
"The maid imagines advantageous marriages but concludes that in the meantime, \"a girl ought to celebrate what passes by\" (\"The Miller's Son\").",
"Charlotte confesses her plan to Fredrik, and both watch Henrik and Anne, happy together, run away to start their new life.",
"The two commiserate on a bench.",
"Carl-Magnus, preparing to sleep with Desiree, sees this and challenges Fredrik to Russian Roulette; Fredrik nervously misfires and simply grazes his own ear.",
"Feeling victorious, Carl-Magnus reaffirms his love for Charlotte, finally granting her wish.After the Count and Countess leave, Fredrika and Madam Armfeldt discuss the recent chaotic turns of events.",
"The elderly woman asks Fredrika a surprising question: \"What is it all for?\"",
"Fredrika thinks about this and decides that love, for all of its frustrations, \"must be worth it.\"",
"Madam Armfeldt is surprised, ruefully noting that she rejected love for material wealth at Fredrika's age.",
"She praises her granddaughter and remembers true love's fleeting nature.Fredrik finally confesses his love for Desiree, acknowledging that Fredrika is his daughter, and the two promise to start a new life together (\"Send in the Clowns\" (Reprise)).",
"Madam Armfeldt sits alone with Fredrika, who tells her grandmother that she has watched carefully but still has not seen the night smile.",
"Madam Armfeldt laughs and points out that the night has indeed smiled twice: first on Henrik and Anne, the young, and second on Desiree and Fredrik, the fools.",
"As the two wait for the \"third smile... on the old\", it occurs: Madam Armfeldt closes her eyes and dies peacefully with Fredrika beside her (\"Last Waltz\")."
],
[
"Musical numbers",
"; Act I* Overture – Mr. Lindquist, Mrs. Nordstrom, Mrs. Anderssen, Mr. Erlanson and Mrs. Segstrom (the \"Quintet\")* \"Night Waltz\" – Company* \"Now\" – Fredrik Egerman* \"Later\" – Henrik Egerman* \"Soon\" – Anne Egerman* \"Soon/Later/Now\" – Anne, Henrik and Fredrik* \"The Glamorous Life\" – Fredrika Armfeldt, Desiree Armfeldt, Madam Armfeldt and Quintet* \"Remember?\"",
"– Quintet* \"You Must Meet My Wife\" – Desiree and Fredrik* \"Liaisons\" – Madam Armfeldt* \"In Praise of Women\" – Count Carl-Magnus Malcolm* \"Every Day a Little Death\" – Countess Charlotte Malcolm and Anne* \"A Weekend in the Country\" – Company; Act II* Entr'acte – Orchestra* \"Night Waltz I (The Sun Won't Set)\" – Quintet* \"Night Waltz II (The Sun Sits Low)\" – Quintet* \"It Would Have Been Wonderful\" – Fredrik and Carl-Magnus* \"Perpetual Anticipation\" – Mrs. Nordstrom, Mrs. Segstrom and Mrs. Anderssen* \"Dinner Table Scene\" – Orchestra* \"Send In the Clowns\" – Desiree* \"The Miller's Son\" – Petra* \"The World Won't End/Every Day a Little Death (reprise)\" – Desiree and Charlotte* Reprises (\"Soon\", \"You Must Meet My Wife\", \"A Weekend in the Country\" and \"Every Day a Little Death\") – Quintet* \"Send in the Clowns\" (Reprise) – Desiree and Fredrik* \"Last Waltz\" – Orchestra; Additional musical numbers'''Stage:'''* \"Two Fairy Tales\" – Henrik and Anne (cut in rehearsals when the tone of the musical changed)* \"Silly People\" – Frid (cut for time when \"The Miller's Son\" was added in Boston)* \"Bang!\"",
"– Carl-Magnus (replaced by \"In Praise of Women\")* \"My Husband the Pig\" – Charlotte (replaced by the second half of \"In Praise of Women\")'''Screen:'''* \"Love Takes Time\" – Company (lyrics added to Night Waltz)* \"The Glamorous Life\" – Fredrika (solo version later used combined with the original in the RNT revival)* A new introductory verse to \"Every Day a Little Death\" and a short section for Mme.",
"Armfeldt in \"A Weekend in the Country\""
],
[
"Characters",
"* '''Fredrik Egerman''': A successful widowed middle-aged lawyer.",
"He is married to the 18-year-old Anne and has one son, Henrik, from his previous marriage.",
"In the past, he and Desiree were lovers.",
"Bass-Baritone A2–E4*'''Anne Egerman''': Fredrik's new, naive wife, who is still a virgin after 11 months of marriage.",
"Soprano G3–A5*'''Henrik Egerman''': Fredrik's son, 20 years old and Anne's stepson.",
"He is serious but confused; he reads the works of philosophers and theologians whilst studying for the Lutheran priesthood.",
"His sexual repression is a great cause of his turmoil, as he lusts after Anne and attempts to have a sexual encounter with Petra.",
"Tenor G2–B4*'''Petra''': Anne's maid and closest confidante, brash, bold and flirtatious.",
"She has relations with Henrik.",
"Mezzo-soprano F3–F5*'''Desiree Armfeldt''': Self-absorbed, once-successful actress, now touring the countryside in what is clearly not the \"glamorous life\".",
"Harboured love for Fredrik for years since their affair.",
"Mezzo-soprano F3–E5*'''Fredrika Armfeldt''': Desiree's thirteen-year-old daughter, who may or may not be the product (unbeknownst to Fredrik) of the actress's and Fredrik's affair.",
"Soprano C4–E5*'''Madame Armfeldt''': Desiree's mother, a former courtesan who has had \"liaisons\" with royalty.",
"Contralto C3–F4*'''Count Carl-Magnus Malcolm''': A military dragoon who is Desiree's latest lover.",
"Hypocritically places value on fidelity, being hugely possessive when it comes to both his wife and mistress.",
"Comedic role.",
"Operatic Baritone G2–F4*'''Countess Charlotte Malcolm''': Carl-Magnus' wife, to whom he flaunts his infidelities.",
"She despises her husband for his behaviour, but obeys his orders due to her hopeless love for him.",
"Self-loathing and borderline alcoholic, yet the more intelligent half of the Malcolm couple.",
"Mezzo-soprano G3–F5*'''Frid''': Madame Armfeldt's manservant.",
"Has a tryst with Petra.",
"*'''The Quintet''': Mr. Lindquist, Mrs. Nordstrom, Mrs. Anderssen, Mr. Erlanson and Mrs. Segstrom.",
"A group of five singers that act as a Greek chorus.",
"Sometimes referred to as the Liebeslieder Singers (love song singers) although Stephen Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler did not script them to have that title, using Quintet instead.",
"The first usage of Liebeslieder for the Quintet came during the 1990 New York City Opera production.",
"Prince said that these characters represent \"people in the show who aren't wasting time ... the play is about wasting time.",
"\"*'''Malla''': Desiree's maid, who is with her constantly.",
"Silent part*'''Osa''': Maid at Madame Armfeldt's manse.",
"Silent part*'''Bertrand''': Page at Madame Armfeldt's manse.",
"Silent part"
],
[
"Casts and characters",
" Character Broadway US National Tour West EndFirst West End RevivalOff-West End RevivalSecond West End Revival First Broadway Revival 197319741975198920082009 Desiree Armfeldt Glynis Johns Jean Simmons Dorothy Tutin Hannah Waddingham Catherine Zeta-Jones Fredrik Egerman Len Cariou George Lee Andrews Joss Ackland Peter McEnery Alexander Hanson Alexander Hanson Madame Armfeldt Hermione Gingold Margaret Hamilton Hermione Gingold Lila Kedrova Maureen Lipman Angela Lansbury Fredrika Armfeldt Judy Kahan Marti Morris Christine McKenna-Tirella Debra Beaumont Holly HallamGrace Link Katherine Leigh DohertyKeaton Whittaker Petra D'Jamin Bartlett Mary Ann Chinn Diane Langton Sara Weymouth Kaisa Hammarlund Leigh Ann Larkin Henrik Egerman Mark Lambert Stephen Lehew Terry Mitchell Alexander Hanson Gabriel Vick Hunter Ryan Herdlicka Anne Egerman Victoria Mallory Virgina Pulos Veronica Page Deborah Poplett Jessie Buckley Ramona Mallory Countess Charlotte Malcolm Patricia Elliott Andra Akers Maria Aitken Susan Hampshire Kelly Price Erin Davie Count Carl-Magnus Malcolm Laurence Guittard Ed Evanko David Kernan Eric Flynn Alistair Robins Aaron Lazar=== Notable replacements ===;Broadway (1973–74)*'''Fredrik Egerman:''' William Daniels;West End (1975)*'''Desiree Armfeldt:''' Virginia McKenna*'''Madame Armfeldt:''' Angela Baddeley;Broadway Revival (2009–11)*'''Desiree Armfeldt:''' Bernadette Peters*'''Madame Armfeldt:''' Elaine Stritch*'''Fredrika Armfeldt:''' Katherine McNamara*'''Count Carl-Magnus:''' Bradley Dean"
],
[
"Productions",
"===Original Broadway production===''A Little Night Music'' opened on Broadway at the Shubert Theatre on February 25, 1973.It played there until September 15, 1973, then moved to the Majestic Theatre, on September 17, and closed there on August 3, 1974, after 601 performances and 12 previews.",
"It was directed by Harold Prince with choreography by Patricia Birch and design by Boris Aronson.",
"The cast included Glynis Johns (Desiree Armfeldt), Len Cariou (Fredrik Egerman), Hermione Gingold (Madame Armfeldt), Victoria Mallory (Anne Egerman), Judith Kahan (Fredrika Armfeldt), Mark Lambert (Henrik Egerman), Laurence Guittard (Carl-Magnus Malcolm), Patricia Elliott (Charlotte Malcolm), George Lee Andrews (Frid), and D'Jamin Bartlett (Petra).",
"It won the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award and the Tony Award for Best Musical.=== Australian premiere ===The first international production opened at Her Majesty's Theatre in Sydney, Australia in November 1973, with a cast including Taina Elg, Bruce Barry, Jill Perryman, Doris Fitton, Anna Russell and Geraldine Turner.",
"Australian revivals have been presented by the Sydney Theatre Company (featuring Geraldine Turner and a young Toni Collette) in 1990, Melbourne Theatre Company (featuring Helen Morse and John O'May) in 1997, Opera Australia (featuring Sigrid Thornton and Anthony Warlow) in 2009, and Victorian Opera (featuring Ali McGregor, Simon Gleeson and Verity Hunt-Ballard) in 2019.===United States tour===A US national tour began on February 26, 1974, at the Forrest Theatre, Philadelphia, and ended on February 13, 1975, at the Shubert Theatre, Boston.",
"Jean Simmons as Desiree Armfeldt, George Lee Andrews as Fredrik Egerman and Margaret Hamilton as Madame Armfeldt headed the cast.===West End premiere===The musical premiered in the West End at the Adelphi Theatre on April 15, 1975, and starred Jean Simmons, Joss Ackland, David Kernan, Liz Robertson, and Diane Langton, with Hermione Gingold reprising her role as Madame Armfeldt.",
"It ran for 406 performances.",
"During the run, Angela Baddeley replaced Gingold, and Virginia McKenna replaced Simmons.===1989 West End revival===A revival opened in the West End on October 6, 1989, at the Piccadilly Theatre, directed by Ian Judge, designed by Mark Thompson, and choreographed by Anthony Van Laast.",
"It starred Lila Kedrova as Madame Armfeldt, Dorothy Tutin as Desiree Armfeldt, Peter McEnery as Fredrik, and Susan Hampshire.",
"The production ran for 144 performances, closing on February 17, 1990.===1995 London revival===A revival by the Royal National Theatre opened at the Olivier Theatre on September 26, 1995.It was directed by Sean Mathias, with set design by Stephen Brimson Lewis, costumes by Nicky Gillibrand, lighting by Mark Henderson and choreography by Wayne McGregor.",
"It starred Judi Dench (Desiree), Siân Phillips (Madame Armfeldt), Joanna Riding (Anne Egerman), Laurence Guittard (Fredrik Egerman), Patricia Hodge (Countess Charlotte) and Issy van Randwyck (Petra).",
"The production closed on August 31, 1996.Dench received the Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Musical.===2008 London revival===The third London revival ran at the Menier Chocolate Factory from November 22, 2008, until March 8, 2009.The production was directed by Trevor Nunn, with musical supervision by Caroline Humphris, choreography by Lynne Page, sets and costumes by David Farley and new orchestrations by Jason Carr.",
"The cast included Hannah Waddingham as Desiree, Alexander Hanson as Frederik, Jessie Buckley (Anne), Maureen Lipman (Madame Armfeldt), Alistair Robins (the Count), Gabriel Vick (Henrik), Grace Link (Fredrika) and Kasia Hammarlund (Petra).",
"This critically acclaimed production transferred to the Garrick Theatre in the West End for a limited season, opening on March 28, 2009, and running until July 25, 2009.The production then transferred to Broadway with a new cast.===2009 Broadway revival===The 2008 Menier Chocolate Factory production opened on Broadway at the Walter Kerr Theatre in previews on November 24, 2009, and officially on December 13, 2009, with the same creative team.",
"The cast was led by Angela Lansbury as Madame Armfeldt and, in her Broadway debut, Catherine Zeta-Jones as Desiree.",
"Also featured were Alexander Hanson as Frederik, Ramona Mallory (the daughter of original Broadway cast members Victoria Mallory and Mark Lambert) as Anne, Hunter Ryan Herdlicka as Henrik, Leigh Ann Larkin as Petra, Erin Davie as the Countess, Aaron Lazar as the Count, and Bradley Dean as Frid.",
"Zeta-Jones received the award for Best Leading Actress in a Musical at the 64th Tony Awards.Originally, Katherine Doherty and Keaton Whittaker played Fredrika in alternating performances, beginning with the November 2009 previews.",
"The official show album, which was recorded in January 2010, features both Doherty and Whittaker as Fredrika (on different songs).",
"However, Katherine McNamara replaced Doherty in February 2010.McNamara and Whittaker stayed with the production until it ended in January 2011.When the contracts of Zeta-Jones and Lansbury ended, the production closed temporarily on June 20, 2010, and resumed on July 13, with new stars Bernadette Peters as Desiree Armfeldt and Elaine Stritch as Madame Armfeldt.",
"In an interview, Peters said that Sondheim had \"proposed the idea to her this spring and urged the producers of the revival to cast her.\"",
"Trevor Nunn directed rehearsals with the two new stars, and the rest of the original cast remained.",
"Peters and Stritch extended their contracts until January 9, 2011, when the production closed with 20 previews and 425 regular performances.",
"Before the production closed, it recouped its initial investment.===Europe===Zarah Leander played Madame Armfeldt in the original Austrian staging (in 1975) as well as in the original Swedish staging in Stockholm in 1978 (here with Jan Malmsjö as Fredrik Egerman).",
"The successful Stockholm staging was directed by Stig Olin.",
"In 2010 the musical was scheduled to return to Stockholm and the Stockholm Stadsteater.",
"The cast included Pia Johansson, Dan Ekborg, Yvonne Lombard and Thérese Andersson.The Théâtre du Châtelet, Paris production ran from February 15, 2010, through February 20, 2010.Lee Blakeley directed and Andrew George was the choreographer.",
"Italian-born actress Greta Scacchi played Désirée, and Leslie Caron played Madame Armfeldt.The Turku City Theatre staged the musical in 2011 with in the role as Désirée.",
"directed and Jussi Vahvaselkä was musical director.In 2019, the Nederlands Reisopera staged a version directed by Zack Winokur, with Susan Rigvava-Dumas playing Désirée.===Opera companies===The musical has also become part of the repertoire of a few opera companies.",
"Michigan Opera Theatre was the first major American opera company to present the work in 1983, and again in November 2009.Light Opera Works (Evanston, Illinois) produced the work in August 1983.New York City Opera staged it in 1990, 1991 and 2003, the Houston Grand Opera in 1999, the Los Angeles Opera in 2004, and Hartford Opera Theater in 2014.New York City Opera's production in August 1990 and July 1991 (a total of 18 performances) won the 1990 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Revival and was telecast on the PBS show ''Live at Lincoln Center'' on November 7, 1990.The cast included both stage performers: Sally Ann Howes and George Lee Andrews as Desiree and Frederik and opera regular Regina Resnik as Madame Armfeldt (in 1991).",
"The 2003 production featured a young Anna Kendrick as Fredrika Armfeldt, alongside Jeremy Irons as Frederik, Juliet Stevenson as Desiree, Claire Bloom as Madame Armfeldt, Danny Gurwin as Henrik, Michele Pawk as Charlotte, Jessiva Boevers as Petra, Kristin Huxhold as Anne and Marc Kudisch as Carl-Magnus.",
"The 2003 production was revived at Los Angeles Opera in July of 2004.Kudish, Pawk, Gurwin and Boevers returned alongside Judith Ivey as Desiree, Zoe Caldwell as Madame Armfeldt, Victor Garber as Frederik, Laura Benanti as Anne and Kristen Bell as Fredrika.Opera Australia presented the piece in Melbourne in May 2009, starring Sigrid Thornton as Desiree Armfeldt and Nancye Hayes as Madame Armfeldt.",
"The production returned in 2010 at the Sydney Opera House with Anthony Warlow taking on the role of Fredrik Egerman.",
"The production was directed by Stuart Maunder, designed by Roger Kirk, and conducted by Andrew Greene.",
"Opera Theatre of Saint Louis performed the musical in June 2010.Designer Isaac Mizrahi directed and designed the production, with a cast that included Amy Irving, Siân Phillips, and Ron Raines as Fredrik Egerman.The piece has also become a popular choice for amateur musical theatre and light opera companies.",
"In 2017, the musical was performed by students at The Royal Academy of Dramatic Art."
],
[
"Film adaptation",
"A film version of ''A Little Night Music'' was released in 1977, starring Elizabeth Taylor as Desiree, Lesley-Anne Down as Anne and Diana Rigg as Charlotte, with Len Cariou, Hermione Gingold and Laurence Guittard reprising their Broadway roles.",
"The setting for the film was moved from Sweden to Austria.",
"Stephen Sondheim wrote lyrics for the \"Night Waltz\" theme (\"Love Takes Time\") and wrote an entirely new version of \"The Glamorous Life\", which has been incorporated into several subsequent productions of the stage musical.",
"However, other songs, including \"In Praise of Women\", \"The Miller's Son\" and \"Liaisons\", were cut and remain heard only as background orchestrations.",
"The film marked Broadway director Harold Prince's second (and final) time as a motion picture director.",
"Critical reaction to the film was mostly negative, with much being made of Taylor's wildly fluctuating weight from scene to scene.",
"Some critics talked more positively of the film, with ''Variety'' calling it \"an elegant looking, period romantic charade\".",
"There was praise for Diana Rigg's performance, and orchestrator Jonathan Tunick received an Oscar for his work on the score.",
"A soundtrack recording was released on LP, and a DVD release was issued in June 2007."
],
[
"Music analysis",
"The score for ''A Little Night Music'' presents performance challenges more often seen in operetta or light opera pieces than in standard musical comedy.",
"The demands made on the singing cast are considerable; although the vocal demands of the role of Desiree are rather small, most of the other singing roles require strong, legitimately-trained voices with fairly wide ranges.",
"Sondheim's liberal use of counterpoint extends to the vocal parts, including a free-structured round (the trio \"Perpetual Anticipation\") as well as songs in which characters engage in interior monologues or even overt dialogue simultaneously (\"Now/Later/Soon\", \"A Weekend in the Country\").",
"Critic Rex Reed noted that \"The score of 'Night Music' ...contains patter songs, contrapuntal duets and trios, a quartet, and even a dramatic double quintet to puzzle through.",
"All this has been gorgeously orchestrated by Jonathan Tunick; there is no rhythm section, only strings and woodwinds to carry the melodies and harmonies aloft.",
"\"Sondheim's engagement with threes extends to his lyrics.",
"He organizes trios with the singers separated, while his duets are sung together, about a third person.The work is performed as an operetta in many professional opera companies.",
"For example, it was added to the New York City Opera Company repertoire in 1990.=== time===Most of the music in the show is written in waltz meter ( time).",
"Some parts adopt compound meter, with a time signature such as .",
"Passages in \"Overture\", \"Glamorous Life\", \"Liaisons\", \"Every Day A Little Death\", and \"The Miller's Son\" are in duple meter.===Counterpoint and polyphony===At several points, Sondheim has multiple performers each sing a different song simultaneously.",
"This use of counterpoint maintains coherence even as it extends the notion of a round, familiar in songs such as the traditional \"Frère Jacques\", into something more complex.",
"Sondheim said: \"As for the three songs ... going together well, I might as well confess.",
"In those days I was just getting into contrapuntal and choral writing...and I wanted to develop my technique by writing a trio.",
"What I didn't want to do is the quodlibet method...wouldn't it be nice to have three songs you don't think are going to go together, and they do go together ...",
"The trick was the little vamp on \"Soon\" which has five-and six-note chords.\"",
"Steve Swayne comments that the \"contrapuntal episodes in the extended ensembles ... stand as testament to his interest in Counterpoint.",
"\"===\"Send In The Clowns\"===The show's best-known and Sondheim's biggest hit song was almost an afterthought, written several days before the start of out-of-town tryouts.",
"Sondheim initially conceived Desiree as a role for a more or less non-singing actress.",
"When he discovered that the original Desiree, Glynis Johns, was able to sing (she had a \"small, silvery voice\") but could not \"sustain a phrase\", he devised the song \"Send in the Clowns\" for her in a way that would work around her vocal weakness, e.g., by ending lines with consonants that made for a short cut-off.",
"\"It is written in short phrases in order to be acted rather than sung ... tailor-made for Glynis Johns, who lacks the vocal power to sustain long phrases.",
"\"In analyzing the text of the song, Max Cryer wrote that it \"is not intended to be sung by the young in love, but by a mature performer who has seen it all before.",
"The song remains an anthem to regret for unwise decisions in the past and recognition that there's no need to send in the clowns – they're already here.",
"\"Graham Wolfe has argued, \"What Desirée is referring to in the famous song is a conventional device to cover over a moment when something has gone wrong on stage.",
"Midway through the second Act she has deviated from her usual script by suggesting to Fredrik the possibility of being together seriously and permanently, and, having been rejected, she falters ''as'' a show-person, finds herself bereft of the capacity to improvise and wittily cover.",
"If Desirée could perform at this moment – revert to the innuendos, one-liners and blithe self-referential humour that constitutes her normal character – all would be well.",
"She cannot, and what follows is an exemplary manifestation of Sondheim’s musico-dramatic complexity, his inclination to write music that performs drama.",
"That is, what needs to be covered over (by the clowns sung about in the song) is the very intensity, ragged emotion and utter vulnerability that comes forward through the music and singing itself, a display protracted to six minutes, wrought with exposed silences, a shocked Fredrik sitting so uncomfortably before Desirée while something much too real emerges in a realm where he – and his audience – felt assured of performance.",
"\"===Influences===There is a Mozart reference in the title—''A Little Night Music'' is an occasionally-used translation of ''Eine kleine Nachtmusik'', the nickname of Mozart's Serenade No.",
"13, K. 525.The elegant, harmonically-advanced music in this musical pays indirect homage to the compositions of Maurice Ravel, especially his ''Valses nobles et sentimentales'' (whose opening chord is borrowed for the opening chord of the song \"Liaisons\"); part of this effect stems from the style of orchestration that Jonathan Tunick used.",
"There is also a direct quotation in 'A Weekend in the Country' (just as it moves to A major for the last time in the final section of the number) of Octavian's theme from Strauss' 'Der Rosenkavalier', another comedy of manners with partner-swapping at its heart.=== Orchestration ===The original Broadway pit consisted of a 17 piece orchestra.",
"* Strings: 2 violins 1 viola, 1 cello, 1 bass, 1 harp* Brass: 2 trumpets (1 player), 3 horns, 1 trombone* Keyboards: 1 piano/celesta* Woodwinds:** Reed 1: alto flute, flute, piccolo** Reed 2: clarinet, flute** Reed 3: bass clarinet, clarinet** Reed 4: English horn, oboe** Reed 5: bassoon, clarinet* Percussion: (1 player) bells, crotales, snare drum, triangle, tympani, xylophoneThe 2008 revival of the show modified the orchestrations to an 8 piece pit, re-orchestrated by Jason Carr.",
"* Strings: 1 violin 1 viola, 1 cello, 1 bass, 1 harp* Keyboards: 1 piano/synthesizer* Woodwinds: 1 player ** Bassoon: 1 player"
],
[
"Cast recordings",
"Cast recording of 1995 National Theatre revival starring Judi DenchIn addition to the original Broadway and London cast recordings, and the motion picture soundtrack (no longer available), there are recordings of the 1990 studio cast, the 1995 Royal National Theatre revival (starring Judi Dench), and the 2001 Barcelona cast recording sung in Catalan.",
"In 1997 an all-jazz version of the score was recorded by Terry Trotter.The 2009 Broadway revival with Catherine Zeta-Jones and Angela Lansbury recorded a cast album on January 4, 2010, which was released on April 6."
],
[
"Critical response",
"In his review of the original 1973 Broadway production, Clive Barnes in ''The New York Times'' called the musical \"heady, civilized, sophisticated and enchanting.\"",
"He noted that \"the real triumph belongs to Stephen Sondheim...the music is a celebration of 3/4 time, an orgy of plaintively memorable waltzes, all talking of past loves and lost worlds...There is a peasant touch here.\"",
"He commented that the lyrics are \"breathtaking\".In its review of the 1989 London revival, the reviewer for ''The Guardian'' wrote that the \"production also strikes me as infinitely superior to Harold Prince's 1975 version at the Adelphi.",
"Mr Judge's great innovation is to transform the Liebeslieder Singers from the evening-dressed, after-dinner line-up into 18th century ghosts weaving in and out of the action...But Mr Judge's other great realisation is that, in Sondheim, the lyrics are not an adornment to a song but their very essence: understand them and the show will flow.",
"Thus Dorothy Tutin as Desiree, the touring thesp eventually reunited with her quondam lover, is not the melting romantic of previous productions but a working mother with the sharpness of a hat-pin.",
"\"The ''Independent'' review of the 1995 National Theatre revival praised the production, writing \"For three hours of gloriously barbed bliss and bewitchment, Sean Mathias's production establishes the show as a minor miracle of astringent worldly wisdom and one that is haunted by less earthy intimations.\"",
"The review went on to state that \"The heart of the production, in both senses, is Judi Dench's superb Desiree Armfeldt...Her husky-voiced rendering of \"Send in the Clowns\" is the most moving I've ever heard.",
"\"In reviewing the 2008 Menier Chocolate Factory production, the ''Telegraph'' reviewer wrote that \"Sondheim's lyrics are often superbly witty, his music here, mostly in haunting waltz-time, far more accessible than is sometimes the case.",
"The score positively throbs with love, regret and desire.\"",
"But of the specific production, the reviewer went on to note: \"But Nunn's production, on one of those hermetic sets largely consisting of doors and tarnished mirrors that have become such a cliché in recent years, never penetrates the work's subtly erotic heart.",
"And as is often the case with this director's work, the pace is so slow and the mood so reverent, that initial enchantment gives way to bored fidgeting.",
"\"In his ''New York Times'' review of the 2009 Broadway production, Ben Brantley noted that \"the expression that hovers over Trevor Nunn's revival...feels dangerously close to a smirk...It is a smirk shrouded in shadows.",
"An elegiac darkness infuses this production.\"",
"The production is \"sparing on furniture and heavy on shadows\", with \"a scaled-down orchestra at lugubriously slowed-down tempos...\" He goes on to write that \"this somber, less-is-more approach could be effective were the ensemble plugged into the same rueful sensibility.",
"But there is only one moment in this production when all its elements cohere perfectly.",
"That moment, halfway through the first act, belongs to Ms. Lansbury, who has hitherto been perfectly entertaining, playing Madame Armfeldt with the overripe aristocratic condescension of a Lady Bracknell.",
"Then comes her one solo, \"Liaisons\", in which her character thinks back on the art of love as a profession in a gilded age, when sex 'was but a pleasurable means to a measurable end.'",
"Her face, with its glamour-gorgon makeup, softens, as Madame Armfeldt seems to melt into memory itself, and the wan stage light briefly appears to borrow radiance from her.",
"It's a lovely example of the past reaching out to the present...\"Steven Suskin, reviewing the new Broadway cast for ''Variety'', wrote \"What a difference a diva makes.",
"Bernadette Peters steps into the six-month-old revival of ''A Little Night Music'' with a transfixing performance, playing it as if she realizes her character's onstage billing -- \"the one and only Desiree Armfeldt\"—is clichéd hyperbole.",
"By figuratively rolling her eyes at the hype, Peters gives us a rich, warm and comedically human Desiree, which reaches full impact when she pierces the façade with a nakedly honest, tears-on-cheek 'Send in the Clowns.'\""
],
[
"Awards and nominations",
"===Original Broadway production=== Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result 1973 Drama Desk Award Outstanding Book of a Musical Hugh Wheeler Outstanding Music Stephen Sondheim Outstanding Lyrics Outstanding Actress in a Musical Glynis Johns Patricia Elliott Outstanding Director Harold Prince Most Promising Performer D'Jamin Bartlett Grammy Award Best Musical Show Album Theatre World Award Laurence Guittard Patricia Elliott D'Jamin Bartlett Tony Award Best Musical Best Book of a Musical Hugh Wheeler Best Original Score Stephen Sondheim Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical Len Cariou Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical Glynis Johns Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical Laurence Guittard Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical Patricia Elliott Hermione Gingold Best Costume Design Florence Klotz Best Scenic Design Boris Aronson Best Lighting Design Tharon Musser Best Direction of a Musical Harold Prince ===1995 London revival=== Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result 1995 Laurence Olivier Award Best Actress in a Musical Judi Dench Best Performance in a Supporting Role in a Musical Siân Phillips Best Theatre Choreographer Wayne McGregor Best Costume Design Nicky Gillibrand === 2009 London Revival === Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result2010Laurence Olivier AwardBest Revival of a MusicalBest Actress in a MusicalHannah WaddinghamBest Actor in a MusicalAlexander HansonBest Performance in a Supporting role in a MusicalMaureen LipmanBest Performance in a Supporting role in a MusicalKelly Price===2009 Broadway revival=== Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result 2010 Drama Desk Award Outstanding Revival of a Musical Outstanding Actress in a Musical Catherine Zeta-Jones Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Angela Lansbury Outer Critics Circle Award Outstanding Revival of a Musical Outstanding Actress in a Musical Catherine Zeta-Jones Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Angela Lansbury Tony Award Best Revival of a Musical Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical Catherine Zeta-Jones Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical Angela Lansbury Best Sound Design Dan Moses Schreier and Gareth Owen 2011 Grammy Award Best Musical Show Album"
],
[
"References",
"'''Sources'''* *"
],
[
"External links",
"* * ''A Little Night Music'' on The Stephen Sondheim Reference Guide* ''A Little Night Music'' at the Music Theatre International website* \"Show Information, plot summary and character descriptions, stageagent.com ( January 2008 archive)* ''A Little Night Music'', Broadway revival"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Dual wield"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Mongolian soldiers dual wielding knives during skills display'''Dual wielding''' is the technique of using two weapons, one in each hand for training or combat.",
"It is not a common combat practice.",
"Although historical records of dual wielding in war are limited, there are numerous weapon-based martial arts that involve the use of a pair of weapons.",
"The use of a companion weapon is sometimes employed in European martial arts and fencing, such as a parrying dagger.",
"Miyamoto Musashi, a Japanese swordsman and ''ronin'', was said to have conceived of the idea of a particular style of swordsmanship involving the use of two swords.In terms of firearms, especially handguns, dual wielding is generally denounced by firearm enthusiasts due to its impracticality.",
"Though using two handguns at the same time confers an advantage by allowing more ready ammunition, it is rarely done due to other aspects of weapons handling.",
"Dual wielding, both with melee and ranged weapons, has been popularized by fictional works (film, television, and video games)."
],
[
"History",
"''La Liberté guidant le peuple''.Dual wielding has not been used or mentioned much in military history, though it appears in weapon-based martial arts and fencing practices.",
"Dimachaerus were a type of Roman gladiator that fought with two swords.",
"The name is the Latin-language borrowing of the Greek word meaning \"bearing two knives\" (di- ''dual'' + machairi ''knife'') Thus, an inscription from Lyon, France, mentions such a type of gladiator, here spelled ''dymacherus''.",
"The dimachaeri were equipped for close-combat fighting.",
"A dimachaerus used a pair of siccae (curved scimitar) or gladius and used a fighting style adapted to both attack and defend with his weapons rather than a shield, as he was not equipped with one.",
"The use of weapon combinations in each hand has been mentioned for close combat in western Europe during the Byzantine, Medieval, and Renaissance era.",
"The use of a parrying dagger such as a main gauche along with a rapier is common in historical European martial arts.",
"North American Indian tribes of the Atlantic northeast used a form involving a tomahawk in the primary hand and a knife in the secondary.",
"It is practiced today as part of the modern Cree martial art Okichitaw.All the above-mentioned examples, involve either one long and one short weapon, or two short weapons.",
"An example of a dual wield of two sabres is the Ukrainian cossack dance hopak.=== Asia ===During the campaign Muslim conquest in 6th to 7th century AD, a Rashidun caliphate general named Khalid ibn Walid was reported to favor wielding two broad swords, with one in each hand, during combat.Traditional schools of Japanese martial arts include dual wield techniques, particularly a style conceived by Miyamoto Musashi involving the katana and wakizashi, two-sword kenjutsu techniques he called ''Niten Ichi-ryū''.",
"Eskrima, the traditional martial arts of the Philippines teaches ''Doble Baston'' techniques involving the basic use of a pair of rattan sticks and also Espada y daga or Sword/Stick and Dagger.",
"Okinawan martial arts have a method that uses a pair of ''sai''.",
"Chinese martial arts involve the use of a pair of butterfly swords and hook swords.",
"Famed for his enormous strength, Dian Wei, a military general serving under the warlord Cao Cao in the late Eastern Han dynasty of China, excelled at wielding a pair of ''ji'' (a halberd-like weapon), each of which was said to weigh 40 ''jin''.Chen An, a warlord who lived during the Jin dynasty (266–420) and Sixteen Kingdoms period, wielded a sword and a serpent spear in each hand, supposedly measuring at 7 ''chi'' and 1 ''zhang'' 8 ''chi'' respectively.During Ran Wei–Later Zhao war, Ran Min, emperor of the short-lived Ran Wei empire of China, wielded two weapons, one in each hand, and fought fiercely, inflicting many casualties on the Xianbei soldiers while mounted on the famous horse Zhu Long (\"Red Dragon\").Gatka, a weapon-based martial art from the Punjab region, is known to use two sticks at a time.",
"The Thailand weapon-based martial art Krabi Krabong involves the use of a separate ''Krabi'' in each hand.",
"Kalaripayattu teaches advanced students to use either two sticks (of various sizes) or two daggers or two swords, simultaneously.=== Modern ===The use of a gun in each hand is often associated with the American Old West, mainly due to media portrayals.",
"It was common for people in the era to carry two guns, but not to use them at the same time, as shown in movies.",
"The second gun served as a backup weapon, to be used only if the main one suffered a malfunction or was lost or emptied.However, there were several examples of gunmen in the West who actually used two pistols at the same time in their gunfights: * John Wesley Hardin killed a gunman named Benjamin Bradley who shot at him, by drawing both of his pistols and firing back.",
"* The Mexican vaquero Augustine Chacon had several gunfights in which he was outnumbered by more than one gunman and prevailed by equipping himself with a revolver in each hand.",
"* King Fisher once managed to kill three bandits in a shootout by pulling both of his pistols.",
"* During the infamous Four Dead in Five Seconds Gunfight, lawman Dallas Stoudenmire pulled both of his pistols as he ran out onto the street and killed one bystander and two other gunmen.",
"* Jonathan R. Davis, a prospector during the California Gold Rush, was ambushed by thirteen outlaws while together with two of his comrades.",
"One of his friends was killed and the other was mortally wounded during the ambush.",
"Davis drew both of his revolvers and fired, killing seven of the bandits, and killing four more with his bowie knife, causing the final two to flee.Model dressed as Lara Croft dual wielding pistolsDual wielding two handguns has been popularized by film and television."
],
[
"Effectiveness",
"''MythBusters'' compared many firing stances, including having a gun in each hand, and found that, compared to the two-handed single-gun stance as a benchmark, only the one-handed shoulder-level stance with a single gun was comparable in terms of accuracy and speed.",
"The ability to look down the sights of the gun was given as the main reason for this.",
"In an episode the following year, they compared holding two guns and firing simultaneously—rather than alternating left and right shots—with holding one gun in the two-handed stance, and found that the results were in favor of using two guns and firing simultaneously."
],
[
"In media",
"* The ''Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles'' features dual wielding being done by Leonardo with two katana swords, Raphael with two sais, and Michelangelo with two nunchucks.",
"Sometimes, their arch enemy known as the Shredder dual wields with many weapons.",
"* ''Princess Mononoke'' features Lady Eboshi dual wielding with a katana sword and a hairpin.",
"* The Marvel Comics features dual wielding being done by Deadpool with two katana swords, Nightcrawler with two sabres, Elektra with two sais, and Black Widow with two pistols and two batons.",
"* The DC Comics features Dick Grayson and Barbara Gordon dual wielding two bastons.",
"* The ''Star Wars'' franchise features many characters dual wielding two lightsabres or more including Anakin Skywalker, Ahsoka Tano, and General Grievous.",
"''Star Wars: The Clone Wars'' features Palpatine and his former apprentice, Darth Maul, dual wielding two lightsabres each.",
"* The Halo franchise allows you to have two select weapons in Halo 2 and Halo 3.",
"* ''The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe'' features the noble centaur general Oreius dual wielding two longswords, and also the oppressive White Witch doing the same.",
"It also features the Minotaur general Otmin dual wielding a falchion sword and a battle axe.",
"* ''Ip Man 3'' features butterfly swords being dual wielded by Ip Man and Cheung Tin-chi.",
"* ''The Hobbit'' and ''The Lord of the Rings'' features the virtuous wizard Gandalf dual wielding a magic staff and a mystic longsword.",
"* ''The Mummy Returns'' features the adventurous Egyptologist ''Evelyn O'Connell and the treacherous Anck-su-namun dual wielding two sais.",
"* The ''Pirates of the Caribbean'' features characters dual wielding two swords including Jack Sparrow, Will Turner, and Elizabeth Swann.",
"* The martial arts movie ''Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon'' features Michelle Yeoh as Yu Shu Lien dual wielding with a dao sword which split to two, and then with two hook swords.",
"* ''The Three Musketeers'' features many characters dual fighting with rapiers and daggers.",
"* ''Mighty Morphin Power Rangers'' features Tommy Oliver dual wielding a sword and a dagger.",
"* ''Robin of Sherwood'' features Nasir, a Saracen assassin who dual wields two scimitars.",
"* ''Avatar: The Legend of Aang'' features dual wielding done by Zuko with two dao swords, Jet with two hook swords, Suki with two war fans, and Sokka with a machete along a club or a boomerang.",
"* The ''Transformers'' features dual wielding being done by many characters including Optimus Prime and Optimus Primal with two swords.",
"* ''Kung Fu Hustle'' features iron rings being dual wielded by the humble tailor of Pigsty Alley.",
"* ''Power Rangers: Jungle Fury'' features dual wielding being done by Casey Rhodes with two nunchakus and also two dao-themed Shark Sabres, Theo Martin with two tonfas and then two tessan-themed Jungle Fans, and Camille with two sais.",
"* In the Marvel Cinematic Universe martial arts film ''Shang Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings'' features the Ten Rings be dual wielded by Wenwu, the MCU version of the Mandarin, and then by Shang Chi, his son.",
"* The musical version of ''The Lion King'' features Mufasa and his son Simba dual wielding two akrafena swords to fight.",
"* Lara Croft, the heroine of the ''Tomb Raider'' franchise dual wields two pistols."
],
[
"See also",
"* Dimachaerus* Gun fu* Swordsmanship"
],
[
"References"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Ariel Sharon"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Ariel Sharon''' ( ; also known by his diminutive Arik, ; 26 February 192811 January 2014) was an Israeli general and politician who served as the 11th prime minister of Israel from March 2001 until April 2006.Born in Kfar Malal in Mandatory Palestine to Russian Jewish immigrants, he rose in the ranks of the Israeli Army from its creation in 1948, participating in the 1948 Palestine war as platoon commander of the Alexandroni Brigade and taking part in several battles.",
"Sharon became an instrumental figure in the creation of Unit 101 and the reprisal operations, including the 1953 Qibya massacre, as well as in the 1956 Suez Crisis, the Six-Day War of 1967, the War of Attrition, and the Yom-Kippur War of 1973.Yitzhak Rabin called Sharon \"the greatest field commander in our history\".",
"Upon leaving the military, Sharon entered politics, joining the Likud party, and served in a number of ministerial posts in Likud-led governments in 1977–92 and 1996–99.As Minister of Defense, he directed the 1982 Lebanon War.",
"An official enquiry found that he bore \"personal responsibility\" for the Sabra and Shatila massacre of Palestinian refugees, for which he became known as the \"Butcher of Beirut\" among Arabs.",
"He was subsequently removed as defense minister.From the 1970s through to the 1990s, Sharon championed construction of Israeli settlements in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.",
"He became the leader of the Likud in 1999, and in 2000, amid campaigning for the 2001 prime ministerial election, made a controversial visit to the Al-Aqsa complex on the Temple Mount, triggering the Second Intifada.",
"He subsequently defeated Ehud Barak in the election and served as Israel's prime minister from 2001 to 2006.As Prime Minister, Sharon orchestrated the construction of the Israeli West Bank barrier in 2002–03 and Israel's unilateral disengagement from the Gaza Strip in 2005.Facing stiff opposition to the latter policy within the Likud, in November 2005 he left Likud to form a new party, Kadima.",
"He had been expected to win the next election and was widely interpreted as planning on \"clearing Israel out of most of the West Bank\", in a series of unilateral withdrawals.",
"Following a stroke on 4 January 2006, Sharon remained in a permanent vegetative state until his death in 2014.Sharon remains a highly polarizing figure in Middle Eastern history.",
"Israelis almost universally revere Sharon as a war hero and statesman, whereas Palestinians and Human Rights Watch have criticized him as a war criminal, with the latter lamenting that he was never held accountable."
],
[
"Early life and education",
"Ariel Sharon at age 14 (second from right)Ariel (Arik) Scheinerman (later Sharon) was born in Kfar Malal, an agricultural moshav, then in Mandatory Palestine, to Shmuel Scheinerman (1896–1956) of Brest-Litovsk and Vera (née Schneirov) Scheinerman (1900–1988) of Mogilev.",
"His parents met while at university in Tiflis (now Tbilisi, Republic of Georgia), where Sharon's father was studying agronomy and his mother was studying medicine.",
"They immigrated to Mandatory Palestine in 1922 in the wake of the Russian Communist government's growing persecution of Jews in the region.",
"In Palestine, Vera Scheinerman went by the name Dvora.The family arrived with the Third Aliyah and settled in Kfar Malal, a socialist, secular community.",
"(Ariel Sharon himself would remain proudly secular throughout his life.)",
"Although his parents were Mapai supporters, they did not always accept communal consensus: \"The Scheinermans' eventual ostracism ... followed the 1933 Arlozorov murder when Dvora and Shmuel refused to endorse the Labor movement's anti-Revisionist calumny and participate in Bolshevik-style public revilement rallies, then the order of the day.",
"Retribution was quick to come.",
"They were expelled from the local health-fund clinic and village synagogue.",
"The cooperative's truck wouldn't make deliveries to their farm nor collect produce.",
"\"Sharon spoke both Hebrew and Russian.Four years after their arrival at Kfar Malal, the Sheinermans had a daughter, Yehudit (Dita).",
"Ariel was born two years later.",
"At age 10, he joined the youth movement HaNoar HaOved VeHaLomed.",
"As a teenager, he began to take part in the armed night-patrols of his moshav.",
"In 1942 at the age of 14, Sharon joined the Gadna, a paramilitary youth battalion, and later the Haganah, the underground paramilitary force and the Jewish military precursor to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF)."
],
[
"Military career",
"===Battle for Jerusalem and 1948 War===Operation Bin Nun (24–25 May 1948), during which Sharon was shot in the stomach, foot and groin.Sharon's unit of the Haganah became engaged in serious and continuous combat from the autumn of 1947, with the onset of the Battle for Jerusalem.",
"Without the manpower to hold the roads, his unit took to making offensive hit-and-run raids on Arab forces in the vicinity of Kfar Malal.",
"In units of thirty men, they would hit constantly at Arab villages, bridges and bases, as well as ambush the traffic between Arab villages and bases.Sharon wrote in his autobiography: \"We had become skilled at finding our way in the darkest nights and gradually we built up the strength and endurance these kind of operations required.",
"Under the stress of constant combat we drew closer to one another and began to operate not just as a military unit but almost as a family.",
"... We were in combat almost every day.",
"Ambushes and battles followed each other until they all seemed to run together.",
"\"For his role in a night-raid on Iraqi forces at Bir Adas, Sharon was made a platoon commander in the Alexandroni Brigade.",
"Following the Israeli Declaration of Independence and the onset of the War of Independence, his platoon fended off the Iraqi advance at Kalkiya.",
"Sharon was regarded as a hardened and aggressive soldier, swiftly moving up the ranks during the war.",
"He was shot in the groin, stomach and foot by the Jordanian Arab Legion in the First Battle of Latrun, an unsuccessful attempt to relieve the besieged Jewish community of Jerusalem.",
"Sharon wrote of the casualties in the \"horrible battle,\" and his brigade suffered 139 deaths.Jordanian field marshal Habis Majali said that Sharon was among 6 Israeli soldiers captured by the Jordanian 4th battalion during the battle, and that Majali took them to a camp in Mafraq and the 6 were later traded back.",
"Sharon denied the claims, but Majali was adamant.",
"\"Sharon is like a grizzly bear,\" he assured.",
"\"I captured him for 9 days, I healed his wounds and released him due to his insignificance.\"",
"A few fellow high-ranking Jordanian officers testified in favour of his account.\"",
"In 1994 and during the peace treaty signing ceremony with Jordan, Sharon wanted to get in touch with his former captor, but the latter determinedly refused to discuss the incident publicly.After recovering from the wounds received at Latrun, he resumed command of his patrol unit.",
"On 28 December 1948, his platoon attempted to break through an Egyptian stronghold in Iraq-El-Manshia.",
"At about this time, Israeli founding father David Ben-Gurion gave him the Hebraized name \"Sharon\".",
"In September 1949, Sharon was promoted to company commander (of the Golani Brigade's reconnaissance unit) and in 1950 to intelligence officer for Central Command.",
"He then took leave to begin studies in history and Middle Eastern culture at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.",
"Sharon's subsequent military career would be characterized by insubordination, aggression and disobedience, but also brilliance as a commander.===Unit 101===A year and a half later, on the direct orders of the Prime Minister, Sharon returned to active service in the rank of major, as the founder and commander of the new Unit 101, a special forces unit tasked with reprisal operations in response to Palestinian fedayeen attacks.",
"The first Israeli commando unit, Unit 101 specialized in offensive guerrilla warfare in enemy countries.",
"The unit consisted of 50 men, mostly former paratroopers and Unit 30 personnel.",
"They were armed with non-standard weapons and tasked with carrying out special reprisals across the state's borders—mainly establishing small unit maneuvers, activation and insertion tactics.",
"Training included engaging enemy forces across Israel's borders.",
"Israeli historian Benny Morris describes Unit 101:Unit 101 undertook a series of raids against Jordan, which then held the West Bank.",
"The raids also helped bolster Israeli morale and convince Arab states that the fledgling nation was capable of long-range military action.",
"Known for raids against Arab civilians and military targets, the unit is held responsible for the widely condemned Qibya massacre in the fall of 1953.After a group of Palestinians used Qibya as a staging point for a fedayeen attack in Yehud that killed a Jewish woman and her two children in Israel, Unit 101 retaliated on the village.",
"By various accounts of the ensuing attack, 65 to 70 Palestinian civilians, half of them women and children, were killed when Sharon's troops dynamited 45 houses and a school.Facing international condemnation for the attack, Ben-Gurion denied that the Israeli military was involved.",
"In his memoir, Sharon wrote that the unit had checked all the houses before detonating the explosives and that he thought the houses were empty.",
"Although he admitted the results were tragic, Sharon defended the attack, however: \"Now people could feel that the terrorist gangs would think twice before striking, now that they knew for sure they would be hit back.",
"Kibbya also put the Jordanian and Egyptian governments on notice that if Israel was vulnerable, so were they.",
"\"Sharon, top second from left, with members of Unit 101 after Operation Egged (November 1955).",
"Standing l to r: Lt. Meir Har-Zion, Maj. Arik Sharon, Lt. Gen Moshe Dayan, Capt.",
"Dani Matt, Lt. Moshe Efron, Maj. Gen Asaf Simchoni; on ground, l to r: Capt.",
"Aharon Davidi, Lt.",
"Ya'akov Ya'akov, Capt.",
"Raful EitanA few months after its founding, Unit 101 was merged with the 890 Paratroopers Battalion to create the Paratroopers Brigade, of which Sharon would also later become commander.",
"Like Unit 101, it continued raids into Arab territory, culminating with the attack on the Qalqilyah police station in the autumn of 1956.Leading up to the Suez War, the missions Sharon took part in included:*'''Operation Shoshana''' (now known as the Qibya massacre)*'''Operation Black Arrow'''*'''Operation Elkayam'''*'''Operation Egged'''*'''Operation Olive Leaves'''*'''Operation Volcano'''*'''Operation Gulliver (מבצע גוליבר)'''*'''Operation Lulav (מבצע לולב)'''During a payback operation in the Deir al-Balah refugee camp in the Gaza Strip, Sharon was again wounded by gunfire, this time in the leg.",
"Incidents such as those involving Meir Har-Zion, along with many others, contributed to the tension between Prime Minister Moshe Sharett, who often opposed Sharon's raids, and Moshe Dayan, who had become increasingly ambivalent in his feelings towards Sharon.",
"Later in the year, Sharon was investigated and tried by the Military Police for disciplining one of his subordinates.",
"However, the charges were dismissed before the onset of the Suez War.===1956 Suez War===Ka-Bar combat knife, stands with other paratroop commandos, before Operation Olive Leaves, 1955.Sharon commanded Unit 202 (the Paratroopers Brigade) during the 1956 Suez War (the British \"Operation Musketeer\"), leading the troop to take the ground east of the Sinai's Mitla Pass and eventually the pass itself against the advice of superiors, suffering heavy Israeli casualties in the process.",
"Having successfully carried out the first part of his mission (joining a battalion parachuted near Mitla with the rest of the brigade moving on ground), Sharon's unit was deployed near the pass.",
"Neither reconnaissance aircraft nor scouts reported enemy forces inside the Mitla Pass.",
"Sharon, whose forces were initially heading east, away from the pass, reported to his superiors that he was increasingly concerned with the possibility of an enemy thrust through the pass, which could attack his brigade from the flank or the rear.1956 Israeli conquest of SinaiSharon asked for permission to attack the pass several times, but his requests were denied, though he was allowed to check its status so that if the pass was empty, he could receive permission to take it later.",
"Sharon sent a small scout force, which was met with heavy fire and became bogged down due to vehicle malfunction in the middle of the pass.",
"Sharon ordered the rest of his troops to attack to aid their comrades.",
"Sharon was criticized by his superiors and was damaged by allegations several years later made by several former subordinates, who claimed that Sharon tried to provoke the Egyptians and sent out the scouts in bad faith, ensuring that a battle would ensue.Sharon had assaulted Themed in a dawn attack, and had stormed the town with his armor through the Themed Gap.",
"Sharon routed the Sudanese police company, and captured the settlement.",
"On his way to the Nakla, Sharon's men came under attack from Egyptian MIG-15s.",
"On the 30th, Sharon linked up with Eytan near Nakla.",
"Dayan had no more plans for further advances beyond the passes, but Sharon nonetheless decided to attack the Egyptian positions at Jebel Heitan.",
"Sharon sent his lightly armed paratroopers against dug-in Egyptians supported by aircraft, tanks and heavy artillery.",
"Sharon's actions were in response to reports of the arrival of the 1st and 2nd Brigades of the 4th Egyptian Armored Division in the area, which Sharon believed would annihilate his forces if he did not seize the high ground.",
"Sharon sent two infantry companies, a mortar battery and some AMX-13 tanks under the command of Mordechai Gur into the Heitan Defile on the afternoon of 31 October 1956.The Egyptian forces occupied strong defensive positions and brought down heavy anti-tank, mortar and machine gun fire on the IDF force.",
"Gur's men were forced to retreat into the \"Saucer\", where they were surrounded and came under heavy fire.",
"Hearing of this, Sharon sent in another task force while Gur's men used the cover of night to scale the walls of the Heitan Defile.",
"During the ensuing action, the Egyptians were defeated and forced to retreat.",
"A total of 260 Egyptian and 38 Israeli soldiers were killed during the battle at Mitla.",
"Due to these deaths, Sharon's actions at Mitla were surrounded in controversy, with many within the IDF viewing the deaths as the result of unnecessary and unauthorized aggression.===Six-Day War, War of Attrition and Yom Kippur War===Conquest of Sinai.",
"5–6 June 1967Conquest of Sinai.",
"7–8 June 1967The Mitla incident hindered Sharon's military career for several years.",
"In the meantime, he occupied the position of an infantry brigade commander and received a law degree from Tel Aviv University.",
"However, when Yitzhak Rabin became Chief of Staff in 1964, Sharon again began to rise rapidly in the ranks, occupying the positions of Infantry School Commander and Head of Army Training Branch, eventually achieving the rank of Aluf (Major General).In the Six-Day War, Sharon, in command of an armored division on the Sinai front, drew up his own complex offensive strategy that combined infantry troops, tanks and paratroopers from planes and helicopters to destroy the Egyptian forces Sharon's 38th Division faced when it broke through to the Kusseima-Abu-Ageila fortified area.",
"Sharon's victories and offensive strategy in the Battle of Abu-Ageila led to international commendation by military strategists; he was judged to have inaugurated a new paradigm in operational command.",
"Researchers at the United States Army Training and Doctrine Command studied Sharon's operational planning, concluding that it involved a number of unique innovations.",
"It was a simultaneous attack by a multiplicity of small forces, each with a specific aim, attacking a particular unit in a synergistic Egyptian defense network.",
"As a result, instead of supporting and covering each other as they were designed to do, each Egyptian unit was left fighting for its own life.According to Sapir Handelman, after Sharon's assault of the Sinai in the Six-Day War and his encirclement of the Egyptian Third Army in the Yom Kippur War, the Israeli public nicknamed him \"The King of Israel\".Sharon played a key role in the War of Attrition.",
"In 1969, he was appointed the Head of IDF's Southern Command.",
"As leader of the southern command, on 29 July Israeli frogmen stormed and destroyed Green Island, a fortress at the northern end of the Gulf of Suez whose radar and antiaircraft installations controlled that sector's airspace.",
"On 9 September Sharon's forces carried out Operation Raviv, a large-scale raid along the western shore of the Gulf of Suez.",
"Landing craft ferried across Russian-made tanks and armored personnel carriers that Israel had captured in 1967, and the small column harried the Egyptians for ten hours.Following his appointment to the southern command, Sharon had no further promotions, and considered retiring.",
"Sharon discussed the issue with Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, who strongly advised him to remain at his post.",
"Sharon remained in the military for another three years, before retiring in August 1973.Soon after, he helped found the Likud (\"Unity\") political party.",
"''Operation Gazelle'', Israel's ground maneuver, encircles the Egyptian Third Army, October 1973At the start of the Yom Kippur War on 6 October 1973, Sharon was called back to active duty along with his assigned reserve armored division.",
"On his farm, before he left for the front line, the Reserve Commander, Zeev Amit, said to him, \"How are we going to get out of this?\"",
"Sharon replied, \"You don't know?",
"We will cross the Suez Canal and the war will end over there.\"",
"Sharon arrived at the front, to participate in his fourth war, in a civilian car.",
"His forces did not engage the Egyptian Army immediately, despite his requests.",
"Under cover of darkness, Sharon's forces moved to a point on the Suez Canal that had been prepared before the war.",
"In a move that again thwarted the commands of his superiors, Sharon's division crossed the Suez, effectively winning the war for Israel.",
"He then headed north towards Ismailia, intent on cutting the Egyptian second army's supply lines, but his division was halted south of the Fresh Water Canal.Sharon's 143rd Division, crossing the Suez Canal, in the direction of Cairo, 15 October 1973Abraham Adan's division passed over the bridgehead into Africa, advancing to within 101 kilometers of Cairo.",
"His division managed to encircle Suez, cutting off and encircling the Third Army.",
"Tensions between the two generals followed Sharon's decision, but a military tribunal later found his action was militarily effective.Sharon's complex ground maneuver is regarded as a decisive move in the Yom Kippur War, undermining the Egyptian Second Army and encircling the Egyptian Third Army.",
"This move was regarded by many Israelis as the turning point of the war in the Sinai front.",
"Thus, Sharon is widely viewed as the hero of the Yom Kippur War, responsible for Israel's ground victory in the Sinai in 1973.A photo of Sharon wearing a head bandage on the Suez Canal became a famous symbol of Israeli military prowess.Sharon's political positions were controversial, and he was relieved of duty in February 1974.===Bar Lev Line===Following Israel's victory in the six-day war, the war of attrition at the Suez Canal began.",
"The Egyptians began firing in provocation against the Israeli forces posted on the eastern part of the canal.",
"Haim Bar Lev, Israel's chief of staff, suggested that Israel construct a border line to protect its southern border.",
"A wall of sand and earth raised along almost the entire length of the Suez Canal would both allow observation of Egyptian forces and conceal the movements of Israeli troops on the eastern side.",
"This line, named after the chief of staff Haim Bar Lev, became known as the Bar Lev Line.",
"It included at least thirty strong points stretching over almost 200 kilometers.Bar Lev suggested that such a line would defend against any major Egyptian assault across the canal, and was expected to function as a \"graveyard for Egyptian troops\".",
"Moshe Dayan described it as \"one of the best anti-tank ditches in the world.\"",
"Sharon, and Israel Tal on the other hand, vigorously opposed the line.",
"Sharon said that it would pin down large military formations that would be sitting ducks for deadly artillery attacks, and cited the opinion of Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, who explained him \"the great military disaster such a line could bring.\"",
"Notwithstanding, it was completed in spring 1970.During the Yom Kippur War, Egyptian forces successfully breached the Bar Lev Line in less than two hours at a cost of more than a thousand dead and some 5,000 wounded.",
"Sharon would later recall that what Schneerson had told him was a tragedy, \"but unfortunately, that happened.\""
],
[
"Early political career, 1974–2001",
"===Beginnings of political career===In the 1940s and 1950s, Sharon seemed to be personally devoted to the ideals of Mapai, the predecessor of the modern Labor Party.",
"However, after retiring from military service, he joined the Liberal Party and was instrumental in establishing Likud in July 1973 by a merger of Herut, the Liberal Party and independent elements.",
"Sharon became chairman of the campaign staff for that year's elections, which were scheduled for November.",
"Two and a half weeks after the start of the election campaign, the Yom Kippur War erupted and Sharon was called back to reserve service.",
"On the heels of being hailed as a war hero for crossing the Suez in the 1973 war, Sharon won a seat to the Knesset in the elections that year, but resigned a year later.Battle of Abu-AgeilaFrom June 1975 to March 1976, Sharon was a special aide to Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.",
"He planned his return to politics for the 1977 elections; first, he tried to return to the Likud and replace Menachem Begin at the head of the party.",
"He suggested to Simha Erlich, who headed the Liberal Party bloc in the Likud, that he was more able than Begin to win an election victory; he was rejected, however.",
"He then tried to join the Labor Party and the centrist Democratic Movement for Change, but was rejected by those parties too.",
"Only then did he form his own list, Shlomtzion, which won two Knesset seats in the subsequent elections.",
"Immediately after the elections, he merged Shlomtzion with the Likud and became Minister of Agriculture.When Sharon joined Begin's government, he had relatively little political experience.",
"During this period, Sharon supported the Gush Emunim settlements movement and was viewed as the patron of the settlers' movement.",
"He used his position to encourage the establishment of a network of Israeli settlements in the occupied territories to prevent the possibility of Palestinian Arabs' return to these territories.",
"Sharon doubled the number of Jewish settlements on the West Bank and Gaza Strip during his tenure.After the 1981 elections, Begin rewarded Sharon for his important contribution to Likud's narrow win, by appointing him Minister of Defense.Under Sharon, Israel continued to build upon the unprecedented coordination between the Israel Defense Forces and the South African Defence Force, with Israeli and South African generals giving each other unfettered access to each other's battlefields and military tactics, and Israel sharing with South Africa highly classified information about its missions, such as Operation Opera, which had previously only been reserved for the United States.",
"In 1981, after visiting South African forces fighting in Namibia for 10 days, Sharon argued that South Africa needed more weapons to fight Soviet infiltration in the region.",
"Sharon promised that the relationship between Israel and South Africa would continue to deepen as they work to \"ensure the National Defense of both our countries\".",
"The collaboration in carrying out joint-nuclear tests, in planning counter-insurgency strategies in Namibia and in designing security fences helped to make Israel, South Africa's closest ally in this period.===1982 Lebanon War and Sabra and Shatila massacre===Minister of Defense Sharon (right) with his US counterpart Caspar Weinberger, 1982As Defense Minister, Sharon launched an invasion of Lebanon called Operation Peace for Galilee, later known as the 1982 Lebanon War, following the shooting of Israel's ambassador in London, Shlomo Argov.",
"Although this attempted assassination was in fact perpetrated by the Abu Nidal Organization, possibly with Syrian or Iraqi involvement, the Israeli government justified the invasion by citing 270 terrorist attacks by the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) in Israel, the occupied territories, and the Jordanian and Lebanese border (in addition to 20 attacks on Israeli interests abroad).",
"Sharon intended the operation to eradicate the PLO from its state within a state inside Lebanon, but the war is primarily remembered for the Sabra and Shatila massacre.",
"In a three-day massacre between 16 and 18 September, between 460 and 3,500 civilians, mostly Palestinians and Lebanese Shiites, in the Sabra neighborhood and the adjacent Shatila refugee camp were killed by the Phalanges— Lebanese Maronite Christian militias.",
"Shatila had previously been one of the PLO's three main training camps for foreign terrorists and the main training camp for European terrorists; the Israelis maintained that 2,000 to 3,000 terrorists remained in the camps, but were unwilling to risk the lives of more of their soldiers after the Lebanese army repeatedly refused to \"clear them out.\"",
"The killings followed years of sectarian civil war in Lebanon that left 95,000 dead.",
"The Lebanese army's chief prosecutor investigated the killings and counted 460 dead, Israeli intelligence estimated 700–800 dead, and the Palestinian Red Crescent claimed 2,000 dead.",
"1,200 death certificates were issued to anyone who produced three witnesses claiming a family member disappeared during the time of the massacre.",
"Nearly all of the victims were men.The Phalange militia went into the camps to clear out PLO fighters while Israeli forces surrounded the camps, blocking camp exits and providing logistical support.",
"The killings led some to label Sharon \"the Butcher of Beirut\".An Associated Press report on 15 September 1982 stated, \"Defence Minister Ariel Sharon, in a statement, tied the killing of the Phalangist leader Bachir Gemayel to the PLO, saying 'it symbolises the terrorist murderousness of the PLO terrorist organisations and their supporters'.\"",
"Habib Chartouni, a Lebanese Christian from the Syrian Socialist National Party confessed to the murder of Gemayel, and no Palestinians were involved.Robert Maroun Hatem, Hobeika's bodyguard, stated in his book ''From Israel to Damascus'' that Phalangist commander Elie Hobeika ordered the massacre of civilians in defiance of Israeli instructions to behave like a \"dignified\" army.",
"Hatem claimed \"Sharon had given strict orders to Hobeika....to guard against any desperate move\" and that Hobeika perpetrated the massacre \"to tarnish Israel's reputation worldwide\" for the benefit of Syria.",
"Hobeika subsequently joined the Syrian occupation government and lived as a prosperous businessman under Syrian protection; further massacres in Sabra and Shatilla occurred with Syrian support in 1985.The massacre followed intense Israeli bombings of Beirut that had seen heavy civilian casualties, testing Israel's relationship with the United States in the process.",
"America sent troops to help negotiate the PLO's exit from Lebanon, withdrawing them after negotiating a ceasefire that ostensibly protected Palestinian civilians.====Legal findings====After 400,000 Peace Now protesters rallied in Tel Aviv to demand an official government inquiry into the massacres, the official Israeli government investigation into the massacre at Sabra and Shatila, the Kahan Commission (1982), was conducted.",
"The inquiry found that the Israeli Defense Forces were indirectly responsible for the massacre since IDF troops held the area.",
"The commission determined that the killings were carried out by a Phalangist unit acting on its own, but its entry was known to Israel and approved by Sharon.",
"Prime Minister Begin was also found responsible for not exercising greater involvement and awareness in the matter of introducing the Phalangists into the camps.The commission also concluded that Sharon bore personal responsibility \"for ignoring the danger of bloodshed and revenge and not taking appropriate measures to prevent bloodshed\".",
"It said Sharon's negligence in protecting the civilian population of Beirut, which had come under Israeli control, amounted to a dereliction of duty of the minister.",
"In early 1983, the commission recommended the removal of Sharon from his post as defense minister and stated:We have found ... that the Minister of Defense Ariel Sharon bears personal responsibility.",
"In our opinion, it is fitting that the Minister of Defense draw the appropriate personal conclusions arising out of the defects revealed with regard to the manner in which he discharged the duties of his office—and if necessary, that the Prime Minister consider whether he should exercise his authority ... to ... remove him from office.Sharon initially refused to resign as defense minister, and Begin refused to fire him.",
"After a grenade was thrown into a dispersing crowd at an Israeli Peace Now march, killing Emil Grunzweig and injuring 10 others, a compromise was reached: Sharon agreed to forfeit the post of defense minister but stayed in the cabinet as a minister without portfolio.Sharon's resignation as defense minister is listed as one of the important events of the Tenth Knesset.In its 21 February 1983 issue, ''Time'' published an article implying that Sharon was directly responsible for the massacres.",
"Sharon sued ''Time'' for libel in American and Israeli courts.",
"Although the jury concluded that the ''Time'' article included false allegations, they found that the magazine had not acted with actual malice and so was not guilty of libel.On 18 June 2001, relatives of the victims of the Sabra massacre began proceedings in Belgium to have Sharon indicted on alleged war crimes charges.",
"Elie Hobeika, the leader of the Phalange militia who carried out the massacres, was assassinated in January 2002, several months before he was scheduled to testify trial.",
"Prior to his assassination, he had \"specifically stated that he did not plan to identify Sharon as being responsible for Sabra and Shatila.",
"\"===Political downturn and recovery===Sharon and Yitzhak Mordechai greeting United States President Bill Clinton in 1998After his dismissal from the Defense Ministry post, Sharon remained in successive governments as a minister without portfolio (1983–1984), Minister for Trade and Industry (1984–1990), and Minister of Housing Construction (1990–1992).",
"In the Knesset, he was member of the Foreign Affairs and Defense committee (1990–1992) and chairman of the committee overseeing Jewish immigration from the Soviet Union.",
"During this period he was a rival to then prime minister Yitzhak Shamir, but failed in various bids to replace him as chairman of Likud.",
"Their rivalry reached a head in February 1990, when Sharon grabbed the microphone from Shamir, who was addressing the Likud central committee, and famously exclaimed: \"Who's for wiping out terrorism?\"",
"The incident was widely viewed as an apparent coup attempt against Shamir's leadership of the party.Sharon unsuccessfully challenged Shamir in the 1984 Herut leadership election and the 1992 Likud leadership election.In Benjamin Netanyahu's 1996–1999 government, Sharon was Minister of National Infrastructure (1996–98), and Foreign Minister (1998–99).",
"Upon the election of the Barak Labor government, Sharon became the interim leader of the Likud party and subsequently won the September 1999 Likud leadership election.==== Opposition to the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia ====Ariel Sharon criticised the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999 as an act of \"brutal interventionism\".",
"Sharon said both Serbia and Kosovo have been victims of violence.",
"He said prior to the current Yugoslav campaign against Kosovo Albanians, Serbians were the targets of attacks in the Kosovo province.",
"\"Israel has a clear policy.",
"We are against aggressive actions.",
"We are against hurting innocent people.",
"I hope that the sides will return to the negotiating table as soon as possible.\"",
"During the crisis, Elyakim Haetzni said the Serbs should be the first to receive Israeli aid.",
"\"There are our traditional friends,\" he told Israel Radio.\"",
"It was suggested that Sharon may have supported the Yugoslav position because of the Serbian population's history of saving Jews during the holocaust.",
"On Sharon's death, Serbian minister Aleksandar Vulin stated: The Serbian people will remember Sharon for opposing the 1999 NATO bombing campaign against the former Yugoslavia and advocating respect for sovereignty of other nations and a policy of not interfering with their internal affairs.===Campaign for Prime Minister, 2000–2001===On 28 September 2000, Sharon and an escort of over 1,000 Israeli police officers visited the Temple Mount complex, site of the Dome of the Rock and Qibli Mosque, the holiest place in the world to Jews and the third holiest site in Islam.",
"Sharon declared that the complex would remain under perpetual Israeli control.",
"Palestinian commentators accused Sharon of purposely inflaming emotions with the event to provoke a violent response and obstruct success of delicate ongoing peace talks.",
"On the following day, a large number of Palestinian demonstrators and an Israeli police contingent confronted each other at the site.",
"According to the U.S. State Department, \"Palestinians held large demonstrations and threw stones at police in the vicinity of the Western Wall.",
"Police used rubber-coated metal bullets and live ammunition to disperse the demonstrators, killing 4 persons and injuring about 200.\"",
"According to the government of Israel, 14 policemen were injured.Sharon's visit, a few months before his election as Prime Minister, came after archeologists claimed that extensive building operations at the site were destroying priceless antiquities.",
"Sharon's supporters claim that Yasser Arafat and the Palestinian National Authority planned the Second Intifada months prior to Sharon's visit.",
"They state that Palestinian security chief Jabril Rajoub provided assurances that if Sharon did not enter the mosques, no problems would arise.",
"They also often quote statements by Palestinian Authority officials, particularly Imad Falouji, the P.A.",
"Communications Minister, who admitted months after Sharon's visit that the violence had been planned in July, far in advance of Sharon's visit, stating the intifada \"was carefully planned since the return of (Palestinian President) Yasser Arafat from Camp David negotiations rejecting the U.S. conditions\".",
"According to the Mitchell Report,The Mitchell Report found thatIn addition, the report stated,The Or Commission, an Israeli panel of inquiry appointed to investigate the October 2000 events,"
],
[
"Prime Minister (2001–2006)",
"Sharon and President Vladimir Putin meeting in Israel.President George W. Bush, center, discusses the Israeli–Palestinian peace process with Prime Minister Ariel Sharon of Israel, left, and Prime Minister of the Palestinian National Authority Mahmoud Abbas in Aqaba, Jordan, 4 June 2003.Prime Minister of the Palestinian National Authority Mahmoud Abbas, United States President George W. Bush, and Ariel Sharon, Red Sea Summit, Aqaba, June 2003President Bush and Prime Minister Sharon, White House, April 2004After the collapse of Barak's government, Sharon was elected Prime Minister on 6 February 2001, defeating Barak 62 percent to 38 percent.",
"Sharon's senior adviser was Raanan Gissin.",
"In his first act as prime minister, Sharon invited the Labor Party to join in a coalition with Likud.",
"After Israel was struck by a wave of suicide bombings in 2002, Sharon launched Operation Defensive Shield and led the construction of the Israeli West Bank barrier.",
"A survey conducted by Tel Aviv University's Jaffe Center in May 2004 found that 80% of Jewish Israelis believed that the Israel Defense Forces had succeeded in militarily countering the Al-Aqsa Intifada.The election of the more pro-Russian Sharon, as well as the more pro-Israel Vladimir Putin, led to an improvement in Israel–Russia relations.In September 2003, Sharon became the first prime minister of Israel to visit India, saying that Israel regarded India as one of the most important countries in the world.",
"Some analysts speculated on the development of a three-way military axis of New Delhi, Washington, D.C., and Jerusalem.On 20 July 2004, Sharon called on French Jews to emigrate from France to Israel immediately, in light of an increase in antisemitism in France (94 antisemitic assaults were reported in the first six months of 2004, compared to 47 in 2003).",
"France has the third-largest Jewish population in the world (about 600,000 people).",
"Sharon observed that an \"unfettered anti-Semitism\" reigned in France.",
"The French government responded by describing his comments as \"unacceptable\", as did the French representative Jewish organization CRIF, which denied Sharon's claim of intense anti-Semitism in French society.",
"An Israeli spokesperson later claimed that Sharon had been misunderstood.",
"France then postponed a visit by Sharon.",
"Upon his visit, both Sharon and French President Jacques Chirac were described as showing a willingness to put the issue behind them.===Unilateral disengagement===In September 2001, Sharon stated for the first time that Palestinians should have the right to establish their own land west of the Jordan River.",
"In May 2003, Sharon endorsed the Road Map for Peace put forth by the United States, the European Union and Russia, which opened a dialogue with Mahmud Abbas, and stated his commitment to the creation of a Palestinian state in the future.He embarked on a course of unilateral withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, while maintaining control of its coastline and airspace.",
"Sharon's plan was welcomed by both the Palestinian Authority and Israel's left wing as a step towards a final peace settlement.",
"However, it was greeted with opposition from within his own Likud party and from other right wing Israelis, on national security, military, and religious grounds.===Disengagement from Gaza===On 1 December 2004, Sharon dismissed five ministers from the Shinui party for voting against the government's 2005 budget.",
"In January 2005, Sharon formed a national unity government that included representatives of Likud, Labor, and Meimad and Degel HaTorah as \"out-of-government\" supporters without any seats in the government (United Torah Judaism parties usually reject having ministerial offices as a policy).",
"Between 16 and 30 August 2005, Sharon controversially expelled 9,480 Jewish settlers from 21 settlements in Gaza and four settlements in the northern West Bank.",
"Once it became clear that the evictions were definitely going ahead, a group of conservative Rabbis, led by Yosef Dayan, placed an ancient curse on Sharon known as the Pulsa diNura, calling on the Angel of Death to intervene and kill him.",
"After Israeli soldiers bulldozed every settlement structure except for several former synagogues, Israeli soldiers formally left Gaza on 11 September 2005 and closed the border fence at Kissufim.",
"While his decision to withdraw from Gaza sparked bitter protests from members of the Likud party and the settler movement, opinion polls showed that it was a popular move among most of the Israeli electorate, with more than 80 percent of Israelis backing the plans.",
"On 27 September 2005, Sharon narrowly defeated a leadership challenge by a 52–48 percent vote.",
"The move was initiated within the central committee of the governing Likud party by Sharon's main rival, Benjamin Netanyahu, who had left the cabinet to protest Sharon's withdrawal from Gaza.",
"The measure was an attempt by Netanyahu to call an early primary in November 2005 to choose the party's leader.===Founding of Kadima===On 21 November 2005, Sharon resigned as head of Likud, and dissolved parliament to form a new centrist party called Kadima (\"Forward\").",
"November polls indicated that Sharon was likely to be returned to the prime ministership.",
"On 20 December 2005, Sharon's longtime rival Netanyahu was elected his successor as leader of Likud.",
"Following Sharon's incapacitation, Ehud Olmert replaced Sharon as Kadima's leader, for the nearing general elections.",
"Likud, along with the Labor Party, were ''Kadima''s chief rivals in the March 2006 elections.Sharon's stroke occurred a few months before he had been expected to win a new election and was widely interpreted as planning on \"clearing Israel out of most of the West Bank\", in a series of unilateral withdrawals.In the elections, which saw Israel's lowest-ever voter turnout of 64 percent (the number usually averages on the high 70%), Kadima, headed by Olmert, received the most Knesset seats, followed by Labor.",
"The new governing coalition installed in May 2006 included Kadima, with Olmert as Prime Minister, Labor (including Amir Peretz as Defense Minister), the Pensioners' Party (Gil), the Shas religious party, and Israel Beytenu.===Alleged fundraising irregularities and Greek island affair===During the latter part of his career, Sharon was investigated for alleged involvement in a number of financial scandals, in particular, the Greek island affair and irregularities of fundraising during the 1999 election campaign.",
"In the Greek island affair, Sharon was accused of promising (during his term as Foreign Minister) to help Israeli businessman David Appel in his development project on a Greek island in exchange for large consultancy payments to Sharon's son Gilad.",
"The charges were later dropped due to lack of evidence.",
"In the 1999 election fundraising scandal, Sharon was not charged with any wrongdoing, but his son Omri, a Knesset member at the time, was charged and sentenced in 2006 to nine months in prison.To avoid a potential conflict of interest in relation to these investigations, Sharon was not involved in the confirmation of the appointment of a new attorney general, Menahem Mazuz, in 2005.On 10 December 2005, Israeli police raided Martin Schlaff's apartment in Jerusalem.",
"Another suspect in the case was Robert Nowikovsky, an Austrian involved in Russian state-owned company Gazprom's business activities in Europe.According to ''Haaretz'', \"The $3 million that parachuted into Gilad and Omri Sharon's bank account toward the end of 2002 was transferred there in the context of a consultancy contract for development of kolkhozes (collective farms) in Russia.",
"Gilad Sharon was brought into the campaign to make the wilderness bloom in Russia by Getex, a large Russian-based exporter of seeds (peas, millet, wheat) from Eastern Europe.",
"Getex also has ties with Israeli firms involved in exporting wheat from Ukraine, for example.",
"The company owns farms in Eastern Europe and is considered large and prominent in its field.",
"It has its Vienna offices in the same building as Jurimex, which was behind the $1-million guarantee to the Yisrael Beiteinu party.",
"\"On 17 December, police found evidence of a $3 million bribe paid to Sharon's sons.",
"Shortly afterwards, Sharon had a stroke."
],
[
"Illness, incapacitation and death (2006–2014)",
"Sharon had been obese since the 1980s, and also had suspected chronic high blood pressure and high cholesterol – at tall, he was reputed to weigh .",
"Stories of Sharon's appetite and obesity were legendary in Israel.",
"He would often joke about his love of food and expansive girth.",
"His staff car would reportedly be stocked with snacks, vodka, and caviar.",
"In October 2004 when asked why he did not wear a bulletproof vest despite frequent death threats, Sharon smiled and replied, \"There is none that fits my size\".",
"He was a daily consumer of cigars and luxury foods.",
"Numerous attempts by doctors, friends, and staff to impose a balanced diet on Sharon were unsuccessful.Sharon was hospitalized on 18 December 2005, following a minor ischemic stroke.",
"During his hospital stay, doctors discovered a heart defect requiring surgery and ordered bed rest pending a cardiac catheterization scheduled for 5 January 2006.Instead, Sharon immediately returned to work and had a hemorrhagic stroke on 4 January.",
"He was rushed to Hadassah Medical Center in Jerusalem.",
"After two surgeries lasting 7 and 14 hours, doctors stopped the bleeding in Sharon's brain, but were unable to prevent him from entering into a coma.",
"Subsequent media reports indicated that Sharon had been diagnosed with cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) during his December hospitalisation.",
"Hadassah Hospital Director Shlomo Mor-Yosef declined to respond to comments that the combination of CAA and blood thinners after Sharon's December stroke might have caused his more serious subsequent stroke.Ehud Olmert became Acting Prime Minister the night of Sharon's second stroke, while Sharon officially remained in office.",
"Knesset elections followed in March, with Olmert and Sharon's Kadima party winning a plurality.",
"The next month, the Israeli Cabinet declared Sharon permanently incapacitated and Olmert became Interim Prime Minister on 14 April 2006 and Prime Minister in his own right on 4 May.Sharon underwent a series of subsequent surgeries related to his state.",
"In May 2006, he was transferred to a long-term care facility in Sheba Medical Center.",
"In July of that year, he was briefly taken to the hospital's intensive care unit to be treated for bacteria in his blood, before returning to the long-term care facility on 6 November 2006.Sharon would remain at Sheba Medical Center until his death.",
"Medical experts indicated that his cognitive abilities had likely been destroyed by the stroke.",
"His condition worsened from late 2013, and Sharon suffered from renal failure on 1 January 2014.After spending eight years in a coma, Sharon died at 14:00 local time (12:00 UTC) on 11 January 2014.Sharon's state funeral was held on 13 January in accordance with Jewish burial customs, which require that interment take place as soon after death as possible.",
"His body lay in state in the Knesset Plaza from 12 January until the official ceremony, followed by a funeral held at the family's ranch in the Negev Desert.",
"Sharon was buried beside his wife, Lily."
],
[
"Personal life",
"Sharon and wife Lily Sharon in New York in 1974Sharon was married twice, to two sisters, Margalit and Lily Zimmerman, who were from Romania.",
"Sharon met Margalit in 1947 when she was 16, while she was tending a vegetable field, and married her in 1953, shortly after becoming a military instructor.",
"Margalit was a supervisory psychiatric nurse.",
"They had one son, Gur.",
"Margalit died in a car accident in May 1962 and Gur died in October 1967, aged 11, after a friend accidentally shot him while the two children were playing with a rifle at the Sharon family home.",
"After Margalit's death, Sharon married her younger sister, Lily.",
"They had two sons, Omri and Gilad, and six grandchildren.",
"Lily Sharon died of lung cancer in 2000.Sharon's sister, Yehudit, known as \"Dita\", married Shmuel Mandel.",
"In the 1950s, the couple permanently left Israel and emigrated to the United States.",
"This caused a permanent rift in the family.",
"Shmuel and Vera Scheinerman were greatly hurt by their daughter's choice to leave Israel.",
"As a result, Vera Scheinerman willed only a small part of her estate to Dita, an act which enraged her.",
"At one point, Dita decided to return to Israel, but after Vera was informed by the Israel Lands Administration that it would not be legally possible to split the family property between Ariel and Dita, and informed her that she would not be able to build a home there, Dita, believing she was being lied to, cut her family in Israel off and refused to attend the funerals of her mother and sister-in-law.",
"She reestablished contact with the family after Sharon's stroke.",
"Sharon's sister has rarely been mentioned in biographies of him: he himself rarely acknowledged her and only mentioned her twice in his autobiography."
],
[
"Legacy",
"A hugely consequential figure, Sharon remains a highly polarizing figure as well.",
"While generally considered a great general and statesman among Israelis, Palestinians and numerous media and political sources revile Sharon as a war criminal.",
"Human Rights Watch has contended that Sharon should have been held criminally accountable for his role in the Sabra and Shatila massacre, and other abuses.The Ariel Sharon Park, an environmental park near Tel Aviv, is named for him.In the Negev desert, the IDF is currently building its city of training bases, Camp Ariel Sharon.",
"In total, a NIS 50 billion project, the city of bases is named after Ariel Sharon, the largest active construction project in Israel, it is to become the largest IDF base in Israel."
],
[
"Overview of offices held",
"Sharon served as prime minister (Israel's head of government) from 7 March 2001 through 14 April 2006 (with Ehud Olmert serving as ''acting'' prime minister beginning 4 January 2006, after Sharon slipped into a coma).",
"As prime minister he led the 12th government during the 15th Knesset and the 13th government during the 16th Knesset.Sharon served in the Knesset, first for several months in 1973, and later from 1977 through 2006.Sharon.",
"From July 1999 through July 2000, Sharon served as the unofficial/honorary Knesset's opposition leader.",
"Thereafter, from July 2000 through March 2001, he served as the first official designated Knesset opposition leader.Sharon was the leader of the Shlomtzion party from its 1976 founding until its 1977 merger into Likud.",
"Sharon served as leader of the Likud party from 1999 through 2005, leaving to create Kadima which he led from 2005 through early 2006 (when he fell into a coma).In addition to these positions and his ministerial roles, Sharon also served as a special aide to Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin from June 1975 through March 1976.===Ministerial posts===+ Ministerial posts Ministerial post Tenure Prime Minister(s) Government(s) Predecessor Successor Minister of Agriculture 20 June 1977 – 5 August 1981 Menachem Begin 18 Aharon Uzan Simha Erlich Minister of Defense 5 August 1981 – 14 February 1983 Menachem Begin 19 Menachem Begin Menachem Begin Minister without portfolio 14 February 1983 – 13 September 1984 Menachem Begin Yitzhak Shamir 19, 20 Minister of Industry and Trade 13 September 1984 – 20 February 1990 Yitzhak Rabin Yitzhak Shamir 21, 22, 23 Gideon Patt Moshe Nissim Minister of Housing and Construction 11 June 1990 – 13 July 1992 Yitzhak Shamir 24 David Levy Binyamin Ben-Eliezer Minister of National Infrastructure 8 July 1996 – 6 July 1999 Benjamin Netanyahu 27 Yitzhak Levy Eli Suissa Minister of Foreign Affairs (first tenure) 13 October 1998 – 6 June 1999 Benjamin Netanyahu 27 Benjamin Netanyahu David Levy Minister of Immigrant Absorption 7 March 2001 – 28 February 2003 ''Ariel Sharon'' 29 Yuli Tamir Tzipi Livni Minister of Industry and Trade (second tenure) 2 November 2002 – 28 February 2003 ''Ariel Sharon'' 29 Dalia Itzik Ehud Olmert Minister of Foreign Affairs (second tenure) 2 October 2002 – 6 November 2002 ''Ariel Sharon'' 29 Shimon Peres Benjamin Netanyahu Minister of Communications 28 February 2003 – 17 August 2003 ''Ariel Sharon'' 30 Reuven Rivlin Ehud Olmert Minister of Religious Affairs 28 February 2003 – 31 December 2003 ''Ariel Sharon'' 30 Asher Ohana Yitzhak Cohen"
],
[
"Electoral history",
"===2001 direct election for Prime Minister=== ===Party leadership elections==="
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"*Ben Shaul, Moshe (editor); ''Generals of Israel'', Tel-Aviv: Hadar Publishing House, Ltd., 1968.",
"*Uri Dan; ''Ariel Sharon: An Intimate Portrait'', Palgrave Macmillan, October 2006, 320 pages.",
".",
"*Ariel Sharon, with David Chanoff; ''Warrior: The Autobiography of Ariel Sharon'', Simon & Schuster, 2001, .",
"*Gilad Sharon, (translated by Mitch Ginsburg); ''Sharon: The Life of a Leader'', HarperCollins Publishers, 2011, .",
"*Nir Hefez, Gadi Bloom, (translated by Mitch Ginsburg); ''Ariel Sharon: A Life'', Random House, October 2006, 512 pages, .",
"*Freddy Eytan, (translated by Robert Davies); ''Ariel Sharon: A Life in Times of Turmoil'', translation of ''Sharon: le bras de fer'', Studio 8 Books and Music, 2006, .",
"*Abraham Rabinovich; ''The Yom Kippur War: The Epic Encounter That Transformed the Middle East'', 2005, .",
"*Ariel Sharon, official biography, Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs.",
"**Tzvi T. Avisar; ''Sharon: Five years forward'', Publisher House, March 2011, 259 pages, Official website, ."
],
[
"External links",
"***Three recordings from Sharon's Military Career, published by Israel State Archives:**"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Romantic orientation"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Romantic orientation''', also called '''affectional orientation''', is the classification of the sex or gender which a person experiences romantic attraction towards or is likely to have a romantic relationship with.",
"The term is used alongside the term \"sexual orientation\", as well as being used alternatively to it, based upon the perspective that sexual attraction is only a single component of a larger concept.For example, although a pansexual person may feel sexually attracted to people regardless of gender, the person may experience romantic attraction and intimacy with women only.For asexual people, romantic orientation is often considered a more useful measure of attraction than sexual orientation.The relationship between sexual attraction and romantic attraction is still under debate.",
"Sexual and romantic attractions are often studied in conjunction.",
"Even though studies of sexual and romantic spectrums are shedding light onto this under-researched subject, much is still not fully understood."
],
[
"Romantic identities",
"People may or may not engage in purely emotional romantic relationships.",
"The main identities relating to this are:* '''Aromantic''', meaning someone who experiences little to no romantic attraction (aromanticism).",
"** ''For identities within the aromantic spectrum, see Aromanticism § Sub-identities on the aromantic spectrum''.",
"* : Romantic attraction towards person(s) of the opposite gender (heteroromanticism).",
"* : Romantic attraction towards person(s) of the same gender (homoromanticism).",
"* : Romantic attraction towards two genders, or person(s) of the same and other genders (biromanticism).",
"Sometimes used the same way as panromantic.",
"* : Romantic attraction towards person(s) of any, every, and all genders (panromanticism).",
"* : Romantic attraction towards person(s) of various, but not all, genders (polyromanticism)."
],
[
"Relationship with sexual orientation and asexuality",
"The implications of the distinction between romantic and sexual orientations have not been fully recognized, nor have they been studied extensively.",
"It is common for sources to describe sexual orientation as including components of both sexual and romantic (or romantic equivalent) attractions.",
"Publications investigating the relationship between sexual orientation and romantic orientation are limited.",
"Challenges in collecting information result from survey participants having difficulty identifying or distinguishing between sexual and romantic attractions.",
"Asexual individuals experience little to no sexual attraction (see gray asexuality); however, they may still experience romantic attraction.",
"Lisa M. Diamond states that a person's romantic orientation can differ from whom the person is sexually attracted to.",
"While there is limited research on the discordance between sexual attraction and romantic attraction in individuals, the possibility of fluidity and diversity in attractions have been progressively recognized.",
"Researchers Bulmer and Izuma found that people who identify as aromantic often have more negative attitudes in relation to romance.",
"While roughly 1% of the population identifies as asexual, 74% of those people reported having some form of romantic attraction.A concept commonly used by people that experience discordant romantic and sexual attraction is the split attraction model, which tries to explain that romantic and sexual attractions are not exclusively tied together and is often used by people of the asexual and aromantic community to explain their differing romantic versus sexual orientations."
],
[
"Aromanticism",
"Simplified diagram of the aromantic and asexual spectra'''Aromanticism''' is a romantic orientation characterized by experiencing little to no romantic attraction.",
"The term \"aromantic\", colloquially shortened to \"aro\", refers to a person who identifies their romantic orientation as aromanticism.",
"As a , it is included in the initialism LGBTQIA+ as the A, standing for aromanticism, along with asexual and agender."
],
[
"See also",
"* Bromance* Cross-sex friendship* Emotional affair* Heterosociality* Homosociality* Queerplatonic relationship* Romantic friendship* Womance"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"***"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Anoa"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Anoa''', also known as '''dwarf buffalo''' and '''''sapiutan''''', are two species of the genus ''Bubalus'', placed within the subgenus ''Anoa'' and endemic to the island of Sulawesi in Indonesia: the mountain anoa (''Bubalus quarlesi'') and the lowland anoa (''Bubalus depressicornis'').",
"Both live in undisturbed rainforests and are similar in appearance to miniature water buffaloes, weighing .Both species of anoa have been classified as endangered since the 1960s and the populations continue to decrease.",
"Fewer than 5,000 animals of each species likely remain.",
"Reasons for their decline include poaching for hides, horns, and meat by the local peoples and loss of habitat due to the advancement of settlement.",
"Currently, poaching is the more serious factor in most areas.Anoa are most closely allied to the larger Asian buffaloes, showing the same reversal of the direction of the hair on their backs.",
"The horns are peculiar for their upright direction and comparative straightness, although they have the same triangular section as in other buffaloes.",
"White spots are sometimes present below the eyes and there may be white markings on the legs and back; the absence or presence of these white markings may be indicative of distinct races.",
"The horns of the cows are very small.",
"The nearest allies of the anoa appear to be certain extinct Asian buffaloes, the remains of which have been found in the Siwalik Hills of northern India.Both are found on the island of Sulawesi and the nearby island of Buton in Indonesia.",
"They live singly or in pairs, rather than in herds like most cattle, except when the cows are about to give birth.",
"Little is known about their life history as well.",
"However, in captive individuals, they have a life expectancy of 20–30 years.",
"The anoa take two to three years before they reach sexual maturity have one calf a year and have very rarely been seen to have more.Skulls of anoa cannot be accurately identified as to species, and there is likely hybridizing and interbreeding between the two in the zoo population.",
"It is questioned as to whether the two species were different due to them occurring together in many different areas, as well as some interbreeding.",
"A study of the mtDNA of ten specimens from different localities found a high mitochondrial genetic diversity between individuals identified as one or the other species, indicating support for recognition as two species."
],
[
"Species",
"Lowland anoa* The lowland anoa (''Bubalus depressicornis'') is a small bovid, standing barely over at the shoulder.",
"It is usually solitary, living in lowland forests, browsing on plants and understory.",
"According to Groves (1969) the lowland anoa can be told apart from the other species by being larger, having a triangular horn cross-section, sparse as opposed to thick and woolly hair, and always having white markings on the face and legs.Mountain anoa* The mountain anoa (''Bubalus quarlesi'') is also known as Quarle's anoa and ''anoa pegunungan''.",
"Standing at at the shoulder, it is even smaller than the lowland anoa and the smallest of all living wild cattle.",
"They also have longer, woolier hair that moults every year, showing faint spots on the head, neck, and limbs.",
"According to Groves (1969), the mountain anoa can be told apart from the other species by being smaller, having a round horn cross-section, thick and woolly hair, and sometimes having white markings on the face and legs."
],
[
"Distribution",
"Both the lowland anoa (''Bubalus depressicornis'') and the mountain anoa (''Bubalus quarlesi'') are endemic to the islands of Sulawesi in Indonesia.",
"Both species appear to occur in the same areas.",
"Sulawesi is a unique area because roughly 61% of the species found there are endemic species, including both anoa species."
],
[
"Habitat",
"Traditionally, a key difference between the two species is the altitude at which they occur.",
"The mountain anoa can be found at higher elevations than its lowland counterpart and is found in the forests.",
"The lowland anoa was said to spend its time in the lower elevation areas and is also found in forests.",
"Since 2005, however, these differences do not seem to be accurate, both species occur in the same areas in the same habitats."
],
[
"Morphology",
"The anoa have many physical characteristics of bovine relatives and are considered to be most closely related to the water buffalo, which was confirmed through DNA analysis.The physical characteristics of the two species are similar.",
"The anoa is the smallest of the wild cattle species.",
"When anoa are born, they have a set of thick, woolly fur that comes in many color variations ranging from yellow to brown.",
"In adults, the fur is typically brown or black and males tend to have darker variations.",
"Hair thickness varies slightly between the two species based on elevation and distribution.",
"In both species of anoa, horns are present in both males and females and are typically straight protuberances.",
"Another defining characteristic of the anoa is an extremely thick hide underneath the thick fur."
],
[
"Conservation",
"Both anoa species are endemic to the island of Sulawesi and are currently experiencing large declines in their populations.",
"Knowledge of their decline has only recently been documented, however, and the villages and villagers lack the knowledge of how to help maintain or increase populations.The leading cause of their population decline is hunting by local villagers for meat, with habitat loss also being significant.",
"One benefit of the lack of knowledge about the legal status of what they are doing is that villagers are open to communication with researchers on their harvests and hunting practices; where awareness of conservation issues has penetrated, villagers will lie about their activities.Logging is a large issue because both species prefer core forested habitats that are far away from humans and the influences that come with them.",
"By logging, humans create much more fragmented habitats and, therefore, a decrease in the area where the anoa can breed and live.",
"This habitat fragmentation also alters the natural mixing of populations of the anoa.",
"This may lead to a loss in genetic diversity between the two species and, over time, could also lead to their decline."
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"DIET COMPOSITION OF ANOA (''Bubalus'' sp.)",
"STUDIED USING DIRECT OBSERVATION AND DUNG ANALYSIS METHOD IN THEIR HABITAT from https://ejournal.undip.ac.id/index.php/jitaa/article/view/7608/6259Pujaningsih, R.i., et al.",
"“DIET COMPOSITION OF ANOA (''Bubalus'' sp.)",
"STUDIED USING DIRECT OBSERVATION AND DUNG ANALYSIS METHOD IN THEIR HABITAT.” ''Journal of the Indonesian Tropical Animal Agriculture'', vol.",
"34, no.",
"3, 2009, doi:10.14710/jitaa.34.3.223-228.",
"* Lowland Anoa ''Bubalus depressicornis'' Smith from wildcattleconservation.org"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Agner Krarup Erlang"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Agner Krarup Erlang''' (1 January 1878 – 3 February 1929) was a Danish mathematician, statistician and engineer, who invented the fields of traffic engineering and queueing theory.By the time of his relatively early death at the age of 51, Erlang had created the field of telephone networks analysis.",
"His early work in scrutinizing the use of local, exchange and trunk telephone line usage in a small community to understand the theoretical requirements of an efficient network led to the creation of the Erlang formula, which became a foundational element of modern telecommunication network studies."
],
[
"Life",
"Erlang was born at Lønborg, near Tarm, in Jutland.",
"He was the son of a schoolmaster, and a descendant of Thomas Fincke on his mother's side.",
"At age 14, he passed the Preliminary Examination of the University of Copenhagen with distinction, after receiving dispensation to take it because he was younger than the usual minimum age.",
"For the next two years he taught alongside his father.A distant relative provided free board and lodging, and Erlang prepared for and took the University of Copenhagen entrance examination in 1896, and passed with distinction.",
"He won a scholarship to the University and majored in mathematics, and also studied astronomy, physics and chemistry.",
"He graduated in 1901 with an MA and over the next 7 years taught at several schools.",
"He maintained his interest in mathematics, and received an award for a paper that he submitted to the University of Copenhagen.He was a member of the Danish Mathematicians' Association (DMF) and through this met amateur mathematician Johan Jensen, the Chief Engineer of the Copenhagen Telephone Company (KTAS in Danish), an offshoot of the International Bell Telephone Company.",
"Erlang worked for the Copenhagen Telephone Company from 1908 for almost 20 years, until his death in Copenhagen after an abdominal operation.He was an associate of the British Institution of Electrical Engineers."
],
[
"Contributions",
"While working for the CTC, Erlang was presented with the classic problem of determining how many circuits were needed to provide an acceptable telephone service.",
"His thinking went further by finding how many telephone operators were needed to handle a given volume of calls.",
"Most telephone exchanges then used human operators and cord boards to switch telephone calls by means of jack plugs.Out of necessity, Erlang was a hands-on researcher.",
"He would conduct measurements and was prepared to climb into street manholes to do so.",
"He was also an expert in the history and calculation of the numerical tables of mathematical functions, particularly logarithms.",
"He devised new calculation methods for certain forms of tables.He developed his theory of telephone traffic over several years.",
"His significant publications include:* 1909 – \"The Theory of Probabilities and Telephone Conversations\", which proves that the Poisson distribution applies to random telephone traffic.",
"* 1917 – \"Solution of some Problems in the Theory of Probabilities of Significance in Automatic Telephone Exchanges\", which contains his classic formulae for call loss and waiting time.",
"* 1920 - \"Telephone waiting times\", which is Erlang's principal work on waiting times, assuming constant holding times.These and other notable papers were translated into English, French and German.",
"His papers were prepared in a very brief style and can be difficult to understand without a background in the field.",
"One Bell Telephone Laboratories researcher is said to have learned Danish to study them.The British Post Office accepted his formula as the basis for calculating circuit facilities.In 1946, the CCITT named the international unit of telephone traffic the \"erlang\".",
"A statistical distribution and programming language listed below have also been named in his honour.Erlang also made an important contribution to physiologic modeling with the Krogh-Erlang capillary cylinder model describing oxygen supply to living tissue."
],
[
"See also",
"* Erlang – a unit of communication activity* Erlang distribution – a statistical probability distribution* Erlang programming language – developed by Ericsson for large industrial real-time systems* Queueing theory* Teletraffic engineering"
],
[
"References"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Anyone Can Whistle"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''''Anyone Can Whistle''''' is a musical with music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, and a book by Arthur Laurents.",
"Described as \"a satire on conformity and the insanity of the so-called sane,\" the show tells a story of an economically depressed town whose corrupt mayor decides to create a fake miracle in order to attract tourists.",
"The phony miracle draws the attention of an emotionally inhibited nurse, a crowd of inmates from a local asylum, and a doctor with secrets of his own.Following a tryout period in Philadelphia, ''Anyone Can Whistle'' opened at the Majestic Theatre on Broadway on April 4, 1964.The show received widely varied reviews (including negative notices from the ''New York Times'' and the ''New York Herald Tribune''), and closed after a run of 12 previews and 9 performances.",
"The show's original run marked the stage musical debut of Angela Lansbury.In the decades since its closing, ''Anyone Can Whistle'' has seen relatively few productions compared to other Sondheim musicals; notable productions include a 1995 concert version at Carnegie Hall, a pair of stagings in London and Los Angeles in 2003 that incorporated revisions, and a 2010 concert staging for the Encores!",
"program at New York City Center.",
"However, its score has become acclaimed as a part of Sondheim's canon, and songs such as the title tune, \"Everybody Says Don't\", and \"There Won't Be Trumpets\" have been performed widely."
],
[
"Background",
"Lee Remick, Angela Lansbury, Harry Guardino, and Herbert Greene The show was first announced in ''The New York Times'' on October 5, 1961: \"For the winter of 1962, Arthur Laurents is nurturing another musical project, ''The Natives Are Restless''.",
"The narrative and staging will be Mr. Laurent's handiwork; music and lyrics that of Stephen Sondheim.",
"A meager description was furnished by Mr. Laurents, who refused to elaborate.",
"Although the title might indicate otherwise, it is indigenous in content and contemporary in scope.",
"No producer yet.\"",
"No news of the show appeared until July 14, 1963, in an article in ''The New York Times'' about Kermit Bloomgarden, where it discussed the four shows he was producing for the coming season; two were maybes, two were definite.",
"One of the latter was a Sondheim-Laurents musical (now named ''Side Show'').",
"In a letter to Bloomgarden, Laurents wrote, \"I beg you not to mention the money problems or any difficulties to Steve anymore.",
"It depresses him terribly and makes it terribly difficult for him to work...It is damn hard to concentrate...when all the atmosphere is filled with gloom and forebodings about will the show get the money to go on?...Spare him the gory details.\"",
"This behavior is considered unusual for Laurents, which runs contrary to his current reputation.",
"Sondheim discovered that Laurents hated doing backers' auditions and he took over that responsibility, playing and singing more than 30.They found 115 investors to back the $350,000 production, including Richard Rodgers and Sondheim's father.Eager to work with both Laurents and Sondheim, Angela Lansbury accepted the lead role as Mayoress Cora Hoover Hooper, despite her strong misgivings about the script and her ability to handle the score.",
"Also signed were Lee Remick as Nurse Fay Apple and Harry Guardino as Hapgood.",
"Laurents had wanted Barbra Streisand for the role of Fay, but she turned it down to star in ''Funny Girl''.",
"Following rehearsals in New York City, the company started pre-Broadway tryouts in Philadelphia from March 2 to 21, 1964.Laurents, ignoring criticism about the show's message being trite and its absurdist style difficult to comprehend, poured his energies into restaging rather than dealing with the crux of the problem.The show suffered further setbacks when supporting actor Henry Lascoe, who played Comptroller Schubb, suffered a heart attack during the show's out-of-town tryout, and was replaced by Gabriel Dell.",
"According to Sondheim, \"Lansbury was so insecure onstage, and unhappy with her performance, that we considered replacing her.",
"Ironically, it soon became apparent that it had been Lascoe, an old pro...who had made her feel like an amateur.",
"The minute his much less confident understudy took over, she felt free to blossom, which she spectacularly did.\"",
"Sondheim called the reviews \"humiliating\" and the audiences \"hostile.\""
],
[
"Productions",
"After multiple revisions, the show opened on Broadway on April 4, 1964 at the Majestic Theatre, where it closed after 9 performances and 12 previews, unable to overcome negative notices from major papers such as the ''New York Times'' and the ''New York Herald Tribune''.",
"Scenic design was by William and Jean Eckart, costume design by Theoni V. Aldredge, and lighting design by Jules Fisher.",
"Choreographer Herbert Ross received the show's sole Tony Award nomination.The show became a cult favorite, and a truncated recording by the original cast released by Columbia Records sold well among Sondheim fans and musical theatre buffs.",
"\"There Won't Be Trumpets,\" a song cut during previews, has become a favorite of cabaret performers.On April 8, 1995, a staged concert was held at Carnegie Hall in New York City as a benefit for the Gay Men's Health Crisis.",
"The concert was recorded by Columbia Records, preserving for the first time musical passages and numbers not included on the recording by the original Broadway cast.",
"For example, the cut song \"There's Always a Woman\" was included at this concert.",
"Lansbury served as narrator, with Madeline Kahn as Cora, Bernadette Peters as Fay, and Scott Bakula as Hapgood.",
"Additional cast included Chip Zien, Ken Page, and Harvey Evans, the only cast member from the original show to reprise his role.In 2003, Sony reissued the original Broadway cast recording on compact disc.",
"Two revivals were staged that year:: one in London at the Bridewell Theatre and one in Los Angeles at the Matrix Theatre.The Ravinia Festival presented a staged concert on August 26 and 27, 2005, with Audra McDonald (Fay), Michael Cerveris (Hapgood) and Patti LuPone (Cora).On January 11, 2008, Talk Is Free Theatre presented the Canadian professional premiere (in concert) at the Gryphon Theatre in Barrie, Ontario, with a fundraiser performance on January 13 at the Diesel Playhouse in Toronto, Ontario.",
"It starred Adam Brazier as Hapgood, Kate Hennig as Cora, Blythe Wilson as Fay, and Richard Ouzounian as Narrator, who also served as director.",
"Choreography was by Sam Strasfeld.",
"Additional cast included Juan Chioran as Comptroller Shub, Jonathan Monro as Treasurer Cooley, and Mark Harapiak as Chief Magruder.",
"Musical direction was provided by Wayne Gwillim.Encores!",
"presented a staged concert from April 8 through April 11, 2010, with Sutton Foster as Nurse Fay Apple, Donna Murphy as Mayoress Cora Hoover Hooper, and Raul Esparza as Hapgood, with direction and choreography by Casey Nicholaw.",
"The production was the second most attended in ''Encores!''",
"history, and Stephen Sondheim was present at the post-matinee talkback on April 10.A London production of ''Anyone can Whistle'' opened at the Jermyn Street Studio Theatre, London, in association with Primavera Productions, running from March 10, 2010, to April 17, 2010.The director is Tom Littler, with Musical Director Tom Attwood, and a cast that includes Issy van Randwyck (Mayoress), Rosalie Craig (Nurse Fay Apple) and David Ricardo-Pearce (Hapgood).Porchlight Music Theatre presented ''Anyone Can Whistle'' in 2013 as a part of \"Porchlight Revisits\" series, in which it staged three forgotten musicals per year.",
"It was directed by Christopher Pazdernik and music directed by Aaron Benham.A new production directed by Phil Willmott opened at the Union Theatre in London, running from February 8 through March 11, 2017.A concert presentation of the show was presented by MasterVoices, under the direction and baton of Ted Sperling, on March 10, 2022 at Carnegie Hall in New York City.",
"This production featured Vanessa Williams (Cora Hoover Hooper), Santino Fontana (J. Bowden Hapgood), Elizabeth Stanley (Fay Apple), Douglas Sills (Comptroller Schub), Eddie Cooper (Treasurer Cooley), and Michael Mulheren (Police Chief Magruder).",
"Joanna Gleason served as the narrator for the event A production of the show ran at the Southwark Playhouse in London from April 1, 2022 to May 7, 2022 under the direction of Georgie Rankcom, with musical direction by Natalie Pound and choreography by Lisa Stevens.",
"The show’s cast featured Alex Young as Cora Hoover Hooper, Chrystine Symone as Nurse Fay Apple, and Jordan Broatch as J. Bowden Hapgood.",
"This production was the largest staged version of the show since its debut on Broadway in 1964."
],
[
"Plot",
"===Act 1===The story is set in an imaginary American town that has gone bankrupt.",
"(Its former major industry was an unidentified product that never wore out.",
"Everyone has one now, and no one needs a replacement.)",
"The only place in town doing good business is the local mental asylum, known as “The Cookie Jar,” whose inmates look much healthier than the disgruntled townspeople.",
"(\"I'm Like the Bluebird\") All the money is in the hands of Cora Hoover Hooper, the stylish, ruthless mayoress and her cronies - Comptroller Schub, Treasurer Cooley, and Police Chief Magruder.",
"Cora appears carried in a litter by her backup singers, and admits that she can accept anything except unpopularity (“Me and My Town”).",
"The scheming Comptroller Schub tells her that he has a plan to save her administration, and the town, promising “It's unethical.” He tells her to meet him at the rock on the edge of town.",
"At the rock, a local mother, Mrs. Schroeder, tries to tell her child, Baby Joan, to come down from the rock, when Baby Joan licks it - and a spring of water begins flowing from it.",
"The town instantly proclaims a miracle, and Cora and her council eagerly anticipate tourist dollars as they boast of the water's curative powers.",
"(\"Miracle Song\") It is soon revealed to Cora that the miracle is a fake, controlled by a pump inside the rock.",
"The only person in town who doubts the miracle is Fay Apple, a skeptical but idealistic young nurse from the Cookie Jar.",
"She appears at the rock with all forty-nine of the inmates, or “Cookies” in tow, intending to let them take some of the water.",
"Schub realizes that if they drink the water and remain insane, people will discover the fraud.",
"As he tries to stop Fay, the inmates mingle with the townspeople, until no one can guess who is who.",
"Fay disappears, and hiding from the police, admits that she hopes for a hero to deliver the town Cora and her lackeys (“There Won't Be Trumpets”).",
"Cora arrives on the scene with the Cookie Jar's manager, Dr. Detmold, who says that Fay has taken the records to identify the inmates.",
"He tells Cora that he is expecting a new assistant who might help them.",
"At that moment a mysterious stranger, J. Bowden Hapgood, arrives asking for directions to the Cookie Jar.",
"He is instantly taken for the new assistant.",
"Asked to identify the missing Cookies, Hapgood begins questioning random people and sorting them into two groups, group A, and group one, without divulging which group is the sane one.",
"The town council becomes suspicious, but Hapgood simply questions them until they begin to doubt their own sanity.",
"Cora is too caught up with his logic to care.",
"(“Simple”) As the extended musical sequence ends, the lights black out except for a spotlight on Hapgood, who announces to the audience, “You are all mad!” Seconds later, the stage lights are restored, and the cast is revealed in theater seats, holding programs, applauding the audience, as the act ends.===Act 2===As Act II opens, the two groups are now in a bitter rivalry over who is the sane group (“A-1 March”) Another stranger, a French woman in a feathered coat appears.",
"It is really Fay Apple in disguise.",
"She introduces herself as the Lady from Lourdes, a professional Miracle Inspector, who has come to investigate the miracle.",
"As Schub runs off to warn Cora, Fay seeks out Hapgood in his hotel, and the two seduce each other in the style of a French romantic film.",
"(“Come Play Wiz Me”) Fay tries to get Hapgood's help in exposing the miracle.",
"Hapgood, however, sees through her disguise and wants to question her first.",
"Fay refuses to take her wig off and confesses to him that this disguise, leftover from a college play, is the only way she can break out of her shell.",
"She begins to hope, however, that Hapgood may be the one who can help her learn to be free.",
"(“Anyone Can Whistle”) Meanwhile, the two groups continue to march, and Cora, trying to give a speech, realizes that Hapgood has stolen her limelight.",
"(“A Parade in Town”) She and Schub plan an emergency meeting at her house.",
"Back at the hotel, Hapgood comes up with an idea, telling Fay to destroy the Cookies' records, so both they and Fay can be free.",
"When Fay is reluctant, Hapgood produces a record of his own - he is her fiftieth Cookie.",
"He is a practicing idealist who, after years of attempted heroism, is tired of crusading and has come to the Cookie Jar to retire.",
"Inspired by his record, Fay begins to tear the records up.",
"As she does, the Cookies appear and begin to dance (“Everybody Says Don't”).===Act 3===Act III begins with Cora at her house with her council.",
"Schub has put the miracle on hiatus but announces that they can easily pin the blame on Hapgood.",
"The group celebrates their alliance.",
"(“I've Got You to Lean On”) A mob forms outside the hotel, and Hapgood and Fay, still disguised, take refuge under the rock.",
"Discovering the fraud, Cora and the council confront them.",
"At that moment, Cora receives a telegram from the governor warning that if the quota of 49 cookies is not filled, she will be impeached.",
"Schub tells her that since Hapgood never said who is sane or not, they can arrest anyone at random until the quota is filled.",
"Hapgood refuses to help Fay stop the Mayoress since he has given up crusading.",
"Although she knows she still isn't out of her shell, Fay angrily swears to go it alone.",
"(“See What it Gets You”) As Cora and the police force begin rounding up Cookies, Fay tries to get the key to the wagon from the guards in an extended ballet sequence.",
"(“The Cookie Chase”) As it ends, Fay is captured, and Dr. Detmold recognizes her.",
"Fay tells the townspeople about the fake miracle, but the town refuses to believe her.",
"Detmold tells Cora that even without the records, Fay can identify the inmates from memory.",
"Cora warns that she will arrest forty-nine people, normal or not, and Fay, helplessly, identifies all the Cookies, except Hapgood.",
"She tells him the world needs people like him, and Hapgood can't turn himself in.",
"He asks Fay to come with him, but she still can't bring herself to break free.",
"They regretfully part ways.",
"(“With So Little to Be Sure Of”) Word comes of a new miracle from the town beyond the valley, of a statue with a warm heart, and the townspeople, including Magruder and Cooley, rush off to see if it is real.",
"Soon the town is all but deserted, and Cora is alone again.",
"Again, Schub has the answer - they can turn the entire town into one big Cookie Jar.",
"Cora realizes she and Schub are meant for each other, and they dance off together.",
"As Fay resumes work, Detmold's real new assistant Jane Borden Osgood arrives, and Fay is horrified to realize that she is even more rigid and disbelieving than Fay herself, and the new nurse marches the Cookies off to the next town to disprove the new miracle.",
"Horrified at seeing what she might become, Fay returns to the rock calling for Hapgood.",
"When he doesn't answer, she tries to whistle - and succeeds in blowing a shrill, ugly whistle.",
"Hapgood appears again, saying 'That's good enough for me.'",
"As they embrace, the water begins flowing from the rock - a true miracle this time.",
"(Finale)"
],
[
"Notable casts",
"CharacterBroadwayOff-Off-BroadwayBritish PremiereCarnegie Hall ConcertEncores!Carnegie Hall RevivalOff-West End196419801986199520102022Cora Hoover HooperAngela LansburyGaylea ByrnePip HintonMadeline KahnDonna MurphyVanessa WilliamsAlex YoungFay AppleLee RemickRosemary McNamaraMarilyn CurtisBernadette PetersSutton FosterElizabeth StanleyChrystine SymoneJ.",
"Bowden HapgoodHarry GuardinoGary KrawfordMichael JayesScott BakulaRaúl EsparzaSantino FontanaJordan BroatchComptroller SchubGabriel DellSam StoneburnerBill BradleyWalter BobbieEdward HibbertDouglas SillsDanny LaneTreasurer CooleyArnold SoboloffRalph David WestfallJohn GriffithsChip ZienJeff BlumenkrantzEddie CooperSamuel CliffordPolice Chief MagruderJames FrawleyDavid BerkJonathan StephensKen PageJohn Ellison ConleeMichael MulherenRenan TeodoroMrs.",
"SchroederPeg MurrayIleane GudellHilary CromieMaureen MooreLinda Griffin??",
"?Kathryn AkinDr.",
"DetmoldDon DohertyKermit BrownThom BookerNick WymanPatrick Wetzel??",
"?Nathan TaylorCora's BoysSterling Clark, Harvey Evans, Larry Roquemore and Tucker SmithStephan DeGhelder, Bill Hastings, Stephen Hope and David E. MallardMichael Gyngell, Dermot McLaughlin, Alan Mosley, Neil PattersonSterling Clark, Harvey Evans, Evan Pappas, Eric Riley and Tony StevensClyde Alves, Grasan Kingsbury, Eric Sciotto and Anthony Wayne??",
"?"
],
[
"Musical numbers",
"(''from the Broadway production'');Act I*Prelude Act I ''(instrumental)'' — Orchestra*I'm Like the Bluebird — company*Me and My Town — Cora Hoover Hooper and Boys*Miracle Song — Cora, Treasurer Cooley, Townspeople, Tourists, and Pilgrims*There Won't Be Trumpets — Fay Apple'''*'''*Simple — J. Bowden Hapgood and Company;Act II*Prelude Act II ''(instrumental)'' — Orchestra*A-1 March — Company*Come Play Wiz Me — Fay, Hapgood, and Boys*Anyone Can Whistle — Fay*A Parade In Town — Cora*Everybody Says Don't — Hapgood*Don't Ballet ''(instrumental)'' — Orchestra;Act III*Prelude Act III ''(instrumental)'' — Orchestra*I've Got You to Lean On — Cora, Comptroller Schub, Treasurer Cooley, Chief Magruder, and Boys*See What It Gets You — Fay*Anyone Can Whistle (Reprise) — Fay*Cora's Chase (The Cookie Chase) — Company*I'm Like the Bluebird (Reprise 1) — Cookies*With So Little to Be Sure Of — Fay and Hapgood*I've Got You to Lean On (Reprise) — Cora and Schub'''*'''*I'm Like the Bluebird (Reprise 2) — Cookies*Finale Ultimo ''(instrumental)'' — Orchestra'''Notes''' * Asterisk ('''*''') denotes song cut during Previews.",
"* Despite being cut from the original production, \"There Won't Be Trumpets\" was nonetheless recorded for the original Broadway cast recording, though it remained unreleased until a 1989 remastered CD.",
"Officially licensed scripts and scores now reinstate the song.",
"* The 1995 concert production restored the songs \"There Won't Be Trumpets\" (Fay Apple) and \"There's Always a Woman\" (Fay and Cora), both previously cut.",
"* \"Finale Ultimo\" is attached to the end of \"With So Little to Be Sure Of\" on the Original Cast Recording."
],
[
"Critical response",
"Howard Taubman in his ''The New York Times'' review wrote that Laurents's \"book lacks the fantasy that would make the idea work, and his staging has not improved matters.",
"Mr. Sondheim has written several pleasing songs but not enough of them to give the musical wings.",
"The performers yell rather than talk and run rather than walk.",
"The dancing is the cream.",
"\"Steven Suskin wrote in his 2000 book about Broadway composers: The \"fascinating extended musical scenes, with extended choral work...immediately marked Sondheim as the most distinctive theatre composer of his time.",
"The first act sanity sequence...and the third act chase...are unlike anything that came before.",
"\"Stuart King writing for London Box Office (April 2022) noted: \"Southwark Playhouse (with Guildford graduate Georgie Rankcom at the directorial helm for this gender-fluid production) has resurrected the piece for a short run — just in time for Easter!",
"But the burning question on Press Night was whether or not the cult 60s show would need a miracle to find a new, modern fan base, OR, have the subjects of political corruption, sexual identity and mental wellbeing potentially given the fundamentally flawed piece new meaning for a young and previously unfamiliar audience?",
"This reviewer’s answer would be that it will almost certainly depend entirely on who you are, how you identify (if indeed you bother with such matters), whether corruption in public office bothers you (why wouldn’t it?)",
"and probably most significantly of all, whether you consider yourself a Sondheim purist/aficionado/devotee.\""
],
[
"Awards and nominations",
"===Original Broadway production=== Year Award ceremony Category Nominee Result 1964 Tony Award Best Choreography Herbert Ross"
],
[
"References",
"* ''Balancing Act, The Authorized Biography of Angela Lansbury'' by Martin Gottfried, published byLittle, Brown and Company, 1999"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"External links",
"* * sondheim.com* MTI shows listing* Live, Laugh, Love: Anyone Can Whistle* ''Anyone Can Whistle'' on the Stephen Sondheim Reference Guide* The story of ''Anyone Can Whistle'' by Mark Eden Horowitz in ''The Sondheim Review''"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Alcopop"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Lime and Grapefruit Bacardi Breezer are made with Bacardi rum.An '''alcopop''' (or '''cooler''') is any of certain mixed alcoholic beverages with relatively low alcohol content (e.g., 3–7% alcohol by volume), including:# Malt beverages to which various fruit juices or other flavorings have been added# Wine coolers: beverages containing wine to which ingredients such as fruit juice or other flavorings have been added# Mixed drinks containing distilled alcohol and sweet liquids such as fruit juices or other flavouringsThe term ''alcopop'' (a portmanteau of the words ''alcohol'' and ''pop'') is used commonly in the United Kingdom and Ireland to describe these drinks.",
"In English-speaking Canada, \"cooler\" is more common but \"alcopop\" may also be used.",
"Other terms include flavored alcoholic beverage ('''FAB'''), flavored malt beverage ('''FMB'''), \"pre-packaged\" or \"premium packaged\" spirit ('''PPS''').",
"In Australia and New Zealand \"premix\" and ready to drink ('''RTD''') are both commonly used terms.",
"\"Malternative\" is an exclusively American term for the malt-based alcopops.",
"\"Spirit cooler\" is used in South Africa for distilled alcohol versions.Hard seltzer is a related category of alcoholic drinks based on flavored seltzer water.",
"Hard soda, meanwhile, is specifically related to soft drinks.",
"Hard lemonade, which could be considered an alcopop, has been around for some time.",
"Hard cider, on the other hand, is a fermented beverage similar to wine or beer."
],
[
"Description",
"Rev, a vodka cooler from CanadaThere are a variety of beverages produced and marketed around the world as well as within each market which are described as coolers or alcopops.",
"They tend to be sweet and served in small bottles (typically 355 ml (the normal size of a soda pop can) in the US, 275 ml in South Africa and Germany, 330 ml in Canada and Europe), and between 4% and 7% ABV.",
"In Europe, Canada, and South Africa coolers tend to be pre-mixed spirits, including vodka (e.g.",
"Smirnoff Ice) or rum (e.g.",
"Bacardi Breezer).",
"In the United States, on the other hand, alcopops often start out as un-hopped beers, depending on the state in which they are sold.",
"Much of the malt (and alcohol) is removed (leaving mostly water), with subsequent addition of alcohol (usually vodka or grain alcohol), sugar, coloring and flavoring.",
"Such drinks are legally classified as beers in virtually all states and can therefore be sold in outlets that do not or cannot carry spirit-based drinks.",
"There are, however, stronger ones that ''are'' simply pre-mixed spirits (e.g.",
"Bacardi Rum Island Iced Tea), often containing about 12.5% alcohol by volume, that can be sold only where hard liquor is available."
],
[
"History",
"Wine coolers gained popularity in the US market in the 1980s when Bartles and Jaymes began advertising their brand of wine coolers, which were followed by other brands, including when Bacardi introduced the Breezer.",
"A growth in popularity occurred around 1993 with Two Dogs, DNA Alcoholic Spring Water, Hooper's Hooch and Zima, which was marketed under the title of \"malternative beverage.\"",
"Wine coolers were on the decline due to the increase in the US federal wine tax, and using a malt-beverage base became the new industry standard.",
"Later, Mike's Hard Lemonade was released in the United States, with humorous commercials depicting what they called \"violence against lemons\".",
"Smirnoff also came out with another citrus-flavored malt beverage in the United States in the late 1990s called Smirnoff Ice, which promoted itself with flashy commercials, usually involving trendy young people dancing in unlikely situations and places.",
"(In the UK, Smirnoff Ice is marketed by Diageo as a PPS.",
")Through its Alcopop-Free Zone® campaign, \" Alcohol Justice has sought to ban alcopop sales entirely since the sweet and brightly colored alcoholic drinks may appeal to children.",
"Many cooler advertising campaigns have been criticized as trying to make alcopops appeal to young drinkers.",
"In the United Kingdom, a media outcry during the mid-1990s arose as the tabloid press associated alcopops with under-age drinking which damaged sales and led to British liquor stores withdrawing them from their shelves.In response to a complaint from the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI), the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) conducted an extensive investigation in 2001.The agency \"found no evidence of intent to target minors with FMB products, packaging, or advertising.",
"Furthermore, after reviewing the consumer survey evidence submitted by CSPI in support of the proposition that FMBs were predominantly popular with minors, the FTC concluded that flaws in the survey's methodology limited the ability to draw conclusions from the survey data.",
"\"The Federal Trade Commission again in 2003 investigated FMB ads, product placement, and internal company marketing documents after a directive from the conferees of the House and Senate Appropriations Committees.",
"\"The Commission's investigation found no evidence of targeting underage consumers in the marketing of FMBs.",
"Adults 21 to 29 appear to be the intended target of FMB marketing\" and found that \"the majority of FMB drinkers are over the age of 27.",
"\"In December 2003, Ireland raised the tax on flavored malt beverages to equal that of spirits, the second-highest in Europe.",
"Germany has imposed an extra duty of 0.80 to 0.90 euro per bottle effective August 1, 2004.To circumvent higher taxation, some German producers have switched to wine coolers, which are being marketed the same way.",
"Some bottles now carry a warning stating that they are not for consumption by people under the legal drinking age (under 18 in the UK and 21 in the United States).",
"On May 11, 2008, the Australian Government increased the excise tax on alcopops by 70%, to bring it in line with the tax on spirits.",
"There is the concern this tax will encourage consumers to buy straight spirits and mix the drinks themselves, possibly resulting in drinks with a higher alcohol concentration than the premixed alternatives.",
"This tax was revoked during March 2009 meaning the government had to pay back the 290 million collected on the tax.The Federal Trade Commission report states, \"Further, industry-conducted research on consumers over the age of 21 who use FMBs shows that these consumers generally view the FMBs as substitutes for beer, ...",
"This research also concludes that consumers are not likely to consume more than two or three FMBs on any occasion because of the products'sweetness.In March 2018, Coca-Cola announced it would be launching an alcopop product for the first time, a ''chūhai'' beverage in Japan."
],
[
"Brands",
"Garage Hard Lemonade from Finland is a lemon-flavoured alcopop whose 4.6% ABV matches that of many commercial beers.Brands of coolers are numerous and their alcoholic base vary greatly.",
"Some notable brands include: VK, Smirnoff Ice, Mike's Hard Lemonade, Bacardi Breezer, Palm Bay, Skyy Blue, Jack Daniel's Hard Cola and, in the UK, WKD Original Vodka.",
"Garage is an alcopop produced by the Finnish brewery Sinebrychoff."
],
[
"Attempts to discourage",
"=== Australia ===The Australian government increased the tax on these drinks under the 2008 budget to the same rate as spirits, volumetrically, in an effort to stop binge drinking.",
"The tax was criticized by the opposition as a tax grab, and voted down in the Senate on March 18, 2009.Before its rejection, the tax had already raised at least A$290 million after April 2008.In April 2009, some Labor party MPs planned to resubmit the tax to the Senate, and it was finally approved in August 2009, increasing the tax on the drinks from $39.36 to $66.67 per litre of alcohol.",
"A 2013 study concluded that the tax had no impact on binge drinking of the drinks by teenagers.=== Germany ===On 1 July 2004 the German government increased the tax on mixed drinks based on spirits (e.g.",
"vodka, rum) by roughly one Euro per 275-ml-bottle in order to discourage teenagers drinking excessively, although those drinks were already prohibited for those under the age of 18.This had two implications: The most common alcopops, such as Smirnoff Ice or Bacardi Breezer, were nearly taken off the market, while other manufacturers changed the recipes of their drinks to replace spirit alcohols with wine or beer, but with the same ABV, enabling these mixed drinks (which are not \"alcopops\" under German law) to be sold legally to minors 16 and 17 years of age.=== Philippines ===In 2019, some senators including Pia Cayetano and former Special Assistant to the President Bong Go called for pullout of alcopops from the market due to \"deceptive packaging that resembles fruit juices usually bought by young consumers\".",
"Alcopops also have seven percent alcohol content, which is slightly lower than that of local beer brand Red Horse Beer.=== United Kingdom ===In June 1997, Co-op Food became the first major retailer to place an outright ban on the sale of alcopops in its shops.",
"This has since been rescinded."
],
[
"See also",
"* Borg (drink)* Chuhai* Comparison of alcopops* Hard seltzer* Hard soda*Jello shot*Jungle juice*Nutcracker (drink)*Purple drank*Queen Mary (beer cocktail)"
],
[
"References",
"; Sources* Bloomberg News, FTC Says Alcohol Type Not Aimed at Minors, ''Los Angeles Times'', June 5, 2002.",
"* Melillo, W. FTC: Ads for 'Alcopops' Not Aimed at Teens, ''Adweek'', June 6, 2002.",
"* American Medical Association, AMA Says Alcohol Industry Targets Teen Girls , December 16, 2004.",
"* California boosts tax on 'alcopops', Associated Press, August 15, 2007."
],
[
"External links",
"* Portman Group (a UK alcoholic beverage industry trade advocacy group with a code of marketing practices)* New wave of 'sophisticated' alcopops fuels teenage binge drinking The Guardian, 14 December 2002* The demonised drink: How has youth drinking evolved 20 years since the launch of alcopops?",
"The Independent, 29 June 2013* The quiet death of the alcopop BBC News Magazine, 31 July 2013*"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Alkali"
],
[
"Introduction",
"In chemistry, an '''alkali''' (; from ) is a basic, ionic salt of an alkali metal or an alkaline earth metal.",
"An alkali can also be defined as a base that dissolves in water.",
"A solution of a soluble base has a pH greater than 7.0.The adjective '''alkaline''', and less often, '''alkalescent''', is commonly used in English as a synonym for basic, especially for bases soluble in water.",
"This broad use of the term is likely to have come about because alkalis were the first bases known to obey the Arrhenius definition of a base, and they are still among the most common bases."
],
[
"Etymology",
"The word \"alkali\" is derived from Arabic ''al qalīy'' (or ''alkali''), meaning ''the calcined ashes'' (see calcination), referring to the original source of alkaline substances.",
"A water-extract of burned plant ashes, called potash and composed mostly of potassium carbonate, was mildly basic.",
"After heating this substance with calcium hydroxide (''slaked lime''), a far more strongly basic substance known as ''caustic potash'' (potassium hydroxide) was produced.",
"Caustic potash was traditionally used in conjunction with animal fats to produce soft soaps, one of the caustic processes that rendered soaps from fats in the process of saponification, one known since antiquity.",
"Plant potash lent the name to the element potassium, which was first derived from caustic potash, and also gave potassium its chemical symbol '''K''' (from the German name ''Kalium''), which ultimately derived from al'''k'''ali."
],
[
"Common properties of alkalis and bases",
"Alkalis are all Arrhenius bases, ones which form hydroxide ions (OH−) when dissolved in water.",
"Common properties of alkaline aqueous solutions include:* Moderately concentrated solutions (over 10−3 M) have a pH of 10 or greater.",
"This means that they will turn phenolphthalein from colorless to pink.",
"* Concentrated solutions are caustic (causing chemical burns).",
"* Alkaline solutions are slippery or soapy to the touch, due to the saponification of the fatty substances on the surface of the skin.",
"* Alkalis are normally water-soluble, although some like barium carbonate are only soluble when reacting with an acidic aqueous solution."
],
[
"Difference between alkali and base",
"The terms \"base\" and \"alkali\" are often used interchangeably, particularly outside the context of chemistry and chemical engineering.There are various, more specific definitions for the concept of an alkali.",
"Alkalis are usually defined as a subset of the bases.",
"One of two subsets is commonly chosen.",
"* A basic salt of an alkali metal or alkaline earth metal (this includes Mg(OH)2 (magnesium hydroxide) but excludes NH3 (ammonia)).",
"* Any base that is soluble in water and forms hydroxide ions or the solution of a base in water.",
"(This includes both Mg(OH)2 and NH3, which forms NH4OH.",
")The second subset of bases is also called an \"Arrhenius base\"."
],
[
"Alkali salts",
"Alkali salts are soluble hydroxides of alkali metals and alkaline earth metals, of which common examples are:* Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) – often called \"caustic soda\"* Potassium hydroxide (KOH) – commonly called \"caustic potash\"* Lye – generic term for either of two previous salts or their mixture* Calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH)2) – saturated solution known as \"limewater\"* Magnesium hydroxide (Mg(OH)2) – an atypical alkali since it has low solubility in water (although the dissolved portion is considered a strong base due to complete dissociation of its ions)"
],
[
"Alkaline soil",
"Soils with pH values that are higher than 7.3 are usually defined as being alkaline.",
"These soils can occur naturally, due to the presence of alkali salts.",
"Although many plants do prefer slightly basic soil (including vegetables like cabbage and fodder like buffalo grass), most plants prefer a mildly acidic soil (with pHs between 6.0 and 6.8), and alkaline soils can cause problems."
],
[
"Alkali lakes",
"In alkali lakes (also called ''soda lakes''), evaporation concentrates the naturally occurring carbonate salts, giving rise to an alkalic and often saline lake.Examples of alkali lakes:*Alkali Lake, Lake County, Oregon *Baldwin Lake, San Bernardino County, California* Bear Lake on the Utah–Idaho border*Lake Magadi in Kenya*Lake Turkana in Kenya*Mono Lake, near Owens Valley in California*Redberry Lake, Saskatchewan *Summer Lake, Lake County, Oregon*Tramping Lake, Saskatchewan"
],
[
"See also",
"* Alkali metals* Alkaline earth metals* Base (chemistry)"
],
[
"References"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Ain't I a Woman? (book)"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''''Ain't I a Woman?",
"Black Women and Feminism''''' is a 1981 book by bell hooks titled after Sojourner Truth's \"Ain't I a Woman?\"",
"speech.",
"hooks examines the effect of racism and sexism on Black women, the civil rights movement, and feminist movements from suffrage to the 1970s.",
"She argues that the convergence of sexism and racism during slavery contributed to Black women having the lowest status and worst conditions of any group in American society.",
"White female abolitionists and suffragists were often more comfortable with Black male abolitionists such as Frederick Douglass, while southern segregationalists and stereotypes of Black female promiscuity and immorality caused protests whenever Black women spoke.",
"hooks points out that these white female reformers were more concerned with white morality than the conditions these morals caused Black Americans.Further, she argues that the stereotypes that were set during slavery still affect Black women today.",
"She argued that slavery allowed white society to stereotype white women as the pure goddess virgin and move Black women to the seductive whore stereotype formerly placed on all women, thus justifying the devaluation of Black femininity and rape of Black women.",
"The work which Black women have been forced to perform, either in slavery or in a discriminatory workplace, that would be non-gender conforming for white women has been used against Black women as a proof of their emasculating behavior.",
"hooks argues that Black nationalism was largely a patriarchal and misogynist movement, seeking to overcome racial divisions by strengthening sexist ones, and that it readily latched onto the idea of the emasculating Black matriarch proposed by Daniel Patrick Moynihan, whose theories bell hooks often criticizes.Meanwhile, she says, the \"feminist movement\", a largely white middle and upper class affair, did not articulate the needs of poor and non-white women, thus reinforcing sexism, racism, and classism.",
"She suggests this explains the low numbers of Black women who participated in the feminist movement in the 1970s, pointing to Louis Harris' Virginia Slims poll done in 1972 for Philip Morris that she says showed 62 percent of Black women supported \"efforts to change women's status\" and 67 percent \"sympathized with the women's rights movement\", compared with 45 and 35 percent of white women (also Steinem, 1972)."
],
[
"Reception",
"Since its publication, ''Ain't I a Woman'' has been critically acclaimed as groundbreaking in the study of feminist theory for discussing the correlation between the history of oppression Black women have faced in the United States and its lingering effects in modern American society.",
"''Ain't I a Woman'' is praised for tackling the intersection of race and gender that marginalizes Black women.",
"hooks' writing has also opened the door for other Black women to write and theorize about similar topics.",
"The book is commonly used in gender studies, Black studies, and philosophy courses.The work has led to some criticism of her being \"ahistorical, unscholarly (there were many complaints about the absence of footnotes), and homophobic\".",
"She does not provide a bibliography for any of her work, making it difficult to find the editors and publication information for the pieces listed under the \"notes\" section of her work.",
"In \"Theory as Liberatory Practice,\" hooks explains that her lack of conventional academic format was \"motivated by the desire to be inclusive, to reach as many readers as possible in as many different locations as possible\".In a book review of hooks' ''Remembered Rapture: The Writer at Work,'' Nicole Abraham criticizes hooks' unconventional format rationalization.",
"Abraham suggests that, if her rationalization for not providing footnotes and bibliographic information in her writing is that it will help her reach a broader, presumably less academic audience, hooks either assumes that the average person is uninterested in pursuing her sources and ideas or implies that her readers are too lazy or unsophisticated for proper endnotes."
],
[
"See also",
"* Black feminism"
],
[
"References"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"AMOS (programming language)"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Screenshot of the AMOS Professional user interface and code editor, displaying the start of a program included with the language'''AMOS BASIC''' is a dialect of the BASIC programming language for the Amiga computer.",
"Following on from the successful STOS BASIC for the Atari ST, AMOS BASIC was written for the Amiga by François Lionet with Constantin Sotiropoulos and published by Europress Software in 1990."
],
[
"History",
"AMOS competed on the Amiga platform with Acid Software's Blitz BASIC.",
"Both BASICs differed from other dialects on different platforms, in that they allowed the easy creation of fairly demanding multimedia software, with full structured code and many high-level functions to load images, animations, sounds and display them in various ways.The original AMOS was a BASIC interpreter which, whilst working fine, suffered the same disadvantages of any language being run interpretively.",
"By all accounts, AMOS was extremely fast among interpreted languages, being speedy enough that an extension called AMOS 3D could produce playable 3D games even on plain 7 MHz 68000 Amigas.",
"Later, an AMOS compiler was developed that further increased speed.",
"AMOS could also run MC68000 machine code, loaded into a program's memory banks.To simplify animation of sprites, AMOS included the AMOS Animation Language (AMAL), a compiled sprite scripting language which runs independently of the main AMOS BASIC program.",
"It was also possible to control screen and \"rainbow\" effects using AMAL scripts.",
"AMAL scripts in effect created CopperLists, small routines executed by the Amiga's Agnus chip.After the original version of AMOS, Europress released a compiler ('''AMOS Compiler'''), and two other versions of the language: '''Easy AMOS''', a simpler version for beginners, and '''AMOS Professional''', a more advanced version with added features, such as a better integrated development environment, ARexx support, a new user interface API and new flow control constructs.",
"Neither of these new versions was significantly more popular than the original AMOS.AMOS was used mostly to make multimedia software, video games (platformers and graphical adventures) and educational software.The language was mildly successful within the Amiga community.",
"Its ease of use made it especially attractive to beginners.Perhaps AMOS BASIC's biggest disadvantage, stemming from its Atari ST lineage, was its incompatibility with the Amiga's operating system functions and interfaces.",
"Instead, AMOS BASIC controlled the computer directly, which caused programs written in it to have a non-standard user interface, and also caused compatibility problems with newer versions of hardware.Today, the language has declined in popularity along with the Amiga computer for which it was written.",
"Despite this, a small community of enthusiasts are still using it.",
"The source code to AMOS was released around 2001 under a BSD style license by Clickteam, a company that includes the original programmer."
],
[
"Software",
"Software written using AMOS BASIC includes:* ''Miggybyte''* ''Scorched Tanks''* Games by Vulcan Software, amongst which was the ''Valhalla'' trilogy* Amiga version of ''Ultimate Domain'' (called ''Genesia'') by Microïds* ''Flight of the Amazon Queen'', by Interactive Binary Illusions* ''Extreme Violence'', included on an ''Amiga Power'' cover disk* ''Jetstrike'', a commercial game by Rasputin Software* ''Black Dawn'', a 1993 game for the Amiga personal computer"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* Source code for AMOS Professional 68000 ASM from pianetaamiga.it (archived, ZIP)* Source code for AMOS and STOS 68000 ASM from clickteam.com (archived, ZIP)* The AMOS Factory (an AMOS support/community site)* Amigacoding website (contains in-depth info and references for AMOS - Archived version 22 Sep 2015)* History of STOS and AMOS: how they came to be published in the UK* Amos Professional group on Facebook (one of the members is AMOS' original developer François Lionet)* Wikiversity: AMOS programming language"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Arcadia 2001"
],
[
"Introduction",
"The '''Arcadia 2001''' is a second-generation 8-bit home video game console released by Emerson Radio in May 1982 for a price of US$ 99, several months before the release of ColecoVision.",
"It was discontinued only 18 months later, with a total of 35 games having been released.",
"Emerson licensed the Arcadia 2001 to Bandai, which released it in Japan.",
"Over 30 Arcadia 2001 clones exist.The unrelated Arcadia Corporation, manufacturer of the Atari 2600 Supercharger add-on, was sued by Emerson for trademark infringement.",
"Arcadia Corporation then changed its name to Starpath."
],
[
"Description",
"The Arcadia is much smaller than its contemporary competitors and is powered by a standard 12 volt power supply so it can be used in a boat or a vehicle.",
"It has two headphone jacks on the far left and right sides of the back.The system came with two Intellivision-style controllers with a 12-button keypad and \"fire\" buttons on the sides.",
"The direction pads have a removable joystick attachment.",
"Most games came with BoPET overlays that can be applied to the controller's keypads.",
"The console itself has five buttons: Power, Start, Reset, Option, and Select.There are at least three different cartridge case styles and artwork, with variations on each.",
"Emerson-family cartridges come in two different lengths (short and long) of black plastic cases."
],
[
"Technical specifications",
"Arcadia 2001 motherboard*Main Processor: Signetics 2650 CPU (some variants run a Signetics 2650A)*RAM: 1 KB*ROM: None*Video display: 128 × 208 / 128 × 104, 8 Colours*Video display controller: Signetics 2637 UVI @ 3.58 MHz (NTSC), 3.55 MHz (PAL)*Sound: Single Channel \"Beeper\" + Single Channel \"Noise\"*Hardware Sprites: 4 independent, single color*Controllers: 2 × 2 way*Keypads: 2 × 12 button (more buttons on some variants)"
],
[
"Console variants and clones",
"Many variants and clones of the Arcadia 2001 have been released by various companies in different countries.",
"These systems are mostly compatible with each other.",
"In 1982, the Bandai Arcadia was released only in Japan.",
"Four exclusive games were released for the system.",
"Name Manufacturer Country Compatibility family ImageAdvision Home ArcadeEmerson consoleArcadiaBandai|Emerson consoleBandai Arcadia 2001Arcadia 2001Emerson|Emerson console200pxCosmosEmerson consoleDynavisionMPT-03 consoleEducatMPT-03 consoleEkuseraMPT-03 consoleHanimex MPT-03Hanimex|MPT-03 consoleHMG-2650Emerson console200pxHome Arcade CentreEmerson consoleIntelligent Game MPT-03MPT-03 consoleIntercord XL 2000 SystemEmerson consoleIntervision 2001Intervision Ormatu console200pxITMC MPT-03MPT-03 consoleLeisure VisionEmerson consoleLeonardoEmerson consoleHome Entertainment Centre Ch-50Ormatu consoleOrmatu 2001Ormatu console200pxPalladium Video-Computer-Game Neckermann Palladium consolePolybrain Video Computer GamePalladium consolePoppy MPT-03 Tele Computer SpielMPT-03 consolePrestige Video Computer Game MPT-03MPT-03 consoleRobdajet MPT-03MPT-03 consoleRowtron 2000MPT-03 consoleSchmid TVG-2000Schmid|Emerson console200pxSheen Home Video Centre 2001Ormatu consoleSoundic MPT-03MPT-03 console 200pxTedelex Home ArcadeEmerson consoleMr.",
"Altus Das Tele-Gehirn Color (German for ''tele brain'')Palladium console200pxTele-FeverTchibo|Emerson console200pxTempest MPT-03MPT-03 consoleTobby MPT-03Tobby?MPT-03 consoleTrakton Computer Video GamePalladium consoleTryom Video Game CenterMPT-03 consoleTunix Home ArcadeEmerson consoleUVI Compu-GameOrbit consoleVideo MasterOrbit console===Bandai Arcadia===In 1982, the '''Bandai Arcadia''', a variant of the Emerson Arcadia 2001, was licensed and distributed to Japan by Bandai for a price of 19,800 yen.",
"There were four Japan-exclusive games released by Bandai.*''Doraemon''*''Dr.",
"Slump''*''Mobile Suit Gundam''*''Super Dimension Fortress Macross''"
],
[
"Reception",
"The Emerson Booth at CES 1982, featuring their Arcadia 2001 system.After seeing the Arcadia 2001 at the summer 1982 Consumer Electronics Show, Danny Goodman of ''Creative Computing Video & Arcade Games'' reported that its graphics were similar to the Atari 2600's, and that \"our overall impression of the game play was favorable for a system in this price range, though no cartridge stands out as being an exciting original creation\".",
"He called the controller offering both Intellivision-like disc and joystick functionality \"A great idea\"."
],
[
"Games",
"Emerson planned to launch the console with 19 games.",
"Some Arcadia 2001 games are ports of lesser-known arcade games such as ''Route 16'', ''Jungler'', and ''Jump Bug'', which were not available on other home systems.Emerson actually created many popular arcade titles including ''Pac-Man'', ''Galaxian'' and ''Defender'' for the Arcadia, but never had them manufactured as Atari started to sue its competitor companies for releasing games to which it had exclusive-rights agreements.",
"Early marketing showed popular arcade games, but they were later released as clones.",
"For instance, the Arcadia 2001 game ''Space Raiders'' is a clone of ''Defender'', and ''Breakaway'' is a clone of ''Breakout''.=== Released games ===There are 47 games known to have been released for the Arcadia 2001 and its clones.===Bandai Arcadia Only===See here===Unreleased games===*"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* Video Game Console Library entry on the Arcadia 2001* TheGameConsole.com entry on the Arcadia 2001* The Dot Eaters entry on the Arcadia 2001* www.old-computers.com Emerson Arcadia 2001 museum entry* www.old-computers.com Article about Arcadia 2001 and clones* Arcadia 2001 retrospective at IGN"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Convex uniform honeycomb"
],
[
"Introduction",
"tetrahedra and red octahedra.In geometry, a '''convex uniform honeycomb''' is a uniform tessellation which fills three-dimensional Euclidean space with non-overlapping convex uniform polyhedral cells.Twenty-eight such honeycombs are known:* the familiar cubic honeycomb and 7 truncations thereof;* the alternated cubic honeycomb and 4 truncations thereof;* 10 prismatic forms based on the uniform plane tilings (11 if including the cubic honeycomb);* 5 modifications of some of the above by elongation and/or gyration.They can be considered the three-dimensional analogue to the uniform tilings of the plane.The Voronoi diagram of any lattice forms a convex uniform honeycomb in which the cells are zonohedra."
],
[
"History",
"* '''1900''': Thorold Gosset enumerated the list of semiregular convex polytopes with regular cells (Platonic solids) in his publication ''On the Regular and Semi-Regular Figures in Space of n Dimensions'', including one regular cubic honeycomb, and two semiregular forms with tetrahedra and octahedra.",
"* '''1905''': Alfredo Andreini enumerated 25 of these tessellations.",
"* '''1991''': Norman Johnson's manuscript ''Uniform Polytopes'' identified the list of 28.",
"* '''1994''': Branko Grünbaum, in his paper ''Uniform tilings of 3-space'', also independently enumerated all 28, after discovering errors in Andreini's publication.",
"He found the 1905 paper, which listed 25, had 1 wrong, and 4 being missing.",
"Grünbaum states in this paper that Norman Johnson deserves priority for achieving the same enumeration in 1991.He also mentions that I. Alexeyev of Russia had contacted him regarding a putative enumeration of these forms, but that Grünbaum was unable to verify this at the time.",
"* '''2006''': George Olshevsky, in his manuscript ''Uniform Panoploid Tetracombs'', along with repeating the derived list of 11 convex uniform tilings, and 28 convex uniform honeycombs, expands a further derived list of 143 convex uniform tetracombs (Honeycombs of uniform 4-polytopes in 4-space).Only 14 of the convex uniform polyhedra appear in these patterns:* three of the five Platonic solids (the tetrahedron, cube, and octahedron),* six of the thirteen Archimedean solids (the ones with reflective tetrahedral or octahedral symmetry), and* five of the infinite family of prisms (the 3-, 4-, 6-, 8-, and 12-gonal ones; the 4-gonal prism duplicates the cube).The icosahedron, snub cube, and square antiprism appear in some alternations, but those honeycombs cannot be realised with all edges unit length.=== Names ===This set can be called the '''regular and semiregular honeycombs'''.",
"It has been called the '''Archimedean honeycombs''' by analogy with the convex uniform (non-regular) polyhedra, commonly called Archimedean solids.",
"Recently Conway has suggested naming the set as the '''Architectonic tessellations''' and the dual honeycombs as the '''Catoptric tessellations'''.The individual honeycombs are listed with names given to them by Norman Johnson.",
"(Some of the terms used below are defined in Uniform 4-polytope#Geometric derivations for 46 nonprismatic Wythoffian uniform 4-polytopes)For cross-referencing, they are given with list indices from '''A'''ndreini (1-22), '''W'''illiams(1-2,9-19), '''J'''ohnson (11-19, 21–25, 31–34, 41–49, 51–52, 61–65), and '''G'''rünbaum(1-28).",
"Coxeter uses δ4 for a cubic honeycomb, hδ4 for an alternated cubic honeycomb, qδ4 for a quarter cubic honeycomb, with subscripts for other forms based on the ring patterns of the Coxeter diagram."
],
[
"Compact Euclidean uniform tessellations (by their infinite Coxeter group families)",
"Fundamental domains in a cubic element of three groups.Family correspondencesThe fundamental infinite Coxeter groups for 3-space are:# The , 4,3,4, cubic, (8 unique forms plus one alternation)# The , 4,31,1, alternated cubic, (11 forms, 3 new)# The cyclic group, (3,3,3,3) or 34, (5 forms, one new)There is a correspondence between all three families.",
"Removing one mirror from produces , and removing one mirror from produces .",
"This allows multiple constructions of the same honeycombs.",
"If cells are colored based on unique positions within each Wythoff construction, these different symmetries can be shown.In addition there are 5 special honeycombs which don't have pure reflectional symmetry and are constructed from reflectional forms with ''elongation'' and ''gyration'' operations.The total unique honeycombs above are 18.The prismatic stacks from infinite Coxeter groups for 3-space are:# The ×, 4,4,2,∞ prismatic group, (2 new forms)# The ×, 6,3,2,∞ prismatic group, (7 unique forms)# The ×, (3,3,3),2,∞ prismatic group, (No new forms)# The ××, ∞,2,∞,2,∞ prismatic group, (These all become a ''cubic honeycomb'')In addition there is one special ''elongated'' form of the triangular prismatic honeycomb.The total unique prismatic honeycombs above (excluding the cubic counted previously) are 10.Combining these counts, 18 and 10 gives us the total 28 uniform honeycombs.=== The C̃3, 4,3,4 group (cubic) ===The regular cubic honeycomb, represented by Schläfli symbol {4,3,4}, offers seven unique derived uniform honeycombs via truncation operations.",
"(One redundant form, the ''runcinated cubic honeycomb'', is included for completeness though identical to the cubic honeycomb.)",
"The reflectional symmetry is the affine Coxeter group 4,3,4.There are four index 2 subgroups that generate alternations: 1+,4,3,4, (4,3,4,2+), 4,3+,4, and 4,3,4+, with the first two generated repeated forms, and the last two are nonuniform.+ 4,3,4, space group Pmm (221)ReferenceIndicesHoneycomb nameCoxeter diagramand Schläfli symbolCell counts/vertexand positions in cubic honeycombFrames(Perspective)Vertex figureDual cell(0) (1) (2) (3)AltSolids(Partial)J11,15A1W1G22δ4cubic (chon) t0{4,3,4}{4,3,4} (8)30px(4.4.4) 75px75px75pxoctahedron 80pxCube, J12,32A15W14G7O1rectified cubic (rich) t1{4,3,4}r{4,3,4}(2)30px(3.3.3.3) (4)30px(3.4.3.4) 75px75px75pxcuboid80pxSquare bipyramidJ13A14W15G8t1δ4O15truncated cubic (tich) t0,1{4,3,4}t{4,3,4}(1)30px(3.3.3.3) (4)30px(3.8.8) 75px75px75pxsquare pyramid80pxIsosceles square pyramidJ14A17W12G9t0,2δ4O14cantellated cubic (srich) t0,2{4,3,4}rr{4,3,4}(1)30px(3.4.3.4)(2)30px(4.4.4) (2)30px(3.4.4.4) 75px75px75pxoblique triangular prism80pxTriangular bipyramidJ17A18W13G25t0,1,2δ4O17cantitruncated cubic (grich) t0,1,2{4,3,4}tr{4,3,4}(1)30px(4.6.6)(1)30px(4.4.4) (2)30px(4.6.8) 75px75px75pxirregular tetrahedron80pxTriangular pyramidilleJ18A19W19G20t0,1,3δ4O19runcitruncated cubic (prich)t0,1,3{4,3,4}(1)30px(3.4.4.4)(1)30px(4.4.4)(2)30px(4.4.8)(1)30px(3.8.8) 75px75px75pxoblique trapezoidal pyramid80px Square quarter pyramidille J21,31,51A2W9G1hδ4O21alternated cubic (octet)h{4,3,4} (8)30px(3.3.3)(6)30px(3.3.3.3)76px75px75pxcuboctahedron80pxDodecahedrilleJ22,34A21W17G10h2δ4O25Cantic cubic (tatoh) ↔ (1)30px(3.4.3.4) (2)30px(3.6.6)(2)30px(4.6.6)75px75px60pxrectangular pyramid80pxHalf oblate octahedrilleJ23A16W11G5h3δ4O26Runcic cubic (sratoh) ↔ (1)30px(4.4.4) (1)30px(3.3.3)(3)30px(3.4.4.4)75px75px60pxtapered triangular prism80pxQuarter cubilleJ24A20W16G21h2,3δ4O28Runcicantic cubic (gratoh) ↔ (1)30px(3.8.8) (1)30px(3.6.6)(2)30px(4.6.8)75px75px60pxIrregular tetrahedron80pxHalf pyramidilleNonuniformbsnub rectified cubic (serch)sr{4,3,4}(1)30px(3.3.3.3.3)(1)30px(3.3.3) (2)30px(3.3.3.3.4)(4)30px(3.3.3)75px75pxIrr.",
"tridiminished icosahedronNonuniformCantic snub cubic (casch)2s0{4,3,4}(1)30px(3.3.3.3.3)(2)30px(3.4.4.4)(3)30px(3.4.4)NonuniformRuncicantic snub cubic (rusch)(1)30px(3.4.3.4)(2)30px(4.4.4)(1)30px(3.3.3)(1)30px(3.6.6)(3)30pxTricupNonuniformRuncic cantitruncated cubic (esch) sr3{4,3,4}(1)30px(3.3.3.3.4)(1)30px(4.4.4)(1)30px(4.4.4)(1)30px(3.4.4.4)(3)30px(3.4.4)+ honeycombs, space group Imm (229)ReferenceIndicesHoneycomb nameCoxeter diagramand Schläfli symbolCell counts/vertexand positions in cubic honeycombSolids(Partial)Frames(Perspective)Vertex figureDual cell(0,3)(1,2)AltJ11,15A1W1G22δ4O1'''runcinated cubic'''(same as regular cubic) (chon)t0,3{4,3,4}(2)30px(4.4.4)(6)30px(4.4.4) 75px75px75pxoctahedron 80pxCubeJ16A3W2G28t1,2δ4O16bitruncated cubic (batch) t1,2{4,3,4}2t{4,3,4}(4)30px(4.6.6) 75px75px75px(disphenoid)80pxOblate tetrahedrilleJ19A22W18G27t0,1,2,3δ4O20omnitruncated cubic (gippich)t0,1,2,3{4,3,4}(2)30px(4.6.8)(2)30px(4.4.8) 75px75px75pxirregular tetrahedron80pxEighth pyramidilleJ21,31,51A2W9G1hδ4O27Quarter cubic honeycomb (batatoh)ht0ht3{4,3,4}(2)30px(3.3.3)(6)30px(3.6.6)76px75px75pxelongated triangular antiprism80pxOblate cubilleJ21,31,51A2W9G1hδ4O21Alternated runcinated cubic (octet)(same as alternated cubic)ht0,3{4,3,4}(2)30px(3.3.3)(6)30px(3.3.3)(6)30px(3.3.3.3)76px75px75pxcuboctahedronNonuniformBiorthosnub cubic honeycomb (gabreth)2s0,3{(4,2,4,3)}(2)30px(4.6.6)(2)30px(4.4.4)(2)30px(4.4.6)NonuniformaAlternated bitruncated cubic (bisch)h2t{4,3,4}30px (4)(3.3.3.3.3) 30px (4)(3.3.3)75px75px80pxNonuniformCantic bisnub cubic (cabisch)2s0,3{4,3,4}(2)30px(3.4.4.4)(2)30px(4.4.4)(2)30px(4.4.4)NonuniformcAlternated omnitruncated cubic (snich)ht0,1,2,3{4,3,4}(2)30px(3.3.3.3.4)(2)30px(3.3.3.4)(4)30px(3.3.3) 75px=== B̃3, 4,31,1 group ===The , 4,3 group offers 11 derived forms via truncation operations, four being unique uniform honeycombs.",
"There are 3 index 2 subgroups that generate alternations: 1+,4,31,1, 4,(31,1)+, and 4,31,1+.",
"The first generates repeated honeycomb, and the last two are nonuniform but included for completeness.The honeycombs from this group are called ''alternated cubic'' because the first form can be seen as a ''cubic honeycomb'' with alternate vertices removed, reducing cubic cells to tetrahedra and creating octahedron cells in the gaps.Nodes are indexed left to right as ''0,1,0',3'' with 0' being below and interchangeable with ''0''.",
"The ''alternate cubic'' names given are based on this ordering.+ 4,31,1 uniform honeycombs, space group Fmm (225)ReferencedindicesHoneycomb nameCoxeter diagramsCells by location(and count around each vertex)Solids(Partial)Frames(Perspective)vertex figure(0) (1) (0') (3)J21,31,51A2W9G1hδ4O21Alternated cubic (octet) ↔ 30px (6)(3.3.3.3)30px(8)(3.3.3)76px75px60pxcuboctahedronJ22,34A21W17G10h2δ4O25Cantic cubic (tatoh) ↔ 30px (1)(3.4.3.4) 30px (2)(4.6.6)30px (2)(3.6.6)75px75px60pxrectangular pyramidJ23A16W11G5h3δ4O26Runcic cubic (sratoh) ↔ 30px (1)cube 30px (3)(3.4.4.4)30px (1)(3.3.3)75px75px60pxtapered triangular prismJ24A20W16G21h2,3δ4O28Runcicantic cubic (gratoh) ↔ 30px (1)(3.8.8) 30px(2)(4.6.8)30px (1)(3.6.6)75px75px60pxIrregular tetrahedron+ 1,1> uniform honeycombs, space group Pmm (221)ReferencedindicesHoneycomb nameCoxeter diagrams ↔ Cells by location(and count around each vertex)Solids(Partial)Frames(Perspective)vertex figure(0,0') (1) (3)AltJ11,15A1W1G22δ4O1Cubic (chon) ↔ 30px (8)(4.4.4) 75px75px60pxoctahedronJ12,32A15W14G7t1δ4O15Rectified cubic (rich) ↔ 30px (4)(3.4.3.4) 30px (2)(3.3.3.3) 75px75px60pxcuboidRectified cubic (rich) ↔ 30px (2)(3.3.3.3) 30px (4)(3.4.3.4) 75px60pxcuboidJ13A14W15G8t0,1δ4O14Truncated cubic (tich) ↔ 30px (4)(3.8.8) 30px (1)(3.3.3.3) 75px75px60pxsquare pyramidJ14A17W12G9t0,2δ4O17Cantellated cubic (srich) ↔ 30px (2)(3.4.4.4)30px (2)(4.4.4)30px (1)(3.4.3.4) 75px75px60pxobilique triangular prismJ16A3W2G28t0,2δ4O16Bitruncated cubic (batch) ↔ 30px (2)(4.6.6) 30px (2)(4.6.6) 75px75px60pxisosceles tetrahedronJ17A18W13G25t0,1,2δ4O18Cantitruncated cubic (grich) ↔ 30px (2)(4.6.8)30px (1)(4.4.4)30px(1)(4.6.6) 75px75px60pxirregular tetrahedronJ21,31,51A2W9G1hδ4O21Alternated cubic (octet) ↔ 30px (8)(3.3.3) 30px (6)(3.3.3.3)75px75px60pxcuboctahedronJ22,34A21W17G10h2δ4O25Cantic cubic (tatoh) ↔ 30px (2)(3.6.6) 30px (1)(3.4.3.4)30px (2)(4.6.6)75px75px60pxrectangular pyramidNonuniformaAlternated bitruncated cubic (bisch) ↔ 30px (2)(3.3.3.3.3) 30px (2)(3.3.3.3.3)30px (4)(3.3.3)60pxNonuniformbAlternated cantitruncated cubic (serch) ↔ 30px (2)(3.3.3.3.4)30px (1)(3.3.3)30px (1)(3.3.3.3.3)30px (4)(3.3.3)75px60pxIrr.",
"tridiminished icosahedron=== Ã3, 34 group ===There are 5 forms constructed from the , 34 Coxeter group, of which only the ''quarter cubic honeycomb'' is unique.",
"There is one index 2 subgroup 34+ which generates the snub form, which is not uniform, but included for completeness.+ 34 uniform honeycombs, space group Fdm (227)ReferencedindicesHoneycomb nameCoxeter diagramsCells by location(and count around each vertex)Solids(Partial)Frames(Perspective)vertex figure(0,1)(2,3)J25,33A13W10G6qδ4O27quarter cubic (batatoh) ↔ q{4,3,4}30px (2)(3.3.3)30px (6)(3.6.6) 75px75px75pxtriangular antiprism+ 4> ↔ 4,31,1 uniform honeycombs, space group Fmm (225)ReferencedindicesHoneycomb nameCoxeter diagrams ↔ Cells by location(and count around each vertex)Solids(Partial)Frames(Perspective)vertex figure0(1,3)2J21,31,51A2W9G1hδ4O21alternated cubic (octet) ↔ ↔ h{4,3,4}30px (8)(3.3.3)30px (6)(3.3.3.3)75px75px75pxcuboctahedronJ22,34A21W17G10h2δ4O25cantic cubic (tatoh) ↔ ↔ h2{4,3,4}30px (2)(3.6.6)30px (1)(3.4.3.4)30px (2)(4.6.6)75px75px75pxRectangular pyramid+ 234 ↔ 4,3,4 uniform honeycombs, space group Pmm (221)ReferencedindicesHoneycomb nameCoxeter diagrams ↔ Cells by location(and count around each vertex)Solids(Partial)Frames(Perspective)vertex figure(0,2)(1,3)J12,32A15W14G7t1δ4O1rectified cubic (rich) ↔ ↔ ↔ r{4,3,4}30px (2)(3.4.3.4)30px (1)(3.3.3.3)75px75px75pxcuboid+ 434 ↔ uniform honeycombs, space group Imm (229)ReferencedindicesHoneycomb nameCoxeter diagrams ↔ ↔ Cells by location(and count around each vertex)Solids(Partial)Frames(Perspective)vertex figure(0,1,2,3)AltJ16A3W2G28t1,2δ4O16bitruncated cubic (batch) ↔ ↔ 2t{4,3,4}30px (4)(4.6.6)75px75px75pxisosceles tetrahedronNonuniformaAlternated cantitruncated cubic (bisch) ↔ ↔ h2t{4,3,4}30px (4)(3.3.3.3.3)30px (4)(3.3.3) 75px=== Nonwythoffian forms (gyrated and elongated) ===Three more uniform honeycombs are generated by breaking one or another of the above honeycombs where its faces form a continuous plane, then rotating alternate layers by 60 or 90 degrees (''gyration'') and/or inserting a layer of prisms (''elongation'').The elongated and gyroelongated alternated cubic tilings have the same vertex figure, but are not alike.",
"In the ''elongated'' form, each prism meets a tetrahedron at one triangular end and an octahedron at the other.",
"In the ''gyroelongated'' form, prisms that meet tetrahedra at both ends alternate with prisms that meet octahedra at both ends.The gyroelongated triangular prismatic tiling has the same vertex figure as one of the plain prismatic tilings; the two may be derived from the gyrated and plain triangular prismatic tilings, respectively, by inserting layers of cubes.ReferencedindicessymbolHoneycomb namecell types (# at each vertex)Solids(Partial)Frames(Perspective)vertex figureJ52A2'G2O22h{4,3,4}:ggyrated alternated cubic (gytoh)tetrahedron (8)octahedron (6)70px100px80px triangular orthobicupolaJ61A?G3O24h{4,3,4}:gegyroelongated alternated cubic (gyetoh)triangular prism (6)tetrahedron (4)octahedron (3)70px100px80pxJ62A?G4O23h{4,3,4}:eelongated alternated cubic (etoh)triangular prism (6)tetrahedron (4)octahedron (3)70px80pxJ63A?G12O12{3,6}:g × {∞}gyrated triangular prismatic (gytoph)triangular prism (12)70px100px80pxJ64A?G15O13{3,6}:ge × {∞}gyroelongated triangular prismatic (gyetaph)triangular prism (6)cube (4)70px100px80px=== Prismatic stacks ===Eleven '''prismatic''' tilings are obtained by stacking the eleven uniform plane tilings, shown below, in parallel layers.",
"(One of these honeycombs is the cubic, shown above.)",
"The vertex figure of each is an irregular bipyramid whose faces are isosceles triangles.==== The C̃2×Ĩ1(∞), 4,4,2,∞, prismatic group ====There are only 3 unique honeycombs from the square tiling, but all 6 tiling truncations are listed below for completeness, and tiling images are shown by colors corresponding to each form.IndicesCoxeter-Dynkinand SchläflisymbolsHoneycomb namePlanetilingSolids(Partial)TilingJ11,15A1G22 {4,4}×{∞}Cubic(Square prismatic) (chon)(4.4.4.4)80px50px r{4,4}×{∞}50px rr{4,4}×{∞}50pxJ45A6G24 t{4,4}×{∞} Truncated/Bitruncated square prismatic (tassiph)(4.8.8)80px50px tr{4,4}×{∞} 50pxJ44A11G14 sr{4,4}×{∞}Snub square prismatic (sassiph)(3.3.4.3.4)80px50pxNonuniformht0,1,2,3{4,4,2,∞}==== The G̃2xĨ1(∞), 6,3,2,∞ prismatic group ====IndicesCoxeter-Dynkinand SchläflisymbolsHoneycomb namePlanetilingSolids(Partial)TilingJ41A4G11 {3,6} × {∞}Triangular prismatic (tiph)(36)60px60pxJ42A5G26 {6,3} × {∞}Hexagonal prismatic (hiph)(63)60px60px t{3,6} × {∞}60px60pxJ43A8G18 r{6,3} × {∞}Trihexagonal prismatic (thiph)(3.6.3.6)60px60pxJ46A7G19 t{6,3} × {∞}Truncated hexagonal prismatic (thaph)(3.12.12)60px60pxJ47A9G16 rr{6,3} × {∞}Rhombi-trihexagonal prismatic (srothaph)(3.4.6.4)60px60pxJ48A12G17 sr{6,3} × {∞}Snub hexagonal prismatic (snathaph)(3.3.3.3.6)60px60pxJ49A10G23 tr{6,3} × {∞}truncated trihexagonal prismatic (grothaph)(4.6.12)60px60pxJ65A11'G13 {3,6}:e × {∞}elongated triangular prismatic (etoph)(3.3.3.4.4)60px60pxJ52A2'G2h3t{3,6,2,∞}gyrated tetrahedral-octahedral (gytoh)(36)60px60pxs2r{3,6,2,∞}Nonuniformht0,1,2,3{3,6,2,∞}=== Enumeration of Wythoff forms ===All nonprismatic Wythoff constructions by Coxeter groups are given below, along with their alternations.",
"Uniform solutions are indexed with Branko Grünbaum's listing.",
"Green backgrounds are shown on repeated honeycombs, with the relations are expressed in the extended symmetry diagrams.Coxeter groupExtendedsymmetryHoneycombsChiralextendedsymmetryAlternation honeycombs4,3,44,3,46 201+,4,3+,4,1+(2) b2+4,3,4 = (1) 222+(4,3+,4,2+)(1) 62+4,3,41282+(4,3+,4,2+)(1)a2+4,3,42272+4,3,4+(1)c4,31,1 4,31,14 2814,31,1=4,3,4 = (7) 25 11+,4,31,1+(2) a14,31,1+=4,3,4+(1)b3434(none)2+34 1 6134=4,31,1 = (2) 10234=4,3,4 = (1) 7(2+,4)34=2+4,3,4 = (1) 28(2+,4)34+= 2+4,3,4+(1) a===Examples===All 28 of these tessellations are found in crystal arrangements.The alternated cubic honeycomb is of special importance since its vertices form a cubic close-packing of spheres.",
"The space-filling truss of packed octahedra and tetrahedra was apparently first discovered by Alexander Graham Bell and independently re-discovered by Buckminster Fuller (who called it the octet truss and patented it in the 1940s).. Octet trusses are now among the most common types of truss used in construction."
],
[
"Frieze forms",
"If cells are allowed to be uniform tilings, more uniform honeycombs can be defined:Families:*×: 4,4,2 ''Cubic slab honeycombs'' (3 forms)*×: 6,3,2 ''Tri-hexagonal slab honeycombs'' (8 forms)* ×: (3,3,3),2 ''Triangular slab honeycombs'' (No new forms)*××: ∞,2,2 = ''Cubic column honeycombs'' (1 form)*×: p,2,∞ ''Polygonal column honeycombs'' (analogous to duoprisms: these look like a single infinite tower of p-gonal prisms, with the remaining space filled with apeirogonal prisms)* ××: ∞,2,∞,2 = 4,4,2 - = (Same as cubic slab honeycomb family)+ Examples (partially drawn)Cubic slab honeycombAlternated hexagonal slab honeycombTrihexagonal slab honeycomb180px180px180px180px(4) 43: cube(1) 44: square tiling180px(4) 33: tetrahedron(3) 34: octahedron(1) 36: triangular tiling180px(2) 3.4.4: triangular prism(2) 4.4.6: hexagonal prism(1) (3.6)2: trihexagonal tilingThe first two forms shown above are semiregular (uniform with only regular facets), and were listed by Thorold Gosset in 1900 respectively as the ''3-ic semi-check'' and ''tetroctahedric semi-check''."
],
[
"Scaliform honeycomb",
"A '''scaliform honeycomb''' is vertex-transitive, like a ''uniform honeycomb'', with regular polygon faces while cells and higher elements are only required to be ''orbiforms'', equilateral, with their vertices lying on hyperspheres.",
"For 3D honeycombs, this allows a subset of Johnson solids along with the uniform polyhedra.",
"Some scaliforms can be generated by an alternation process, leaving, for example, pyramid and cupola gaps.+ Euclidean honeycomb scaliformsFrieze slabsPrismatic stackss3{2,6,3}, s3{2,4,4}, s{2,4,4}, 3s4{4,4,2,∞}, 200px200px200px200px 40px 40px 40px 40px 40px 40px 40px 40px 40px 40px 40px 40px200px(1) 3.4.3.4: triangular cupola(2) 3.4.6: triangular cupola(1) 3.3.3.3: octahedron(1) 3.6.3.6: trihexagonal tiling200px(1) 3.4.4.4: square cupola(2) 3.4.8: square cupola(1) 3.3.3: tetrahedron(1) 4.8.8: truncated square tiling200px(1) 3.3.3.3: square pyramid(4) 3.3.4: square pyramid(4) 3.3.3: tetrahedron(1) 4.4.4.4: square tiling200px(1) 3.3.3.3: square pyramid(4) 3.3.4: square pyramid(4) 3.3.3: tetrahedron(4) 4.4.4: cube"
],
[
"Hyperbolic forms",
"The order-4 dodecahedral honeycomb, {5,3,4} in perspectiveThe paracompact hexagonal tiling honeycomb, {6,3,3}, in perspectiveThere are 9 Coxeter group families of compact uniform honeycombs in hyperbolic 3-space, generated as Wythoff constructions, and represented by ring permutations of the Coxeter-Dynkin diagrams for each family.From these 9 families, there are a total of 76 unique honeycombs generated:* 3,5,3 : - 9 forms* 5,3,4 : - 15 forms* 5,3,5 : - 9 forms* 5,31,1 : - 11 forms (7 overlap with 5,3,4 family, 4 are unique)* (4,3,3,3) : - 9 forms* (4,3,4,3) : - 6 forms* (5,3,3,3) : - 9 forms* (5,3,4,3) : - 9 forms* (5,3,5,3) : - 6 formsSeveral non-Wythoffian forms outside the list of 76 are known; it is not known how many there are.=== Paracompact hyperbolic forms ===There are also 23 paracompact Coxeter groups of rank 4.These families can produce uniform honeycombs with unbounded facets or vertex figure, including ideal vertices at infinity:+ Simplectic hyperbolic paracompact group summaryTypeCoxeter groupsUnique honeycomb countLinear graphs 4×15+6+8+8 = 82Tridental graphs 4+4+0 = 8Cyclic graphs 4×9+5+1+4+1+0 = 47Loop-n-tail graphs 4+4+4+2 = 14"
],
[
"References",
"* John H. Conway, Heidi Burgiel, Chaim Goodman-Strauss, (2008) ''The Symmetries of Things'', (Chapter 21, Naming the Archimedean and Catalan polyhedra and tilings, Architectonic and Catoptric tessellations, p 292–298, includes all the nonprismatic forms)* Branko Grünbaum, (1994) Uniform tilings of 3-space.",
"Geombinatorics 4, 49 - 56.",
"* Norman Johnson (1991) ''Uniform Polytopes'', Manuscript* (Chapter 5: Polyhedra packing and space filling)* * '''Kaleidoscopes: Selected Writings of H.S.M.",
"Coxeter''', edited by F. Arthur Sherk, Peter McMullen, Anthony C. Thompson, Asia Ivic Weiss, Wiley-Interscience Publication, 1995, ** (Paper 22) H.S.M.",
"Coxeter, ''Regular and Semi Regular Polytopes I'', Math.",
"Zeit.",
"46 (1940) 380–407, MR 2,10 (1.9 Uniform space-fillings)* A. Andreini, (1905) ''Sulle reti di poliedri regolari e semiregolari e sulle corrispondenti reti correlative'' (On the regular and semiregular nets of polyhedra and on the corresponding correlative nets), Mem.",
"Società Italiana della Scienze, Ser.3, 14 75–129.PDF * D. M. Y. Sommerville, (1930) ''An Introduction to the Geometry of '''n''' Dimensions.''",
"New York, E. P. Dutton, .",
"196 pp.",
"(Dover Publications edition, 1958) Chapter X: The Regular Polytopes* Chapter 5.Joining polyhedra* Crystallography of Quasicrystals: Concepts, Methods and Structures by Walter Steurer, Sofia Deloudi (2009), p. 54-55.12 packings of 2 or more uniform polyhedra with cubic symmetry"
],
[
"External links",
"* * Uniform Honeycombs in 3-Space VRML models* Elementary Honeycombs Vertex transitive space filling honeycombs with non-uniform cells.",
"* Uniform partitions of 3-space, their relatives and embedding, 1999* The Uniform Polyhedra* Virtual Reality Polyhedra The Encyclopedia of Polyhedra* octet truss animation* Review: A. F. Wells, Three-dimensional nets and polyhedra, H. S. M. Coxeter (Source: Bull.",
"Amer.",
"Math.",
"Soc.",
"Volume 84, Number 3 (1978), 466-470.",
")* *"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Assassination"
],
[
"Introduction",
"John F Kennedy riding in a motorcade shortly before he was assassinated.",
"'''Assassination''' is the willful killing, by a sudden, secret, or planned attack, of a personespecially if prominent or important.",
"It may be prompted by grievances, notoriety, financial, military, political or other motives.",
"Many times governments, corporations, organized crime or their agents order assassinations.",
"Acts of assassination have been performed since ancient times.",
"A person who carries out an assassination is called an '''assassin''' or '''hitman'''."
],
[
"Etymology",
"Nikolay Bobrikov, the Russian Governor-General of Finland, assassinated by Eugen Schauman on June 16, 1904, in Helsinki.",
"A drawing of the assassination by an unknown author.Mugshot of Lee Harvey Oswald, the individual responsible for the assassination of United States President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963.Oswald himself was murdered two days later by Jack Ruby, the first such event to receive wide television coverage.|left''Assassin'' is often believed to derive from the word ''hashshashin'' (), and shares its etymological roots with ''hashish'' ( or ; from '''').",
"It referred to a group of Nizari Ismailis known as the Order of Assassins who worked against various political targets.Founded by Hassan-i Sabbah, the Assassins were active in the Near East from the 8th to the 14th centuries, and later expanded into a de facto state by acquiring or building many scattered strongholds.",
"The group killed members of the Abbasid, Seljuk, Fatimid, and Christian Crusader elite for political and religious reasons.Although it is commonly believed that Assassins were under the influence of hashish during their killings or during their indoctrination, there is debate as to whether these claims have merit, with many Eastern writers and an increasing number of Western academics coming to believe that drug-taking was not the key feature behind the name.The earliest known use of the verb \"to assassinate\" in printed English was by Matthew Sutcliffe in ''A Briefe Replie to a Certaine Odious and Slanderous Libel, Lately Published by a Seditious Jesuite'', a pamphlet printed in 1600, five years before it was used in ''Macbeth'' by William Shakespeare (1605)."
],
[
"Use in history",
"===Ancient to medieval times===Assassination is one of the oldest tools of power politics.",
"It dates back at least as far as recorded history.The Egyptian pharaoh Teti, of the Old Kingdom Sixth Dynasty (23rd century BCE), is thought to be the earliest known victim of assassination, though written records are scant and thus evidence is circumstantial.",
"Two further ancient Egyptian monarchs are more explicitly recorded to have been assassinated; Amenemhat I of the Middle Kingdom Twelfth Dynasty (20th century BCE) is recorded to have been assassinated in his bed by his palace guards for reasons unknown (as related in the ''Instructions of Amenemhat''); meanwhile contemporary judicial records relate the assassination of New Kingdom Twentieth Dynasty monarch Ramesses III in 1155 BCE as part of a failed coup attempt.",
"Between 550 BC and 330 BC, seven Persian kings of Achaemenid Dynasty were murdered.",
"The Art of War, a 5th-century BC Chinese military treatise mentions tactics of Assassination and its merits.In the Old Testament, King Joash of Judah was assassinated by his own servants; Joab assassinated Absalom, King David's son; King Sennacherib of Assyria was assassinated by his own sons; and Jael assassinated Sisera.Chanakya (–283 BC) wrote about assassinations in detail in his political treatise ''Arthashastra''.",
"His student Chandragupta Maurya, the founder of the Maurya Empire, later made use of assassinations against some of his enemies.Some famous assassination victims are Philip II of Macedon (336 BC), the father of Alexander the Great, and Roman dictator Julius Caesar (44 BC).",
"Emperors of Rome often met their end in this way, as did many of the Muslim Shia Imams hundreds of years later.",
"Three successive Rashidun caliphs (Umar, Uthman Ibn Affan, and Ali ibn Abi Talib) were assassinated in early civil conflicts between Muslims.",
"The practice was also well known in ancient China, as in Jing Ke's failed assassination of Qin king Ying Zheng in 227 BC.",
"Whilst many assassinations were performed by individuals or small groups, there were also specialized units who used a collective group of people to perform more than one assassination.",
"The earliest were the sicarii in 6 AD, who predated the Middle Eastern Assassins and Japanese shinobis by centuries.In the Middle Ages, regicide was rare in Western Europe, but it was a recurring theme in the Eastern Roman Empire.",
"Strangling in the bathtub was the most commonly used method.",
"With the Renaissance, tyrannicide—or assassination for personal or political reasons—became more common again in Western Europe.===Modern history===Shown in the presidential booth of Ford's Theatre, from left to right, are assassin John Wilkes Booth, Abraham Lincoln, Mary Todd Lincoln, Clara Harris and Henry Rathbone.|leftDuring the 16th and 17th centuries, international lawyers began to voice condemnation of assassinations of leaders.",
"Balthazar Ayala has been described as \"the first prominent jurist to condemn the use of assassination in foreign policy\".",
"Alberico Gentili condemned assassinations in a 1598 publication where he appealed to the self-interest of leaders: (i) assassinations had adverse short-term consequences by arousing the ire of the assassinated leader's successor, and (ii) assassinations had the adverse long-term consequences of causing disorder and chaos.",
"Hugo Grotius's works on the law of war strictly forbade assassinations, arguing that killing was only permissible on the battlefield.",
"In the modern world, the killing of important people began to become more than a tool in power struggles between rulers themselves and was also used for political symbolism, such as in the propaganda of the deed.In Japan, a group of assassins called the Four Hitokiri of the Bakumatsu killed a number of people, including Ii Naosuke who was the head of administration for the Tokugawa shogunate, during the Boshin War.",
"Most of the assassinations in Japan were committed with bladed weaponry, a trait that was carried on into modern history.",
"A video-record exists of the assassination of Inejiro Asanuma, using a sword.In 1895, a group of Japanese assassins killed the Korean queen (and posthumously empress) Myeongseong.In the United States, within 100 years, four presidents—Abraham Lincoln, James A. Garfield, William McKinley and John F. Kennedy—died at the hands of assassins.",
"There have been at least 20 known attempts on U.S. presidents' lives.In Austria, the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife Sophie, Duchess of Hohenberg in Sarajevo on June 28, 1914, carried out by Gavrilo Princip, a Serbian nationalist.",
"He is blamed for igniting World War I. Reinhard Heydrich died after an attack by British-trained Czechoslovak soldiers on behalf of the Czechoslovak government in exile in Operation Anthropoid, and knowledge from decoded transmissions allowed the United States to carry out a targeted attack, killing Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto while he was travelling by plane.During the 1930s and 1940s, Joseph Stalin's NKVD carried out numerous assassinations outside of the Soviet Union, such as the killings of Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists leader Yevhen Konovalets, Ignace Poretsky, Fourth International secretary Rudolf Klement, Leon Trotsky, and the Workers' Party of Marxist Unification (POUM) leadership in Catalonia.",
"India's \"Father of the Nation\", Mahatma Gandhi, was shot to death on January 30, 1948, by Nathuram Godse.The African-American civil rights activist, Martin Luther King Jr., was assassinated on April 4, 1968, at the Lorraine Motel (now the National Civil Rights Museum) in Memphis, Tennessee.",
"Three years prior, another African-American civil rights activist, Malcolm X, was assassinated at the Audubon Ballroom on February 21, 1965.===Cold War and beyond===Indira Gandhi's blood-stained sari and belongings at the time of her assassination.",
"She was the Prime Minister of India.Most major powers repudiated Cold War assassination tactics, but many allege that was merely a smokescreen for political benefit and that covert and illegal training of assassins continues today, with Russia, Israel, the U.S., Argentina, Paraguay, Chile, and other nations accused of engaging in such operations.",
"After the Iranian Revolution of 1979, the new Islamic government of Iran began an international campaign of assassination that lasted into the 1990s.",
"At least 162 killings in 19 countries have been linked to the senior leadership of the Islamic Republic of Iran.",
"The campaign came to an end after the Mykonos restaurant assassinations because a German court publicly implicated senior members of the government and issued arrest warrants for Ali Fallahian, the head of Iranian intelligence.",
"Evidence indicates that Fallahian's personal involvement and individual responsibility for the murders were far more pervasive than his current indictment record represents.In India, Prime Ministers Indira Gandhi and her son Rajiv Gandhi (neither of whom was related to Mahatma Gandhi, who had himself been assassinated in 1948), were assassinated in 1984 and 1991 in what were linked to separatist movements in Punjab and northern Sri Lanka, respectively.In 1994, the assassination of Juvénal Habyarimana and Cyprien Ntaryamira during the Rwandan Civil War sparked the Rwandan genocide.In Israel, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated on November 4, 1995, by Yigal Amir, who opposed the Oslo Accords.",
"In Lebanon, the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri on February 14, 2005, prompted an investigation by the United Nations.",
"The suggestion in the resulting ''Mehlis report'' that there was involvement by Syria prompted the Cedar Revolution, which drove Syrian troops out of Lebanon.==== United States government killing of citizens ====In 2010, ''The New York Times'' revealed the existence of a hit list made by the Obama administration.",
"It included at least three Americans to be killed without any kind of court oversight and no trial, against the background of the War on Terror.",
"Officials of the government proposed who to kill and the president decided who was going to get killed.",
"In September 2011, American citizens Anwar Al-Awlaki and Samir Khan were assassinated by the United States government with drone strikes.",
"Two weeks later, Awlaki's 16-year-old son was also killed."
],
[
"Further motivations",
"===As a military and foreign policy doctrine===The functions of the ninja included espionage, sabotage and assassination.Assassination for military purposes has long been espoused: Sun Tzu, writing around 500 BC, argued in favor of using assassination in his book ''The Art of War''.",
"Nearly 2000 years later, in his book ''The Prince'', Machiavelli also advises rulers to assassinate enemies whenever possible to prevent them from posing a threat.",
"An army and even a nation might be based upon and around a particularly strong, canny, or charismatic leader, whose loss could paralyze the ability of both to make war.For similar and additional reasons, assassination has also sometimes been used in the conduct of foreign policy.",
"The costs and benefits of such actions are difficult to compute.",
"It may not be clear whether the assassinated leader gets replaced with a more or less competent successor, whether the assassination provokes ire in the state in question, whether the assassination leads to souring domestic public opinion, and whether the assassination provokes condemnation from third-parties.",
"One study found that perceptual biases held by leaders often negatively affect decision making in that area, and decisions to go forward with assassinations often reflect the vague hope that any successor might be better.In both military and foreign policy assassinations, there is the risk that the target could be replaced by an even more competent leader, or that such a killing (or a failed attempt) will prompt the masses to contemn the killers and support the leader's cause more strongly.",
"Faced with particularly brilliant leaders, that possibility has in various instances been risked, such as in the attempts to kill the Athenian Alcibiades during the Peloponnesian War.",
"A number of additional examples from World War II show how assassination was used as a tool:* The assassination of Reinhard Heydrich in Prague on May 27, 1942, by the British and Czechoslovak government-in-exile.",
"That case illustrates the difficulty of comparing the benefits of a foreign policy goal (strengthening the legitimacy and influence of the Czechoslovak government-in-exile in London) against the possible costs resulting from an assassination (the Lidice massacre).",
"* The American interception of Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto's plane during World War II after his travel route had been decrypted.",
"* Operation Gaff was a planned British commando raid to capture or kill the German field marshal Erwin Rommel, also known as \"The Desert Fox\".Use of assassination has continued in more recent conflicts:* During the Vietnam War, the US engaged in the Phoenix Program to assassinate Viet Cong leaders and sympathizers.",
"It killed between 6,000 and 41,000 people, with official \"targets\" of 1,800 per month.",
"* With the January 3, 2020 Baghdad International Airport airstrike, the US assassinated the commander of Iran's Quds Force General Qasem Soleimani and the commander of Iraq's Popular Mobilization Forces Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, along with eight other high-ranking military personnel.",
"The assassination of the military leaders was part of escalating tensions between the US and Iran and the American-led intervention in Iraq.===As a tool of insurgents===Insurgent groups have often employed assassination as a tool to further their causes.",
"Assassinations provide several functions for such groups: the removal of specific enemies and as propaganda tools to focus the attention of media and politics on their cause.The Irish Republican Army guerrillas in 1919 to 1921 killed many Royal Irish Constabulary Police intelligence officers during the Irish War of Independence.",
"Michael Collins set up a special unit, the Squad, for that purpose, which had the effect of intimidating many policemen into resigning from the force.",
"The Squad's activities peaked with the killing of 14 British agents in Dublin on Bloody Sunday in 1920.The tactic was used again by the Provisional IRA during the Troubles in Northern Ireland (1969–1998).",
"Assassination of unionist politicians and activists was one of a number of methods used in the Provisional IRA campaign 1969–1997.The IRA also attempted to assassinate British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher by bombing the Conservative Party Conference in a Brighton hotel.",
"Loyalist paramilitaries retaliated by killing Catholics at random and assassinating Irish nationalist politicians.Basque separatists ETA in Spain assassinated many security and political figures since the late 1960s, notably the president of the government of Spain, Luis Carrero Blanco, 1st Duke of Carrero-Blanco Grandee of Spain, in 1973.In the early 1990s, it also began to target academics, journalists and local politicians who publicly disagreed with it.The Red Brigades in Italy carried out assassinations of political figures and, to a lesser extent, so did the Red Army Faction in Germany in the 1970s and the 1980s.In the Vietnam War, communist insurgents routinely assassinated government officials and individual civilians deemed to offend or rival the revolutionary movement.",
"Such attacks, along with widespread military activity by insurgent bands, almost brought the Ngo Dinh Diem regime to collapse before the US intervened."
],
[
"Psychology",
"A major study about assassination attempts in the US in the second half of the 20th century came to the conclusion that most prospective assassins spend copious amounts of time planning and preparing for their attempts.",
"Assassinations are thus rarely \"impulsive\" actions.However, about 25% of the actual attackers were found to be delusional, a figure that rose to 60% with \"near-lethal approachers\" (people apprehended before reaching their targets).",
"That shows that while mental instability plays a role in many modern assassinations, the more delusional attackers are less likely to succeed in their attempts.",
"The report also found that around two-thirds of attackers had previously been arrested, not necessarily for related offenses; 44% had a history of serious depression, and 39% had a history of substance abuse."
],
[
"Techniques",
"===Modern methods===With the advent of effective ranged weaponry and later firearms, the position of an assassination target was more precarious.",
"Bodyguards were no longer enough to deter determined killers, who no longer needed to engage directly or even to subvert the guard to kill the leader in question.",
"Moreover, the engagement of targets at greater distances dramatically increased the chances for assassins to survive since they could quickly flee the scene.",
"The first heads of government to be assassinated with a firearm were James Stewart, 1st Earl of Moray, the regent of Scotland, in 1570, and William the Silent, the Prince of Orange of the Netherlands, in 1584.Gunpowder and other explosives also allowed the use of bombs or even greater concentrations of explosives for deeds requiring a larger touch.Explosives, especially the car bomb, become far more common in modern history, with grenades and remote-triggered land mines also used, especially in the Middle East and the Balkans; the initial attempt on Archduke Franz Ferdinand's life was with a grenade.",
"With heavy weapons, the rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) has become a useful tool given the popularity of armored cars (discussed below), and Israeli forces have pioneered the use of aircraft-mounted missiles, as well as the innovative use of explosive devices.Rifle of Lee Harvey Oswald, the assassin of President John F. KennedyDerringer of John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Abraham LincolnA sniper with a precision rifle is often used in fictional assassinations; however, certain pragmatic difficulties attend long-range shooting, including finding a hidden shooting position with a clear line of sight, detailed advance knowledge of the intended victim's travel plans, the ability to identify the target at long range, and the ability to score a first-round lethal hit at long range, which is usually measured in hundreds of meters.",
"A dedicated sniper rifle is also expensive, often costing thousands of dollars because of the high level of precision machining and handfinishing required to achieve extreme accuracy.Despite their comparative disadvantages, handguns are more easily concealable and so are much more commonly used than rifles.",
"Of the 74 principal incidents evaluated in a major study about assassination attempts in the US in the second half of the 20th century, 51% were undertaken by a handgun, 30% with a rifle or shotgun, 15% used knives, and 8% explosives (the use of multiple weapons/methods was reported in 16% of all cases).In the case of state-sponsored assassination, poisoning can be more easily denied.",
"Georgi Markov, a dissident from Bulgaria, was assassinated by ricin poisoning.",
"A tiny pellet containing the poison was injected into his leg through a specially designed umbrella.",
"Widespread allegations involving the Bulgarian government and the KGB have not led to any legal results.",
"However, after the fall of the Soviet Union, it was learned that the KGB had developed an umbrella that could inject ricin pellets into a victim, and two former KGB agents who defected stated that the agency assisted in the murder.",
"The CIA made several attempts to assassinate Fidel Castro; many of the schemes involving poisoning his cigars.",
"In the late 1950s, the KGB assassin Bohdan Stashynsky killed Ukrainian nationalist leaders Lev Rebet and Stepan Bandera with a spray gun that fired a jet of poison gas from a crushed cyanide ampule, making their deaths look like heart attacks.",
"A 2006 case in the UK concerned the assassination of Alexander Litvinenko who was given a lethal dose of radioactive polonium-210, possibly passed to him in aerosol form sprayed directly onto his food."
],
[
"Targeted killing",
"Predator combat drone; sometimes used in targeted killingsTargeted killing is the intentional killing by a government or its agents of a civilian or \"unlawful combatant\" who is not in the government's custody.",
"The target is a person asserted to be taking part in an armed conflict or terrorism, by bearing arms or otherwise, who has thereby lost the immunity from being targeted that he would otherwise have under the Third Geneva Convention.",
"It is a different term and concept from that of \"targeted violence\", as used by specialists who study violence.On the other hand, Gary D. Solis, a professor at Georgetown University Law Center, in his 2010 book ''The Law of Armed Conflict: International Humanitarian Law in War'', wrote, \"Assassinations and targeted killings are very different acts.\"",
"The use of the term \"assassination\" is opposed, as it denotes murder (unlawful killing), but the terrorists are targeted in self-defense, which is thus viewed as a killing but not a crime (justifiable homicide).",
"Abraham D. Sofaer, former federal judge for the US District Court for the Southern District of New York, wrote on the subject:When people call a targeted killing an \"assassination\", they are attempting to preclude debate on the merits of the action.",
"Assassination is widely defined as murder, and is for that reason prohibited in the United States ... U.S. officials may not kill people merely because their policies are seen as detrimental to our interests...",
"But killings in self-defense are no more \"assassinations\" in international affairs than they are murders when undertaken by our police forces against domestic killers.",
"Targeted killings in self-defense have been authoritatively determined by the federal government to fall outside the assassination prohibition.Author and former U.S. Army Captain Matthew J. Morgan argued that \"there is a major difference between assassination and targeted killing... targeted killing is not synonymous with assassination.",
"Assassination... constitutes an illegal killing.\"",
"Similarly, Amos Guiora, a professor of law at the University of Utah, wrote, \"Targeted killing is... not an assassination.\"",
"Steve David, professor of international relations at Johns Hopkins University, wrote, \"There are strong reasons to believe that the Israeli policy of targeted killing is not the same as assassination.\"",
"Syracuse Law William Banks and GW Law Peter Raven-Hansen wrote, \"Targeted killing of terrorists is... not unlawful and would not constitute assassination.\"",
"Rory Miller writes: \"Targeted killing... is not 'assassination.",
"Eric Patterson and Teresa Casale wrote, \"Perhaps most important is the legal distinction between targeted killing and assassination.",
"\"On the other hand, the American Civil Liberties Union also states on its website, \"A program of targeted killing far from any battlefield, without charge or trial, violates the constitutional guarantee of due process.",
"It also violates international law, under which lethal force may be used outside armed conflict zones only as a last resort to prevent imminent threats, when non-lethal means are not available.",
"Targeting people who are suspected of terrorism for execution, far from any war zone, turns the whole world into a battlefield.",
"\"Yael Stein, the research director of B'Tselem, the Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories, also stated in her article \"By Any Name Illegal and Immoral: Response to 'Israel's Policy of Targeted Killing:The argument that this policy affords the public a sense of revenge and retribution could serve to justify acts both illegal and immoral.",
"Clearly, lawbreakers ought to be punished.",
"Yet, no matter how horrific their deeds, as the targeting of Israeli civilians indeed is, they should be punished according to the law.",
"David's arguments could, in principle, justify the abolition of formal legal systems altogether.Targeted killing has become a frequent tactic of the United States and Israel in their fight against terrorism.",
"The tactic can raise complex questions and lead to contentious disputes as to the legal basis for its application, who qualifies as an appropriate \"hit list\" target, and what circumstances must exist before the tactic may be used.",
"Opinions range from people considering it a legal form of self-defense that decreases terrorism to people calling it an extrajudicial killing that lacks due process and leads to further violence.",
"Methods used have included firing Hellfire missiles from Predator or Reaper drones (unmanned, remote-controlled planes), detonating a cell phone bomb, and long-range sniper shooting.",
"Countries such as the US (in Pakistan and Yemen) and Israel (in the West Bank and Gaza) have used targeted killing to eliminate members of groups such as Al-Qaeda and Hamas.",
"In early 2010, with President Obama's approval, Anwar al-Awlaki became the first US citizen to be publicly approved for targeted killing by the Central Intelligence Agency.",
"Awlaki was killed in a drone strike in September 2011.United Nations investigator Ben Emmerson said that US drone strikes may have violated international humanitarian law.",
"''The Intercept'' reported, \"Between January 2012 and February 2013, U.S. special operations airstrikes in northeastern Afghanistan killed more than 200 people.",
"Of those, only 35 were the intended targets.\""
],
[
"Countermeasures",
"===Early forms===IED during Sheik Abdul Sattar Abu Risha's assassination in 2007.One of the earliest forms of defense against assassins was employing bodyguards, who act as a shield for the potential target; keep a lookout for potential attackers, sometimes in advance, such as on a parade route; and putting themselves in harm's way, both by simple presence, showing that physical force is available to protect the target, and by shielding the target if any attack occurs.",
"To neutralize an attacker, bodyguards are typically armed as much as legal and practical concerns permit.Notable examples of bodyguards include the Roman Praetorian Guard or the Ottoman Janissaries, but in both cases, the protectors sometimes became assassins themselves, exploiting their power to make the head of state a virtual hostage or killing the very leaders whom they were supposed to protect.",
"The loyalty of individual bodyguards is an important question as well, especially for leaders who oversee states with strong ethnic or religious divisions.",
"Failure to realize such divided loyalties allowed the assassination of Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, who was assassinated by two Sikh bodyguards in 1984.The bodyguard function was often executed by the leader's most loyal warriors, and it was extremely effective throughout most of early human history, which led assassins to attempt stealthy means, such as poison, whose risk was reduced by having another person taste the leader's food first.===Modern strategies===Assassination attempt on President Ronald ReaganWith the advent of gunpowder, ranged assassination via bombs or firearms became possible.",
"One of the first reactions was simply to increase the guard, creating what at times might seem a small army trailing every leader.",
"Another was to begin clearing large areas whenever a leader was present to the point that entire sections of a city might be shut down.As the 20th century dawned, the prevalence and capability of assassins grew quickly, as did measures to protect against them.",
"For the first time, armored cars or limousines were put into service for safer transport, with modern versions virtually invulnerable to small arms fire, smaller bombs and mines.",
"Bulletproof vests also began to be used, but since they were of limited utility, restricting movement and leaving the head unprotected, they tended to be worn only during high-profile public events, if at all.Access to famous people also became more and more restricted; potential visitors would be forced through numerous different checks before being granted access to the official in question, and as communication became better and information technology more prevalent, it has become all but impossible for a would-be killer to get close enough to the personage at work or in private life to effect an attempt on their life, especially with the common use of metal and bomb detectors.Most modern assassinations have been committed either during a public performance or during transport, both because of weaker security and security lapses, such as with U.S. President John F. Kennedy and former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, or as part of a coup d'état in which security is either overwhelmed or completely removed, such as with Congolese Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba.Pope Benedict XVI in a modified Mercedes-Benz M-Class Popemobile in São Paulo, BrazilThe methods used for protection by famous people have sometimes evoked negative reactions by the public, with some resenting the separation from their officials or major figures.",
"One example might be traveling in a car protected by a bubble of clear bulletproof glass, such as the MRAP-like Popemobile of Pope John Paul II, built following an attempt at his life.",
"Politicians often resent the need for separation and sometimes send their bodyguards away from them for personal or publicity reasons.",
"US President William McKinley did so at the public reception in which he was assassinated.Other potential targets go into seclusion and are rarely heard from or seen in public, such as writer Salman Rushdie.",
"A related form of protection is the use of body doubles, people with similar builds to those they are expected to impersonate.",
"These people are then made up and, in some cases, undergo plastic surgery to look like the target, with the body double then taking the place of the person in high-risk situations.",
"According to Joe R. Reeder, Under Secretary of the Army from 1993 to 1997, Fidel Castro used body doubles.US Secret Service protective agents receive training in the psychology of assassins."
],
[
"See also",
"* Assassinations in fiction* Contract killing* History of assassination* Hitman* List of assassinated and executed heads of state and government* List of assassinations* List of assassinations by firearm* List of people who survived assassination attempts* List of United States presidential assassination attempts and plots* Special Activities Center of the Central Intelligence Agency"
],
[
"Notes and references"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* Ayton, Mel. ''",
"Plotting to Kill the President: Assassination Attempts from Washington to Hoover'' (Potomac Books, 2017), United States* * * Review ''The Daily Telegraph'', April 3, 2010.",
"* **"
],
[
"External links",
"* Notorious Assassinations – slideshow by ''Life'' magazine* CNN.",
"\"U.S. policy on assassinations\" from CNN.com/Law Center, November 4, 2002.See also Ford's 1976 executive order.",
"However, Executive Order 12333, which prohibited the CIA from assassinations, was relaxed by the George W. Bush administration.",
"* (PDF)* Is the CIA Assassination Order of a US Citizen Legal?",
"– video by ''Democracy Now!''"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Optical audio disc"
],
[
"Introduction",
"An '''audio optical disc''' is an optical disc that stores sound information such as music or speech.",
"It may specifically refer to:"
],
[
"Audio CDs",
"* Compact disc (CD), an optical disc used to store digital data (700 MB storage)** Compact Disc Digital Audio (CD-DA), a CD that contains PCM encoded digital audio in the original \"Red Book\" CD-DA format** 5.1 Music Disc, an extension to the Red Book standard that uses DTS Coherent Acoustics 5.1 surround sound** Compressed audio optical disc, an optical disc storing MP3s and other compressed audio files as data, rather than in the Red Book format"
],
[
"Audio DVDs",
"* DVD, 4 GB single layer, 8 GB double layer storage** DVD-Audio, a DVD that plays audio** Super Audio CD (SACD), a format which competes with DVD-Audio"
],
[
"Audio Blu-rays",
"* Blu-ray, 25 GB single layer, 50 GB double layer** BD-Audio, a Blu-ray disc that is capable of audio-only playback"
],
[
"See also",
"* Compatible Discrete 4 (CD-4), a variety of quadrophonic audio for vinyl records"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Alcoholism"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Alcoholism''' is the continued drinking of alcohol despite negative results.",
"Problematic use of alcohol has been mentioned in the earliest historical records, the World Health Organization (WHO) estimated there were 283 million people with alcohol use disorders worldwide .",
"The term ''alcoholism'' was first coined in 1852, but ''alcoholism'' and ''alcoholic'' are stigmatizing and discourage seeking treatment, so clinical diagnostic terms such as '''alcohol use disorder''' or '''alcohol dependence''' are used instead.Alcohol is addictive, and heavy long-term alcohol use results in many negative health and social consequences.",
"It can damage all the organ systems, but especially affects the brain, heart, liver, pancreas and immune system.",
"Heavy alcohol usage can result in trouble sleeping, and severe cognitive issues like dementia, brain damage, or Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome.",
"Physical effects include irregular heartbeat, an impaired immune response, liver cirrhosis, increased cancer risk, and severe withdrawal symptoms if stopped suddenly.",
"These health effects can reduce life expectancy by 10 years.",
"Drinking during pregnancy may harm the child's health, and drunk driving increases the risk of traffic accidents.",
"Alcoholism is also associated with increases in violent and non-violent crime.",
"While alcoholism directly resulted in 139,000 deaths worldwide in 2013, in 2012 3.3 million deaths may be attributable globally to alcohol.The development of alcoholism is attributed to both environment and genetics equally.",
"The use of alcohol to self-medicate stress or anxiety can turn into alcoholism.",
"Someone with a parent or sibling with an alcohol use disorder is three to four times more likely to develop an alcohol use disorder themselves, but only a minority of them do.",
"Environmental factors include social, cultural and behavioral influences.",
"High stress levels and anxiety, as well as alcohol's inexpensive cost and easy accessibility, increase the risk.",
"People may continue to drink partly to prevent or improve symptoms of withdrawal.",
"After a person stops drinking alcohol, they may experience a low level of withdrawal lasting for months.",
"Medically, alcoholism is considered both a physical and mental illness.",
"Questionnaires are usually used to detect possible alcoholism.",
"Further information is then collected to confirm the diagnosis.Treatment of alcoholism may take several forms.",
"Due to medical problems that can occur during withdrawal, alcohol cessation should be controlled carefully.",
"One common method involves the use of benzodiazepine medications, such as diazepam.",
"These can be taken while admitted to a health care institution or individually.",
"The medications acamprosate or disulfiram may also be used to help prevent further drinking.",
"Mental illness or other addictions may complicate treatment.",
"Various individual or group therapy or support groups are used to attempt to keep a person from returning to alcoholism.",
"Among them is the abstinence based mutual aid fellowship Alcoholics Anonymous (AA).",
"A 2020 scientific review found that clinical interventions encouraging increased participation in AA (AA/twelve step facilitation (AA/TSF))—resulted in higher abstinence rates over other clinical interventions, and most studies in the review found that AA/TSF led to lower health costs.Many terms, some slurs and some informal, have been used to refer to people affected by alcoholism such as ''tippler'', ''drunkard'', ''dipsomaniac'' and ''souse''."
],
[
"Signs and symptoms",
"The risk of alcohol dependence begins at low levels of drinking and increases directly with both the volume of alcohol consumed and a pattern of drinking larger amounts on an occasion, to the point of intoxication, which is sometimes called ''binge drinking''.===Long-term misuse===Some of the possible long-term effects of ethanol an individual may develop.",
"Additionally, in pregnant women, alcohol can cause fetal alcohol syndrome.Alcoholism is characterised by an increased tolerance to alcohol – which means that an individual can consume more alcohol – and physical dependence on alcohol, which makes it hard for an individual to control their consumption.",
"The physical dependency caused by alcohol can lead to an affected individual having a very strong urge to drink alcohol.",
"These characteristics play a role in decreasing the ability to stop drinking of an individual with an alcohol use disorder.",
"Alcoholism can have adverse effects on mental health, contributing to psychiatric disorders and increasing the risk of suicide.",
"A depressed mood is a common symptom of heavy alcohol drinkers.=== Warning signs ===Warning signs of alcoholism include the consumption of increasing amounts of alcohol and frequent intoxication, preoccupation with drinking to the exclusion of other activities, promises to quit drinking and failure to keep those promises, the inability to remember what was said or done while drinking (colloquially known as \"blackouts\"), personality changes associated with drinking, denial or the making of excuses for drinking, the refusal to admit excessive drinking, dysfunction or other problems at work or school, the loss of interest in personal appearance or hygiene, marital and economic problems, and the complaint of poor health, with loss of appetite, respiratory infections, or increased anxiety.====Physical=========Short-term effects=====Drinking enough to cause a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of 0.03–0.12% typically causes an overall improvement in mood and possible euphoria (intense feelings of well-being and happiness), increased self-confidence and sociability, decreased anxiety, a flushed, red appearance in the face and impaired judgment and fine muscle coordination.",
"A BAC of 0.09% to 0.25% causes lethargy, sedation, balance problems and blurred vision.",
"A BAC of 0.18% to 0.30% causes profound confusion, impaired speech (e.g.",
"slurred speech), staggering, dizziness and vomiting.",
"A BAC from 0.25% to 0.40% causes stupor, unconsciousness, anterograde amnesia, vomiting (death may occur due to inhalation of vomit while unconscious) and respiratory depression (potentially life-threatening).",
"A BAC from 0.35% to 0.80% causes a coma (unconsciousness), life-threatening respiratory depression and possibly fatal alcohol poisoning.",
"With all alcoholic beverages, drinking while driving, operating an aircraft or heavy machinery increases the risk of an accident; many countries have penalties for drunk driving.=====Long-term effects=====Having more than one drink a day for women or two drinks for men increases the risk of heart disease, high blood pressure, atrial fibrillation, and stroke.",
"Risk is greater with binge drinking, which may also result in violence or accidents.",
"About 3.3 million deaths (5.9% of all deaths) are believed to be due to alcohol each year.",
"Alcoholism reduces a person's life expectancy by around ten years and alcohol use is the third leading cause of early death in the United States.",
"Long-term alcohol misuse can cause a number of physical symptoms, including cirrhosis of the liver, pancreatitis, epilepsy, polyneuropathy, alcoholic dementia, heart disease, nutritional deficiencies, peptic ulcers and sexual dysfunction, and can eventually be fatal.",
"Other physical effects include an increased risk of developing cardiovascular disease, malabsorption, alcoholic liver disease, and several cancers.",
"Damage to the central nervous system and peripheral nervous system can occur from sustained alcohol consumption.",
"A wide range of immunologic defects can result and there may be a generalized skeletal fragility, in addition to a recognized tendency to accidental injury, resulting in a propensity for bone fractures.Women develop long-term complications of alcohol dependence more rapidly than do men, women also have a higher mortality rate from alcoholism than men.",
"Examples of long-term complications include brain, heart, and liver damage and an increased risk of breast cancer.",
"Additionally, heavy drinking over time has been found to have a negative effect on reproductive functioning in women.",
"This results in reproductive dysfunction such as anovulation, decreased ovarian mass, problems or irregularity of the menstrual cycle, and early menopause.",
"Alcoholic ketoacidosis can occur in individuals who chronically misuse alcohol and have a recent history of binge drinking.",
"The amount of alcohol that can be biologically processed and its effects differ between sexes.",
"Equal dosages of alcohol consumed by men and women generally result in women having higher blood alcohol concentrations (BACs), since women generally have a lower weight and higher percentage of body fat and therefore a lower volume of distribution for alcohol than men.====Psychiatric====Long-term misuse of alcohol can cause a wide range of mental health problems.",
"Severe cognitive problems are common; approximately 10% of all dementia cases are related to alcohol consumption, making it the second leading cause of dementia.",
"Excessive alcohol use causes damage to brain function, and psychological health can be increasingly affected over time.",
"Social skills are significantly impaired in people with alcoholism due to the neurotoxic effects of alcohol on the brain, especially the prefrontal cortex area of the brain.",
"The social skills that are impaired by alcohol use disorder include impairments in perceiving facial emotions, prosody, perception problems, and theory of mind deficits; the ability to understand humor is also impaired in people who misuse alcohol.",
"Psychiatric disorders are common in people with alcohol use disorders, with as many as 25% also having severe psychiatric disturbances.",
"The most prevalent psychiatric symptoms are anxiety and depression disorders.",
"Psychiatric symptoms usually initially worsen during alcohol withdrawal, but typically improve or disappear with continued abstinence.",
"Psychosis, confusion, and organic brain syndrome may be caused by alcohol misuse, which can lead to a misdiagnosis such as schizophrenia.",
"Panic disorder can develop or worsen as a direct result of long-term alcohol misuse.The co-occurrence of major depressive disorder and alcoholism is well documented.",
"Among those with comorbid occurrences, a distinction is commonly made between depressive episodes that remit with alcohol abstinence (\"substance-induced\"), and depressive episodes that are primary and do not remit with abstinence (\"independent\" episodes).",
"Additional use of other drugs may increase the risk of depression.",
"Psychiatric disorders differ depending on gender.",
"Women who have alcohol-use disorders often have a co-occurring psychiatric diagnosis such as major depression, anxiety, panic disorder, bulimia, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), or borderline personality disorder.",
"Men with alcohol-use disorders more often have a co-occurring diagnosis of narcissistic or antisocial personality disorder, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, impulse disorders or attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).",
"Women with alcohol use disorder are more likely to experience physical or sexual assault, abuse, and domestic violence than women in the general population, which can lead to higher instances of psychiatric disorders and greater dependence on alcohol.====Social effects====Serious social problems arise from alcohol use disorder; these dilemmas are caused by the pathological changes in the brain and the intoxicating effects of alcohol.",
"Alcohol misuse is associated with an increased risk of committing criminal offences, including child abuse, domestic violence, rape, burglary and assault.",
"Alcoholism is associated with loss of employment, which can lead to financial problems.",
"Drinking at inappropriate times and behavior caused by reduced judgment can lead to legal consequences, such as criminal charges for drunk driving or public disorder, or civil penalties for tortious behavior.",
"An alcoholic's behavior and mental impairment while drunk can profoundly affect those surrounding him and lead to isolation from family and friends.",
"This isolation can lead to marital conflict and divorce, or contribute to domestic violence.",
"Alcoholism can also lead to child neglect, with subsequent lasting damage to the emotional development of children of people with alcohol use disorders.",
"For this reason, children of people with alcohol use disorders can develop a number of emotional problems.",
"For example, they can become afraid of their parents, because of their unstable mood behaviors.",
"They may develop shame over their inadequacy to liberate their parents from alcoholism and, as a result of this, may develop self-image problems, which can lead to depression.===Alcohol withdrawal===\"The bottle has done its work\".",
"Reproduction of an etching by G. Cruikshank, 1847.As with similar substances with a sedative-hypnotic mechanism, such as barbiturates and benzodiazepines, withdrawal from alcohol dependence can be fatal if it is not properly managed.",
"Alcohol's primary effect is the increase in stimulation of the GABAA receptor, promoting central nervous system depression.",
"With repeated heavy consumption of alcohol, these receptors are desensitized and reduced in number, resulting in tolerance and physical dependence.",
"When alcohol consumption is stopped too abruptly, the person's nervous system experiences uncontrolled synapse firing.",
"This can result in symptoms that include anxiety, life-threatening seizures, delirium tremens, hallucinations, shakes and possible heart failure.",
"Other neurotransmitter systems are also involved, especially dopamine, NMDA and glutamate.Severe acute withdrawal symptoms such as delirium tremens and seizures rarely occur after 1-week post cessation of alcohol.",
"The acute withdrawal phase can be defined as lasting between one and three weeks.",
"In the period of 3–6 weeks following cessation, anxiety, depression, fatigue, and sleep disturbance are common.",
"Similar post-acute withdrawal symptoms have also been observed in animal models of alcohol dependence and withdrawal.A kindling effect also occurs in people with alcohol use disorders whereby each subsequent withdrawal syndrome is more severe than the previous withdrawal episode; this is due to neuroadaptations which occur as a result of periods of abstinence followed by re-exposure to alcohol.",
"Individuals who have had multiple withdrawal episodes are more likely to develop seizures and experience more severe anxiety during withdrawal from alcohol than alcohol-dependent individuals without a history of past alcohol withdrawal episodes.",
"The kindling effect leads to persistent functional changes in brain neural circuits as well as to gene expression.",
"Kindling also results in the intensification of psychological symptoms of alcohol withdrawal.",
"There are decision tools and questionnaires that help guide physicians in evaluating alcohol withdrawal.",
"For example, the CIWA-Ar objectifies alcohol withdrawal symptoms in order to guide therapy decisions which allows for an efficient interview while at the same time retaining clinical usefulness, validity, and reliability, ensuring proper care for withdrawal patients, who can be in danger of death."
],
[
"Causes",
"Mental health as a risk factor for alcohol dependence or abuseWilliam Hogarth's ''Gin Lane'', 1751A complex combination of genetic and environmental factors influences the risk of the development of alcoholism.",
"Genes that influence the metabolism of alcohol also influence the risk of alcoholism, as can a family history of alcoholism.",
"There is compelling evidence that alcohol use at an early age may influence the expression of genes which increase the risk of alcohol dependence.",
"These genetic and epigenetic results are regarded as consistent with large longitudinal population studies finding that the younger the age of drinking onset, the greater the prevalence of lifetime alcohol dependence.Severe childhood trauma is also associated with a general increase in the risk of drug dependency.",
"Lack of peer and family support is associated with an increased risk of alcoholism developing.",
"Genetics and adolescence are associated with an increased sensitivity to the neurotoxic effects of chronic alcohol misuse.",
"Cortical degeneration due to the neurotoxic effects increases impulsive behaviour, which may contribute to the development, persistence and severity of alcohol use disorders.",
"There is evidence that with abstinence, there is a reversal of at least some of the alcohol induced central nervous system damage.",
"The use of cannabis was associated with later problems with alcohol use.",
"Alcohol use was associated with an increased probability of later use of tobacco and illegal drugs such as cannabis.===Availability===Alcohol is the most available, widely consumed, and widely misused recreational drug.",
"Beer alone is the world's most widely consumed alcoholic beverage; it is the third-most popular drink overall, after water and tea.",
"It is thought by some to be the oldest fermented beverage.===Gender difference===Based on combined data in the US from SAMHSA's 2004–2005 National Surveys on Drug Use & Health, the rate of past-year alcohol dependence or misuse among persons aged 12 or older varied by level of alcohol use: 44.7% of past month heavy drinkers, 18.5% binge drinkers, 3.8% past month non-binge drinkers, and 1.3% of those who did not drink alcohol in the past month met the criteria for alcohol dependence or misuse in the past year.",
"Males had higher rates than females for all measures of drinking in the past month: any alcohol use (57.5% vs. 45%), binge drinking (30.8% vs. 15.1%), and heavy alcohol use (10.5% vs. 3.3%), and males were twice as likely as females to have met the criteria for alcohol dependence or misuse in the past year (10.5% vs. 5.1%).===Genetic variation===There are genetic variations that affect the risk for alcoholism.",
"Some of these variations are more common in individuals with ancestry from certain areas; for example, Africa, East Asia, the Middle East and Europe.",
"The variants with strongest effect are in genes that encode the main enzymes of alcohol metabolism, ''ADH1B'' and ''ALDH2''.",
"These genetic factors influence the rate at which alcohol and its initial metabolic product, acetaldehyde, are metabolized.",
"They are found at different frequencies in people from different parts of the world.",
"The alcohol dehydrogenase allele ''ADH1B*2'' causes a more rapid metabolism of alcohol to acetaldehyde, and reduces risk for alcoholism; it is most common in individuals from East Asia and the Middle East.",
"The alcohol dehydrogenase allele ''ADH1B*3'' also causes a more rapid metabolism of alcohol.",
"The allele ADH1B*3 is only found in some individuals of African descent and certain Native American tribes.",
"African Americans and Native Americans with this allele have a reduced risk of developing alcoholism.",
"Native Americans, however, have a significantly higher rate of alcoholism than average; risk factors such as cultural environmental effects (e.g.",
"trauma) have been proposed to explain the higher rates.",
"The aldehyde dehydrogenase allele ''ALDH2*2'' greatly reduces the rate at which acetaldehyde, the initial product of alcohol metabolism, is removed by conversion to acetate; it greatly reduces the risk for alcoholism.A genome-wide association study (GWAS) of more than 100,000 human individuals identified variants of the gene ''KLB'', which encodes the transmembrane protein β-Klotho, as highly associated with alcohol consumption.",
"The protein β-Klotho is an essential element in cell surface receptors for hormones involved in modulation of appetites for simple sugars and alcohol.",
"Several large GWAS have found differences in the genetics of alcohol consumption and alcohol dependence, although the two are to some degree related.===DNA damage===Alcohol-induced DNA damage, when not properly repaired, may have a key role in the neurotoxicity induced by alcohol.",
"Metabolic conversion of ethanol to acetaldehyde can occur in the brain and the neurotoxic effects of ethanol appear to be associated with acetaldehyde induced DNA damages including DNA adducts and crosslinks.",
"In addition to acetaldehyde, alcohol metabolism produces potentially genotoxic reactive oxygen species, which have been demonstrated to cause oxidative DNA damage."
],
[
"Diagnosis",
"===Definition===A man drinking from a bottle of liquor while sitting on a boardwalk, –1914.Picture by Austrian photographer Emil Mayer.Because there is disagreement on the definition of the word alcoholism, it is not a recognized diagnosis, and the use of the term alcoholism is discouraged due to its heavily stigmatized connotations.",
"It is classified as alcohol use disorder in the DSM-5 or alcohol dependence in the ICD-11.In 1979, the World Health Organization discouraged the use of ''alcoholism'' due to its inexact meaning, preferring ''alcohol dependence syndrome''.Misuse, problem use, abuse, and heavy use of alcohol refer to improper use of alcohol, which may cause physical, social, or moral harm to the drinker.",
"''The Dietary Guidelines for Americans'', issued by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) in 2005, defines \"moderate use\" as no more than two alcoholic beverages a day for men and no more than one alcoholic beverage a day for women.",
"The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) defines binge drinking as the amount of alcohol leading to a blood alcohol content (BAC) of 0.08, which, for most adults, would be reached by consuming five drinks for men or four for women over a two-hour period.",
"According to the NIAAA, men may be at risk for alcohol-related problems if their alcohol consumption exceeds 14 standard drinks per week or 4 drinks per day, and women may be at risk if they have more than 7 standard drinks per week or 3 drinks per day.",
"It defines a standard drink as one 12-ounce bottle of beer, one 5-ounce glass of wine, or 1.5 ounces of distilled spirits.",
"Despite this risk, a 2014 report in the National Survey on Drug Use and Health found that only 10% of either \"heavy drinkers\" or \"binge drinkers\" defined according to the above criteria also met the criteria for alcohol dependence, while only 1.3% of non-binge drinkers met the criteria.",
"An inference drawn from this study is that evidence-based policy strategies and clinical preventive services may effectively reduce binge drinking without requiring addiction treatment in most cases.====Alcoholism====The term ''alcoholism'' is commonly used amongst laypeople, but the word is poorly defined.",
"Despite the imprecision inherent in the term, there have been attempts to define how the word ''alcoholism'' should be interpreted when encountered.",
"In 1992, it was defined by the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence (NCADD) and ASAM as \"a primary, chronic disease characterized by impaired control over drinking, preoccupation with the drug alcohol, use of alcohol despite adverse consequences, and distortions in thinking.\"",
"MeSH has had an entry for ''alcoholism'' since 1999, and references the 1992 definition.The WHO calls ''alcoholism'' \"a term of long-standing use and variable meaning\", and use of the term was disfavored by a 1979 WHO expert committee.In professional and research contexts, the term ''alcoholism'' is not currently favored, but rather ''alcohol abuse'', ''alcohol dependence'', or ''alcohol use disorder'' are used.",
"Talbot (1989) observes that alcoholism in the classical disease model follows a progressive course: if people continue to drink, their condition will worsen.",
"This will lead to harmful consequences in their lives, physically, mentally, emotionally, and socially.",
"Johnson (1980) proposed that the emotional progression of the addicted people's response to alcohol has four phases.",
"The first two are considered \"normal\" drinking and the last two are viewed as \"typical\" alcoholic drinking.",
"Johnson's four phases consist of:# Learning the mood swing.",
"People are introduced to alcohol (in some cultures this can happen at a relatively young age), and they enjoy the happy feeling it produces.",
"At this stage, there is no emotional cost.# Seeking the mood swing.",
"People will drink to regain that happy feeling in phase 1; the drinking will increase as more alcohol is required to achieve the same effect.",
"Again at this stage, there are no significant consequences.# At the third stage there are physical and social consequences such as hangovers, family problems, and work problems.",
"People will continue to drink excessively, disregarding the problems.# The fourth stage can be detrimental with a risk for premature death.",
"People in this phase now drink to feel normal, they block out the feelings of overwhelming guilt, remorse, anxiety, and shame they experience when sober.====DSM and ICD====In the United States, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) is the most common diagnostic guide for substance use disorders, whereas most countries use the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) for diagnostic (and other) purposes.",
"The two manuals use similar but not identical nomenclature to classify alcohol problems.",
"Manual Nomenclature Definition DSM-IV Alcohol abuse, or Alcohol dependence* Alcohol abuse – repeated use despite recurrent adverse consequences.",
"* Alcohol dependence – ''alcohol abuse'' combined with tolerance, withdrawal, and an uncontrollable drive to drink.",
"The term \"alcoholism\" was split into \"alcohol abuse\" and \"alcohol dependence\" in 1980's DSM-III, and in 1987's DSM-III-R behavioral symptoms were moved from \"abuse\" to \"dependence\".",
"Some scholars suggested that DSM-5 merges alcohol abuse and alcohol dependence into a single new entry, named \"alcohol-use disorder\".",
"DSM-5 Alcohol use disorder \"A problematic pattern of alcohol use leading to clinically significant impairment or distress, as manifested by two or more symptoms out of a total of 12, occurring within a 12-month period ....\" ICD-10 Alcohol harmful use, or Alcohol dependence syndrome Definitions are similar to that of the DSM-IV.",
"The World Health Organization uses the term \"alcohol dependence syndrome\" rather than alcoholism.",
"The concept of \"harmful use\" (as opposed to \"abuse\") was introduced in 1992's ICD-10 to minimize underreporting of damage in the absence of dependence.",
"The term \"alcoholism\" was removed from ICD between ICD-8/ICDA-8 and ICD-9.ICD-11 Episode of harmful use of alcohol, Harmful pattern of use of alcohol, or Alcohol dependence* ''Episode of harmful use of alcohol'' – \"A single episode of use of alcohol that has caused damage to a person's physical or mental health or has resulted in behaviour leading to harm to the health of others ...\"* ''Harmful pattern of use of alcohol'' – \"A pattern of alcohol use that has caused damage to a person's physical or mental health or has resulted in behaviour leading to harm to the health of others ...\"* ''Alcohol dependence'' – \"Alcohol dependence is a disorder of regulation of alcohol use arising from repeated or continuous use of alcohol.",
"The characteristic feature is a strong internal drive to use alcohol.",
"...",
"The features of dependence are usually evident over a period of at least 12 months but the diagnosis may be made if alcohol use is continuous (daily or almost daily) for at least 1 month.",
"\"===Social barriers===Attitudes and social stereotypes can create barriers to the detection and treatment of alcohol use disorder.",
"This is more of a barrier for women than men.",
"Fear of stigmatization may lead women to deny that they have a medical condition, to hide their drinking, and to drink alone.",
"This pattern, in turn, leads family, physicians, and others to be less likely to suspect that a woman they know has alcohol use disorder.",
"In contrast, reduced fear of stigma may lead men to admit that they are having a medical condition, to display their drinking publicly, and to drink in groups.",
"This pattern, in turn, leads family, physicians, and others to be more likely to suspect that a man they know is someone with an alcohol use disorder.===Screening===Screening is recommended among those over the age of 18.Several tools may be used to detect a loss of control of alcohol use.",
"These tools are mostly self-reports in questionnaire form.",
"Another common theme is a score or tally that sums up the general severity of alcohol use.The CAGE questionnaire, named for its four questions, is one such example that may be used to screen patients quickly in a doctor's office.",
":The CAGE questionnaire has demonstrated a high effectiveness in detecting alcohol-related problems; however, it has limitations in people with less severe alcohol-related problems, white women and college students.Other tests are sometimes used for the detection of alcohol dependence, such as the Alcohol Dependence Data Questionnaire, which is a more sensitive diagnostic test than the CAGE questionnaire.",
"It helps distinguish a diagnosis of alcohol dependence from one of heavy alcohol use.",
"The Michigan Alcohol Screening Test (MAST) is a screening tool for alcoholism widely used by courts to determine the appropriate sentencing for people convicted of alcohol-related offenses, driving under the influence being the most common.",
"The Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT), a screening questionnaire developed by the World Health Organization, is unique in that it has been validated in six countries and is used internationally.",
"Like the CAGE questionnaire, it uses a simple set of questions – a high score earning a deeper investigation.",
"The Paddington Alcohol Test (PAT) was designed to screen for alcohol-related problems amongst those attending Accident and Emergency departments.",
"It concords well with the AUDIT questionnaire but is administered in a fifth of the time.===Urine and blood tests===There are reliable tests for the actual use of alcohol, one common test being that of blood alcohol content (BAC).",
"These tests do not differentiate people with alcohol use disorders from people without; however, long-term heavy drinking does have a few recognizable effects on the body, including:* Macrocytosis (enlarged MCV)* Elevated GGT* Moderate elevation of AST and ALT and an AST: ALT ratio of 2:1* High carbohydrate deficient transferrin (CDT)With regard to alcoholism, BAC is useful to judge alcohol tolerance, which in turn is a sign of alcoholism.",
"Electrolyte and acid-base abnormalities including hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, hyponatremia, hyperuricemia, metabolic acidosis, and respiratory alkalosis are common in people with alcohol use disorders.However, none of these blood tests for biological markers is as sensitive as screening questionnaires."
],
[
"Prevention",
"The World Health Organization, the European Union and other regional bodies, national governments and parliaments have formed alcohol policies in order to reduce the harm of alcoholism.Increasing the age at which alcohol can be purchased, and banning or restricting alcohol beverage advertising are common methods to reduce alcohol use among adolescents and young adults in particular.",
"Another common method of alcoholism prevention is taxation of alcohol products – increasing price of alcohol by 10% is linked with reduction of consumption of up to 10%.Credible, evidence-based educational campaigns in the mass media about the consequences of alcohol misuse have been recommended.",
"Guidelines for parents to prevent alcohol misuse amongst adolescents, and for helping young people with mental health problems have also been suggested.Because alcohol is often used for self-medication of conditions like anxiety temporarily, prevention of alcoholism may be attempted by reducing the severity or prevalence of stress and anxiety in individuals."
],
[
"Management",
"Treatments are varied because there are multiple perspectives of alcoholism.",
"Those who approach alcoholism as a medical condition or disease recommend differing treatments from, for instance, those who approach the condition as one of social choice.",
"Most treatments focus on helping people discontinue their alcohol intake, followed up with life training and/or social support to help them resist a return to alcohol use.",
"Since alcoholism involves multiple factors which encourage a person to continue drinking, they must all be addressed to successfully prevent a relapse.",
"An example of this kind of treatment is detoxification followed by a combination of supportive therapy, attendance at self-help groups, and ongoing development of coping mechanisms.",
"Much of the treatment community for alcoholism supports an abstinence-based zero tolerance approach popularized by the 12 step program of Alcoholics Anonymous; however, some prefer a harm-reduction approach.===Cessation of alcohol intake===Medical treatment for alcohol detoxification usually involves administration of a benzodiazepine, in order to ameliorate alcohol withdrawal syndrome's adverse impact.",
"The addition of phenobarbital improves outcomes if benzodiazepine administration lacks the usual efficacy, and phenobarbital alone might be an effective treatment.",
"Propofol also might enhance treatment for individuals showing limited therapeutic response to a benzodiazepine.",
"Individuals who are only at risk of mild to moderate withdrawal symptoms can be treated as outpatients.",
"Individuals at risk of a severe withdrawal syndrome as well as those who have significant or acute comorbid conditions can be treated as inpatients.",
"Direct treatment can be followed by a treatment program for alcohol dependence or alcohol use disorder to attempt to reduce the risk of relapse.",
"Experiences following alcohol withdrawal, such as depressed mood and anxiety, can take weeks or months to abate while other symptoms persist longer due to persisting neuroadaptations.===Psychological===A regional service center for Alcoholics AnonymousVarious forms of group therapy or psychotherapy are sometimes used to encourage and support abstinence from alcohol, or to reduce alcohol consumption to levels that are not associated with adverse outcomes.",
"Mutual-aid group-counseling is an approach used to facilitate relapse prevention.",
"Alcoholics Anonymous was one of the earliest organizations formed to provide mutual peer support and non-professional counseling, however the effectiveness of Alcoholics Anonymous is disputed.",
"A 2020 Cochrane review concluded that Twelve-Step Facilitation (TSF) probably achieves outcomes such as fewer drinks per drinking day, however evidence for such a conclusion comes from low to moderate certainty evidence \"so should be regarded with caution\".",
"Others include LifeRing Secular Recovery, SMART Recovery, Women for Sobriety, and Secular Organizations for Sobriety.Manualized Twelve Step Facilitation (TSF) interventions (i.e.",
"therapy which encourages active, long-term Alcoholics Anonymous participation) for Alcohol Use Disorder lead to higher abstinence rates, compared to other clinical interventions and to wait-list control groups.===Moderate drinking===Moderate drinking amongst people with alcohol dependence—often termed 'controlled drinking'—has been subject to significant controversy.",
"Indeed, much of the skepticism toward the viability of moderate drinking goals stems from historical ideas about 'alcoholism', now replaced with 'alcohol use disorder' or alcohol dependence in most scientific contexts.",
"A 2021 meta-analysis and systematic review of controlled drinking covering 22 studies concluded controlled drinking was a 'non-inferior' outcome to abstinence for many drinkers.Rationing and moderation programs such as Moderation Management and DrinkWise do not mandate complete abstinence.",
"While most people with alcohol use disorders are unable to limit their drinking in this way, some return to moderate drinking.",
"A 2002 US study by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) showed that 17.7% of individuals diagnosed as alcohol dependent more than one year prior returned to low-risk drinking.",
"This group, however, showed fewer initial symptoms of dependency.A follow-up study, using the same subjects that were judged to be in remission in 2001–2002, examined the rates of return to problem drinking in 2004–2005.The study found abstinence from alcohol was the most stable form of remission for recovering alcoholics.",
"There was also a 1973 study showing chronic alcoholics drinking moderately again, but a 1982 follow-up showed that 95% of subjects were not able to maintain drinking in moderation over the long term.",
"Another study was a long-term (60 year) follow-up of two groups of alcoholic men which concluded that \"return to controlled drinking rarely persisted for much more than a decade without relapse or evolution into abstinence.\"",
"Internet based measures appear to be useful at least in the short term.===Medications===In the United States there are four approved medications for alcoholism: acamprosate, two methods of using naltrexone and disulfiram.",
"* Acamprosate may stabilise the brain chemistry that is altered due to alcohol dependence via antagonising the actions of glutamate, a neurotransmitter which is hyperactive in the post-withdrawal phase.",
"By reducing excessive NMDA activity which occurs at the onset of alcohol withdrawal, acamprosate can reduce or prevent alcohol withdrawal related neurotoxicity.",
"Acamprosate reduces the risk of relapse amongst alcohol-dependent persons.",
"* Naltrexone is a competitive antagonist for opioid receptors, effectively blocking the effects of endorphins and opioids.",
"Naltrexone is used to decrease cravings for alcohol and encourage abstinence.",
"Alcohol causes the body to release endorphins, which in turn release dopamine and activate the reward pathways; hence in the body Naltrexone reduces the pleasurable effects from consuming alcohol.",
"Evidence supports a reduced risk of relapse among alcohol-dependent persons and a decrease in excessive drinking.",
"Nalmefene also appears effective and works in a similar manner.",
"* Disulfiram prevents the elimination of acetaldehyde, a chemical the body produces when breaking down ethanol.",
"Acetaldehyde itself is the cause of many hangover symptoms from alcohol use.",
"The overall effect is discomfort when alcohol is ingested: an extremely rapid and long-lasting, uncomfortable hangover.Several other drugs are also used and many are under investigation.",
"* Benzodiazepines, while useful in the management of acute alcohol withdrawal, if used long-term can cause a worse outcome in alcoholism.",
"Alcoholics on chronic benzodiazepines have a lower rate of achieving abstinence from alcohol than those not taking benzodiazepines.",
"This class of drugs is commonly prescribed to alcoholics for insomnia or anxiety management.",
"Initiating prescriptions of benzodiazepines or sedative-hypnotics in individuals in recovery has a high rate of relapse with one author reporting more than a quarter of people relapsed after being prescribed sedative-hypnotics.",
"Those who are long-term users of benzodiazepines should not be withdrawn rapidly, as severe anxiety and panic may develop, which are known risk factors for alcohol use disorder relapse.",
"Taper regimes of 6–12 months have been found to be the most successful, with reduced intensity of withdrawal.",
"* Calcium carbimide works in the same way as disulfiram; it has an advantage in that the occasional adverse effects of disulfiram, hepatotoxicity and drowsiness, do not occur with calcium carbimide.",
"* Ondansetron and topiramate are supported by tentative evidence in people with certain genetic patterns.",
"Evidence for ondansetron is stronger in people who have recently started to abuse alcohol.",
"Topiramate is a derivative of the naturally occurring sugar monosaccharide D-fructose.",
"Review articles characterize topiramate as showing \"encouraging\", \"promising\", \"efficacious\", and \"insufficient\" results in the treatment of alcohol use disorders.Evidence does not support the use of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), antipsychotics, or gabapentin."
],
[
"Research",
"Topiramate, a derivative of the naturally occurring sugar monosaccharide D-fructose, has been found effective in helping alcoholics quit or cut back on the amount they drink.",
"Evidence suggests that topiramate antagonizes excitatory glutamate receptors, inhibits dopamine release, and enhances inhibitory gamma-aminobutyric acid function.",
"A 2008 review of the effectiveness of topiramate concluded that the results of published trials are promising, however as of 2008, data was insufficient to support using topiramate in conjunction with brief weekly compliance counseling as a first-line agent for alcohol dependence.",
"A 2010 review found that topiramate may be superior to existing alcohol pharmacotherapeutic options.",
"Topiramate effectively reduces craving and alcohol withdrawal severity as well as improving quality-of-life-ratings.Baclofen, a GABAB receptor agonist, is under study for the treatment of alcoholism.",
"According to a 2017 Cochrane Systematic Review, there is insufficient evidence to determine the effectiveness or safety for the use of baclofen for withdrawal symptoms in alcoholism.",
"Psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy is under study for the treatment of patients with alcohol use disorder.===Dual addictions and dependencies===Alcoholics may also require treatment for other psychotropic drug addictions and drug dependencies.",
"The most common dual dependence syndrome with alcohol dependence is benzodiazepine dependence, with studies showing 10–20% of alcohol-dependent individuals had problems of dependence and/or misuse problems of benzodiazepine drugs such as diazepam or clonazepam.",
"These drugs are, like alcohol, depressants.",
"Benzodiazepines may be used legally, if they are prescribed by doctors for anxiety problems or other mood disorders, or they may be purchased as illegal drugs.",
"Benzodiazepine use increases cravings for alcohol and the volume of alcohol consumed by problem drinkers.",
"Benzodiazepine dependency requires careful reduction in dosage to avoid benzodiazepine withdrawal syndrome and other health consequences.",
"Dependence on other sedative-hypnotics such as zolpidem and zopiclone as well as opiates and illegal drugs is common in alcoholics.",
"Alcohol itself is a sedative-hypnotic and is cross-tolerant with other sedative-hypnotics such as barbiturates, benzodiazepines and nonbenzodiazepines.",
"Dependence upon and withdrawal from sedative-hypnotics can be medically severe and, as with alcohol withdrawal, there is a risk of psychosis or seizures if not properly managed."
],
[
"Epidemiology",
"Disability-adjusted life year for alcohol use disorders per million inhabitants in 2012Alcohol consumption per person 2016The World Health Organization estimates that there are about 380 million people with alcoholism worldwide (5.1% of the population over 15 years of age), with it being most common among males and young adults.",
"Geographically, it is least common in Africa (1.1% of the population) and has the highest rates in Eastern Europe (11%).",
"in the United States, about 17 million (7%) of adults and 0.7 million (2.8%) of those age 12 to 17 years of age are affected.",
"About 12% of American adults have had an alcohol dependence problem at some time in their life.In the United States and Western Europe, 10–20% of men and 5–10% of women at some point in their lives will meet criteria for alcoholism.",
"In England, the number of \"dependent drinkers\" was calculated as over 600,000 in 2019.Estonia had the highest death rate from alcohol in Europe in 2015 at 8.8 per 100,000 population.",
"In the United States, 30% of people admitted to hospital have a problem related to alcohol.Within the medical and scientific communities, there is a broad consensus regarding alcoholism as a disease state.",
"For example, the American Medical Association considers alcohol a drug and states that \"drug addiction is a chronic, relapsing brain disease characterized by compulsive drug seeking and use despite often devastating consequences.",
"It results from a complex interplay of biological vulnerability, environmental exposure, and developmental factors (e.g., stage of brain maturity).\"",
"Alcoholism has a higher prevalence among men, though, in recent decades, the proportion of female alcoholics has increased.",
"Current evidence indicates that in both men and women, alcoholism is 50–60% genetically determined, leaving 40–50% for environmental influences.",
"Most alcoholics develop alcoholism during adolescence or young adulthood."
],
[
"Prognosis",
"Alcohol use disorders deaths per million persons in 2012Alcoholism often reduces a person's life expectancy by around ten years.",
"The most common cause of death in alcoholics is from cardiovascular complications.",
"There is a high rate of suicide in chronic alcoholics, which increases the longer a person drinks.",
"Approximately 3–15% of alcoholics die by suicide, and research has found that over 50% of all suicides are associated with alcohol or drug dependence.",
"This is believed to be due to alcohol causing physiological distortion of brain chemistry, as well as social isolation.",
"Suicide is also very common in adolescent alcohol abusers, with 25% of suicides in adolescents being related to alcohol abuse.",
"Among those with alcohol dependence after one year, some met the criteria for low-risk drinking, even though only 26% of the group received any treatment, with the breakdown as follows: 25% were found to be still dependent, 27% were in partial remission (some symptoms persist), 12% asymptomatic drinkers (consumption increases chances of relapse) and 36% were fully recovered – made up of 18% low-risk drinkers plus 18% abstainers.",
"In contrast, however, the results of a long-term (60-year) follow-up of two groups of alcoholic men indicated that \"return to controlled drinking rarely persisted for much more than a decade without relapse or evolution into abstinence....return-to-controlled drinking, as reported in short-term studies, is often a mirage.\""
],
[
"History",
"Adriaen Brouwer, ''Inn with Drunken Peasants'', 1620s1904 advertisement describing alcoholism as a diseaseHistorically the name ''dipsomania'' was coined by German physician C. W. Hufeland in 1819 before it was superseded by ''alcoholism''.",
"That term now has a more specific meaning.",
"The term ''alcoholism'' was first used by Swedish physician Magnus Huss in an 1852 publication to describe the systemic adverse effects of alcohol.Alcohol has a long history of use and misuse throughout recorded history.",
"Biblical, Egyptian and Babylonian sources record the history of abuse and dependence on alcohol.",
"In some ancient cultures alcohol was worshiped and in others, its misuse was condemned.",
"Excessive alcohol misuse and drunkenness were recognized as causing social problems even thousands of years ago.",
"However, the defining of habitual drunkenness as it was then known as and its adverse consequences were not well established medically until the 18th century.",
"In 1647 a Greek monk named Agapios was the first to document that chronic alcohol misuse was associated with toxicity to the nervous system and body which resulted in a range of medical disorders such as seizures, paralysis, and internal bleeding.",
"In the 1910s and 1920s, the effects of alcohol misuse and chronic drunkenness boosted membership of the temperance movement and led to the prohibition of alcohol in many Western countries, nationwide bans on the production, importation, transportation, and sale of alcoholic beverages that generally remained in place until the late 1920s or early 1930s; these policies resulted in the decline of death rates from cirrhosis and alcoholism.",
"In 2005, alcohol dependence and misuse was estimated to cost the US economy approximately 220 billion dollars per year, more than cancer and obesity."
],
[
"Society and culture",
"The various health problems associated with long-term alcohol consumption are generally perceived as detrimental to society; for example, money due to lost labor-hours, medical costs due to injuries due to drunkenness and organ damage from long-term use, and secondary treatment costs, such as the costs of rehabilitation facilities and detoxification centers.",
"Alcohol use is a major contributing factor for head injuries, motor vehicle injuries (27%), interpersonal violence (18%), suicides (18%), and epilepsy (13%).",
"Beyond the financial costs that alcohol consumption imposes, there are also significant social costs to both the alcoholic and their family and friends.",
"For instance, alcohol consumption by a pregnant woman can lead to an incurable and damaging condition known as fetal alcohol syndrome, which often results in cognitive deficits, mental health problems, an inability to live independently and an increased risk of criminal behaviour, all of which can cause emotional stress for parents and caregivers.",
"Estimates of the economic costs of alcohol misuse, collected by the World Health Organization, vary from 1–6% of a country's GDP.",
"One Australian estimate pegged alcohol's social costs at 24% of all drug misuse costs; a similar Canadian study concluded alcohol's share was 41%.",
"One study quantified the cost to the UK of ''all'' forms of alcohol misuse in 2001 as £18.5–20 billion.",
"All economic costs in the United States in 2006 have been estimated at $223.5 billion.The idea of '''hitting rock bottom''' refers to an experience of stress that can be attributed to alcohol misuse.",
"There is no single definition for this idea, and people may identify their own lowest points in terms of lost jobs, lost relationships, health problems, legal problems, or other consequences of alcohol misuse.",
"The concept is promoted by 12-step recovery groups and researchers using the transtheoretical model of motivation for behavior change.",
"The first use of this slang phrase in the formal medical literature appeared in a 1965 review in the ''British Medical Journal'', which said that some men refused treatment until they \"hit rock bottom\", but that treatment was generally more successful for \"the alcohol addict who has friends and family to support him\" than for impoverished and homeless addicts.Stereotypes of alcoholics are often found in fiction and popular culture.",
"The \"town drunk\" is a stock character in Western popular culture.",
"Stereotypes of drunkenness may be based on racism or xenophobia, as in the fictional depiction of the Irish as heavy drinkers.",
"Studies by social psychologists Stivers and Greeley attempt to document the perceived prevalence of high alcohol consumption amongst the Irish in America.",
"Alcohol consumption is relatively similar between many European cultures, the United States, and Australia.",
"In Asian countries that have a high gross domestic product, there is heightened drinking compared to other Asian countries, but it is nowhere near as high as it is in other countries like the United States.",
"It is also inversely seen, with countries that have very low gross domestic product showing high alcohol consumption.",
"In a study done on Korean immigrants in Canada, they reported alcohol was typically an integral part of their meal but is the only time solo drinking should occur.",
"They also generally believe alcohol is necessary at any social event, as it helps conversations start.Peyote, a psychoactive agent, has even shown promise in treating alcoholism.",
"Alcohol had actually replaced peyote as Native Americans' psychoactive agent of choice in rituals when peyote was outlawed."
],
[
"See also",
"* Addictive personality* Alcohol-related traffic crashes in the United States* Alcoholism in family systems* Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism* CRAFFT Screening Test* Disulfiram-like drug* High-functioning alcoholic* Holiday heart syndrome* List of countries by alcohol consumption"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"*"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Abstraction"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Abstraction''' is a process wherein general rules and concepts are derived from the usage and classification of specific examples, literal (real or concrete) signifiers, first principles, or other methods.",
"\"An abstraction\" is the outcome of this process—a concept that acts as a common noun for all subordinate concepts and connects any related concepts as a ''group'', ''field'', or ''category''.Conceptual abstractions may be formed by filtering the information content of a concept or an observable phenomenon, selecting only those aspects which are relevant for a particular purpose.",
"For example, abstracting a leather soccer ball to the more general idea of a ball selects only the information on general ball attributes and behavior, excluding but not eliminating the other phenomenal and cognitive characteristics of that particular ball.",
"In a type–token distinction, a type (e.g., a 'ball') is more abstract than its tokens (e.g., 'that leather soccer ball').Abstraction in its secondary use is a material process, discussed in the themes below."
],
[
"Origins",
"Thinking in abstractions is considered by anthropologists, archaeologists, and sociologists to be one of the key traits in modern human behaviour, which is believed to have developed between 50,000 and 100,000 years ago.",
"Its development is likely to have been closely connected with the development of human language, which (whether spoken or written) appears to both involve and facilitate abstract thinking.===History===''Abstraction'' involves induction of ideas or the synthesis of particular facts into one general theory about something.",
"It is the opposite of ''specification'', which is the analysis or breaking-down of a general idea or abstraction into concrete facts.",
"Abstraction can be illustrated by Francis Bacon's ''Novum Organum'' (1620), a book of modern scientific philosophy written in the late Jacobean era of England to encourage modern thinkers to collect specific facts before making any generalizations.Bacon used and promoted induction as an abstraction tool; it complemented but was distinct from the ancient deductive-thinking approach that had dominated the intellectual world since the times of Greek philosophers like Thales, Anaximander, and Aristotle.",
"Thales (–546 BCE) believed that everything in the universe comes from one main substance, water.",
"He deduced or specified from a general idea, \"everything is water,\" to the specific forms of water such as ice, snow, fog, and rivers.Modern scientists used the approach of abstraction (going from particular facts collected into one general idea).",
"Newton (1642–1727) derived the motion of the planets from Copernicus' (1473–1543) simplification, that the sun is the center of our solar system; Kepler (1571–1630) compressed thousands of measurements into one expression to finally conclude that Mars moves in an elliptical orbit about the sun; Galileo (1564–1642) repeated one hundred specific experiments into the law of falling bodies."
],
[
"Themes",
"===Compression===An abstraction can be seen as a compression process, mapping multiple different pieces of constituent data to a single piece of abstract data; based on similarities in the constituent data, for example, many different physical cats map to the abstraction \"CAT\".",
"This conceptual scheme emphasizes the inherent equality of both constituent and abstract data, thus avoiding problems arising from the distinction between \"abstract\" and \"concrete\".",
"In this sense the process of abstraction entails the identification of similarities between objects, and the process of associating these objects with an abstraction (which is itself an object).",
":For example, ''picture 1 below'' illustrates the concrete relationship \"Cat sits on Mat\".Chains of abstractions can be construed, moving from neural impulses arising from sensory perception to basic abstractions such as color or shape, to experiential abstractions such as a specific cat, to semantic abstractions such as the \"idea\" of a CAT, to classes of objects such as \"mammals\" and even categories such as \"object\" as opposed to \"action\".",
":For example, ''graph 1 below'' expresses the abstraction \"agent sits on location\".",
"This conceptual scheme entails no specific hierarchical taxonomy (such as the one mentioned involving cats and mammals), only a progressive exclusion of detail.===Instantiation===Non-existent things in any particular place and time are often seen as abstract.",
"By contrast, instances, or members, of such an abstract thing might exist in many different places and times.Those abstract things are then said to be ''multiply instantiated'', in the sense of ''picture 1'', ''picture 2'', etc., shown below.",
"It is not sufficient, however, to define ''abstract'' ideas as those that can be instantiated and to define ''abstraction'' as the movement in the opposite direction to instantiation.",
"Doing so would make the concepts \"cat\" and \"telephone\" abstract ideas since despite their varying appearances, a particular cat or a particular telephone is an instance of the concept \"cat\" or the concept \"telephone\".",
"Although the concepts \"cat\" and \"telephone\" are ''abstractions'', they are not ''abstract'' in the sense of the objects in ''graph 1'' below.",
"We might look at other graphs, in a progression from ''cat'' to ''mammal'' to ''animal'', and see that ''animal'' is more abstract than ''mammal''; but on the other hand ''mammal'' is a harder idea to express, certainly in relation to ''marsupial'' or ''monotreme''.Perhaps confusingly, some philosophies refer to ''tropes'' (instances of properties) as ''abstract particulars''—e.g., the particular redness of a particular apple is an ''abstract particular''.",
"This is similar to qualia and sumbebekos.===Material process===Still retaining the primary meaning of '' or 'to draw away from', the abstraction of money, for example, works by drawing away from the particular value of things allowing completely incommensurate objects to be compared (see the section on 'Physicality' below).",
"Karl Marx's writing on the commodity abstraction recognizes a parallel process.The state (polity) as both concept and material practice exemplifies the two sides of this process of abstraction.",
"Conceptually, 'the current concept of the state is an abstraction from the much more concrete early-modern use as the standing or status of the prince, his visible estates'.",
"At the same time, materially, the 'practice of statehood is now constitutively and materially more abstract than at the time when princes ruled as the embodiment of extended power'.===Ontological status===The way that physical objects, like rocks and trees, have being differs from the way that properties of abstract concepts or relations have being, for example the way the concrete, particular, individuals pictured in ''picture 1'' exist differs from the way the concepts illustrated in ''graph 1'' exist.",
"That difference accounts for the ontological usefulness of the word \"abstract\".",
"The word applies to properties and relations to mark the fact that, if they exist, they do not exist in space or time, but that instances of them can exist, potentially in many different places and times.===Physicality===A physical object (a possible referent of a concept or word) is considered ''concrete'' (not abstract) if it is a ''particular individual'' that occupies a particular place and time.",
"However, in the secondary sense of the term 'abstraction', this physical object can carry materially abstracting processes.",
"For example, record-keeping aids throughout the Fertile Crescent included calculi (clay spheres, cones, etc.)",
"which represented counts of items, probably livestock or grains, sealed in containers.",
"According to , these clay containers contained tokens, the total of which were the count of objects being transferred.",
"The containers thus served as something of a bill of lading or an accounts book.",
"In order to avoid breaking open the containers for the count, marks were placed on the outside of the containers.",
"These physical marks, in other words, acted as material abstractions of a materially abstract process of accounting, using conceptual abstractions (numbers) to communicate its meaning.Abstract things are sometimes defined as those things that do not exist in reality or exist only as sensory experiences, like the color red.",
"That definition, however, suffers from the difficulty of deciding which things are real (i.e.",
"which things exist in reality).",
"For example, it is difficult to agree to whether concepts like ''God'', ''the number three'', and ''goodness'' are real, abstract, or both.An approach to resolving such difficulty is to use ''predicates'' as a general term for whether things are variously real, abstract, concrete, or of a particular property (e.g., ''good'').",
"Questions about the properties of things are then propositions about predicates, which propositions remain to be evaluated by the investigator.",
"In the ''graph 1'' below, the graphical relationships like the arrows joining boxes and ellipses might denote predicates.===Referencing and referring===Abstractions sometimes have ambiguous referents.",
"For example, \"happiness\" can mean experiencing various positive emotions, but can also refer to life satisfaction and subjective well-being.",
"Likewise, \"architecture\" refers not only to the design of safe, functional buildings, but also to elements of creation and innovation which aim at elegant solutions to construction problems, to the use of space, and to the attempt to evoke an emotional response in the builders, owners, viewers and users of the building.===Simplification and ordering===Abstraction uses a strategy of simplification, wherein formerly concrete details are left ambiguous, vague, or undefined; thus effective communication about things in the abstract requires an intuitive or common experience between the communicator and the communication recipient.",
"This is true for all verbal/abstract communication.Conceptual graph for A Cat sitting on the Mat ''(graph 1)''Cat on Mat ''(picture 1)''For example, many different things can be red.",
"Likewise, many things sit on surfaces (as in ''picture 1'', to the right).",
"The property of ''redness'' and the relation ''sitting-on'' are therefore abstractions of those objects.",
"Specifically, the conceptual diagram ''graph 1'' identifies only three boxes, two ellipses, and four arrows (and their five labels), whereas the ''picture 1'' shows much more pictorial detail, with the scores of implied relationships as implicit in the picture rather than with the nine explicit details in the graph.",
"''Graph 1'' details some explicit relationships between the objects of the diagram.",
"For example, the arrow between the ''agent'' and ''CAT:Elsie'' depicts an example of an ''is-a'' relationship, as does the arrow between the ''location'' and the ''MAT''.",
"The arrows between the gerund/present participle ''SITTING'' and the nouns ''agent'' and ''location'' express the diagram's basic relationship; ''\"agent is SITTING on location\"''; ''Elsie'' is an instance of ''CAT''.Although the description ''sitting-on'' (graph 1) is more abstract than the graphic image of a cat sitting on a mat (picture 1), the delineation of abstract things from concrete things is somewhat ambiguous; this ambiguity or vagueness is characteristic of abstraction.",
"Thus something as simple as a newspaper might be specified to six levels, as in Douglas Hofstadter's illustration of that ambiguity, with a progression from abstract to concrete in ''Gödel, Escher, Bach'' (1979):An abstraction can thus encapsulate each of these levels of detail with no loss of generality.",
"But perhaps a detective or philosopher/scientist/engineer might seek to learn about something, at progressively deeper levels of detail, to solve a crime or a puzzle.===Thought processes===In philosophical terminology, ''abstraction'' is the thought process wherein ideas are distanced from objects.",
"But an idea can be symbolized."
],
[
"As used in different disciplines",
"===In art===Typically, ''abstraction'' is used in the arts as a synonym for abstract art in general.",
"Strictly speaking, it refers to art unconcerned with the literal depiction of things from the visible world—it can, however, refer to an object or image which has been distilled from the real world, or indeed, another work of art.",
"Artwork that reshapes the natural world for expressive purposes is called abstract; that which derives from, but does not imitate a recognizable subject is called nonobjective abstraction.",
"In the 20th century the trend toward abstraction coincided with advances in science, technology, and changes in urban life, eventually reflecting an interest in psychoanalytic theory.",
"Later still, abstraction was manifest in more purely formal terms, such as color, freedom from objective context, and a reduction of form to basic geometric designs.===In computer science===Computer scientists use abstraction to make models that can be used and re-used without having to re-write all the program code for each new application on every different type of computer.",
"They communicate their solutions with the computer by writing source code in some particular computer language which can be translated into machine code for different types of computers to execute.",
"Abstraction allows program designers to separate a framework (categorical concepts related to computing problems) from specific instances which implement details.",
"This means that the program code can be written so that code does not have to depend on the specific details of supporting applications, operating system software, or hardware, but on a categorical concept of the solution.",
"A solution to the problem can then be integrated into the system framework with minimal additional work.",
"This allows programmers to take advantage of another programmer's work, while requiring only an abstract understanding of the implementation of another's work, apart from the problem that it solves.=== In general semantics ===Abstractions and levels of abstraction play an important role in the theory of general semantics originated by Alfred Korzybski.",
"Anatol Rapoport wrote \"Abstracting is a mechanism by which an infinite variety of experiences can be mapped on short noises (words).",
"\"=== In history ===Francis Fukuyama defines history as \"a deliberate attempt of abstraction in which we separate out important from unimportant events\".===In linguistics===Researchers in linguistics frequently apply abstraction so as to allow an analysis of the phenomena of language at the desired level of detail.",
"A commonly used abstraction, the ''phoneme'', abstracts speech sounds in such a way as to neglect details that cannot serve to differentiate meaning.",
"Other analogous kinds of abstractions (sometimes called \"emic units\") considered by linguists include morphemes, graphemes, and lexemes.Abstraction also arises in the relation between syntax, semantics, and pragmatics.",
"Pragmatics involves considerations that make reference to the user of the language; semantics considers expressions and what they denote (the designata) abstracted from the language user; and syntax considers only the expressions themselves, abstracted from the designate.===In mathematics===Abstraction in mathematics is the process of extracting the underlying structures, patterns or properties of a mathematical concept or object, removing any dependence on real-world objects with which it might originally have been connected, and generalizing it so that it has wider applications or matching among other abstract descriptions of equivalent phenomena.The advantages of abstraction in mathematics are:* It reveals deep connections between different areas of mathematics.",
"* Known results in one area can suggest conjectures in another related area.",
"* Techniques and methods from one area can be applied to prove results in other related area.",
"*Patterns from one mathematical object can be generalized to other similar objects in the same class.The main disadvantage of abstraction is that highly abstract concepts are more difficult to learn, and might require a degree of mathematical maturity and experience before they can be assimilated.===In music===In music, the term ''abstraction'' can be used to describe improvisatory approaches to interpretation, and may sometimes indicate abandonment of tonality.",
"Atonal music has no key signature, and is characterized by the exploration of internal numeric relationships.===In neurology===A recent meta-analysis suggests that the verbal system has a greater engagement with abstract concepts when the perceptual system is more engaged in processing concrete concepts.",
"This is because abstract concepts elicit greater brain activity in the inferior frontal gyrus and middle temporal gyrus compared to concrete concepts which elicit greater activity in the posterior cingulate, precuneus, fusiform gyrus, and parahippocampal gyrus.",
"Other research into the human brain suggests that the left and right hemispheres differ in their handling of abstraction.",
"For example, one meta-analysis reviewing human brain lesions has shown a left hemisphere bias during tool usage.===In philosophy===Abstraction in philosophy is the process (or, to some, the alleged process) in concept formation of recognizing some set of common features in individuals, and on that basis forming a concept of that feature.",
"The notion of abstraction is important to understanding some philosophical controversies surrounding empiricism and the problem of universals.",
"It has also recently become popular in formal logic under predicate abstraction.",
"Another philosophical tool for the discussion of abstraction is thought space.John Locke defined abstraction in ''An Essay Concerning Human Understanding'':'So words are used to stand as outward marks of our internal ideas, which are taken from particular things; but if every particular idea that we take in had its own special name, there would be no end to names.",
"To prevent this, the mind makes particular ideas received from particular things become general; which it does by considering them as they are in the mind—mental appearances—separate from all other existences, and from the circumstances of real existence, such as time, place, and so on.",
"This procedure is called abstraction.",
"In it, an idea taken from a particular thing becomes a general representative of all of the same kind, and its name becomes a general name that is applicable to any existing thing that fits that abstract idea.'",
"(2.11.9)===In psychology===Carl Jung's definition of abstraction broadened its scope beyond the thinking process to include exactly four mutually exclusive, different complementary psychological functions: sensation, intuition, feeling, and thinking.",
"Together they form a structural totality of the differentiating abstraction process.",
"Abstraction operates in one of these functions when it excludes the simultaneous influence of the other functions and other irrelevancies, such as emotion.",
"Abstraction requires selective use of this structural split of abilities in the psyche.",
"The opposite of abstraction is concretism.",
"''Abstraction'' is one of Jung's 57 definitions in Chapter XI of ''Psychological Types''.===In social theory===Social theorists deal with abstraction both as an ideational and as a material process.",
"Alfred Sohn-Rethel (1899–1990) asked: \"Can there be abstraction other than by thought?\"",
"He used the example of commodity abstraction to show that abstraction occurs in practice as people create systems of abstract exchange that extend beyond the immediate physicality of the object and yet have real and immediate consequences.",
"This work was extended through the 'Constitutive Abstraction' approach of writers associated with the Journal ''Arena''.",
"Two books that have taken this theme of the abstraction of social relations as an organizing process in human history are ''Nation Formation: Towards a Theory of Abstract Community'' (1996)and an associated volume published in 2006, ''Globalism, Nationalism, Tribalism: Bringing Theory Back In''.These books argue that a nation is an abstract community bringing together strangers who will never meet as such; thus constituting materially real and substantial, but abstracted and mediated relations.",
"The books suggest that contemporary processes of globalization and mediatization have contributed to materially abstracting relations between people, with major consequences for how humans live their lives.One can readily argue that abstraction is an elementary methodological tool in several disciplines of social science.",
"These disciplines have definite and different concepts of \"man\" that highlight those aspects of man and his behaviour by idealization that are relevant for the given human science.",
"For example, is the man as sociology abstracts and idealizes it, depicting man as a social being.",
"Moreover, we could talk about (the man who can extend his biologically determined intelligence thanks to new technologies), or (who is simply creative).Abstraction (combined with Weberian idealization) plays a crucial role in economics - hence abstractions such as \"the market\"and the generalized concept of \"business\".Breaking away from directly experienced reality was a common trend in 19th-century sciences (especially physics), and this was the effort which fundamentally determined the way economics tried (and still tries) to approach the economic aspects of social life.",
"It is abstraction we meet in the case of both Newton's physics and the neoclassical theory, since the goal was to grasp the unchangeable and timeless essence of phenomena.",
"For example, Newton created the concept of the material point by following the abstraction method so that he abstracted from the dimension and shape of any perceptible object, preserving only inertial and translational motion.",
"Material point is the ultimate and common feature of all bodies.",
"Neoclassical economists created the indefinitely abstract notion of homo economicus by following the same procedure.",
"Economists abstract from all individual and personal qualities in order to get to those characteristics that embody the essence of economic activity.",
"Eventually, it is the substance of the economic man that they try to grasp.",
"Any characteristic beyond it only disturbs the functioning of this essential core."
],
[
"See also"
],
[
"References",
"===Citations======Sources===* * Sohn-Rethel, Alfred (1977) ''Intellectual and manual labour: A critique of epistemology'', Humanities Press.",
"* ."
],
[
"Further reading",
"* * * ."
],
[
"External links",
"* * * Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Gottlob Frege* Discussion at The Well concerning Abstraction hierarchy"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Abelian group"
],
[
"Introduction",
"In mathematics, an '''abelian group''', also called a '''commutative group''', is a group in which the result of applying the group operation to two group elements does not depend on the order in which they are written.",
"That is, the group operation is commutative.",
"With addition as an operation, the integers and the real numbers form abelian groups, and the concept of an abelian group may be viewed as a generalization of these examples.",
"Abelian groups are named after early 19th century mathematician Niels Henrik Abel.The concept of an abelian group underlies many fundamental algebraic structures, such as fields, rings, vector spaces, and algebras.",
"The theory of abelian groups is generally simpler than that of their non-abelian counterparts, and finite abelian groups are very well understood and fully classified."
],
[
"Definition",
"An abelian group is a set , together with an operation that combines any two elements and of to form another element of denoted .",
"The symbol is a general placeholder for a concretely given operation.",
"To qualify as an abelian group, the set and operation, , must satisfy four requirements known as the ''abelian group axioms'' (some authors include in the axioms some properties that belong to the definition of an operation: namely that the operation is ''defined'' for any ordered pair of elements of , that the result is ''well-defined'', and that the result ''belongs to'' ):;Associativity: For all , , and in , the equation holds.",
";Identity element: There exists an element in , such that for all elements in , the equation holds.",
";Inverse element: For each in there exists an element in such that , where is the identity element.",
";Commutativity: For all , in , .A group in which the group operation is not commutative is called a \"non-abelian group\" or \"non-commutative group\"."
],
[
"Facts",
"=== Notation ===There are two main notational conventions for abelian groups – additive and multiplicative.",
"Convention Operation Identity Powers Inverse Addition 0 Multiplication or 1 Generally, the multiplicative notation is the usual notation for groups, while the additive notation is the usual notation for modules and rings.",
"The additive notation may also be used to emphasize that a particular group is abelian, whenever both abelian and non-abelian groups are considered, some notable exceptions being near-rings and partially ordered groups, where an operation is written additively even when non-abelian.=== Multiplication table ===To verify that a finite group is abelian, a table (matrix) – known as a Cayley table – can be constructed in a similar fashion to a multiplication table.",
"If the group is under the the entry of this table contains the product .The group is abelian if and only if this table is symmetric about the main diagonal.",
"This is true since the group is abelian iff for all , which is iff the entry of the table equals the entry for all , i.e.",
"the table is symmetric about the main diagonal."
],
[
"Examples",
"* For the integers and the operation addition , denoted , the operation + combines any two integers to form a third integer, addition is associative, zero is the additive identity, every integer has an additive inverse, , and the addition operation is commutative since for any two integers and .",
"* Every cyclic group is abelian, because if , are in , then .",
"Thus the integers, , form an abelian group under addition, as do the integers modulo , .",
"* Every ring is an abelian group with respect to its addition operation.",
"In a commutative ring the invertible elements, or units, form an abelian multiplicative group.",
"In particular, the real numbers are an abelian group under addition, and the nonzero real numbers are an abelian group under multiplication.",
"* Every subgroup of an abelian group is normal, so each subgroup gives rise to a quotient group.",
"Subgroups, quotients, and direct sums of abelian groups are again abelian.",
"The finite simple abelian groups are exactly the cyclic groups of prime order.",
"* The concepts of abelian group and -module agree.",
"More specifically, every -module is an abelian group with its operation of addition, and every abelian group is a module over the ring of integers in a unique way.In general, matrices, even invertible matrices, do not form an abelian group under multiplication because matrix multiplication is generally not commutative.",
"However, some groups of matrices are abelian groups under matrix multiplication – one example is the group of rotation matrices."
],
[
"Historical remarks",
"Camille Jordan named abelian groups after Norwegian mathematician Niels Henrik Abel, as Abel had found that the commutativity of the group of a polynomial implies that the roots of the polynomial can be calculated by using radicals."
],
[
"Properties",
"If is a natural number and is an element of an abelian group written additively, then can be defined as ( summands) and .",
"In this way, becomes a module over the ring of integers.",
"In fact, the modules over can be identified with the abelian groups.Theorems about abelian groups (i.e.",
"modules over the principal ideal domain ) can often be generalized to theorems about modules over an arbitrary principal ideal domain.",
"A typical example is the classification of finitely generated abelian groups which is a specialization of the structure theorem for finitely generated modules over a principal ideal domain.",
"In the case of finitely generated abelian groups, this theorem guarantees that an abelian group splits as a direct sum of a torsion group and a free abelian group.",
"The former may be written as a direct sum of finitely many groups of the form for prime, and the latter is a direct sum of finitely many copies of .If are two group homomorphisms between abelian groups, then their sum , defined by , is again a homomorphism.",
"(This is not true if is a non-abelian group.)",
"The set of all group homomorphisms from to is therefore an abelian group in its own right.Somewhat akin to the dimension of vector spaces, every abelian group has a ''rank''.",
"It is defined as the maximal cardinality of a set of linearly independent (over the integers) elements of the group.",
"Finite abelian groups and torsion groups have rank zero, and every abelian group of rank zero is a torsion group.",
"The integers and the rational numbers have rank one, as well as every nonzero additive subgroup of the rationals.",
"On the other hand, the multiplicative group of the nonzero rationals has an infinite rank, as it is a free abelian group with the set of the prime numbers as a basis (this results from the fundamental theorem of arithmetic).The center of a group is the set of elements that commute with every element of .",
"A group is abelian if and only if it is equal to its center .",
"The center of a group is always a characteristic abelian subgroup of .",
"If the quotient group of a group by its center is cyclic then is abelian."
],
[
"Finite abelian groups",
"Cyclic groups of integers modulo , , were among the first examples of groups.",
"It turns out that an arbitrary finite abelian group is isomorphic to a direct sum of finite cyclic groups of prime power order, and these orders are uniquely determined, forming a complete system of invariants.",
"The automorphism group of a finite abelian group can be described directly in terms of these invariants.",
"The theory had been first developed in the 1879 paper of Georg Frobenius and Ludwig Stickelberger and later was both simplified and generalized to finitely generated modules over a principal ideal domain, forming an important chapter of linear algebra.Any group of prime order is isomorphic to a cyclic group and therefore abelian.",
"Any group whose order is a square of a prime number is also abelian.",
"In fact, for every prime number there are (up to isomorphism) exactly two groups of order , namely and .=== Classification ===The '''fundamental theorem of finite abelian groups''' states that every finite abelian group can be expressed as the direct sum of cyclic subgroups of prime-power order; it is also known as the '''basis theorem for finite abelian groups'''.",
"Moreover, automorphism groups of cyclic groups are examples of abelian groups.",
"This is generalized by the fundamental theorem of finitely generated abelian groups, with finite groups being the special case when ''G'' has zero rank; this in turn admits numerous further generalizations.The classification was proven by Leopold Kronecker in 1870, though it was not stated in modern group-theoretic terms until later, and was preceded by a similar classification of quadratic forms by Carl Friedrich Gauss in 1801; see history for details.The cyclic group of order is isomorphic to the direct sum of and if and only if and are coprime.",
"It follows that any finite abelian group is isomorphic to a direct sum of the form:in either of the following canonical ways:* the numbers are powers of (not necessarily distinct) primes,* or divides , which divides , and so on up to .For example, can be expressed as the direct sum of two cyclic subgroups of order 3 and 5: .",
"The same can be said for any abelian group of order 15, leading to the remarkable conclusion that all abelian groups of order 15 are isomorphic.For another example, every abelian group of order 8 is isomorphic to either (the integers 0 to 7 under addition modulo 8), (the odd integers 1 to 15 under multiplication modulo 16), or .See also list of small groups for finite abelian groups of order 30 or less.=== Automorphisms ===One can apply the fundamental theorem to count (and sometimes determine) the automorphisms of a given finite abelian group .",
"To do this, one uses the fact that if splits as a direct sum of subgroups of coprime order, then:Given this, the fundamental theorem shows that to compute the automorphism group of it suffices to compute the automorphism groups of the Sylow -subgroups separately (that is, all direct sums of cyclic subgroups, each with order a power of ).",
"Fix a prime and suppose the exponents of the cyclic factors of the Sylow -subgroup are arranged in increasing order::for some .",
"One needs to find the automorphisms of:One special case is when , so that there is only one cyclic prime-power factor in the Sylow -subgroup .",
"In this case the theory of automorphisms of a finite cyclic group can be used.",
"Another special case is when is arbitrary but for .",
"Here, one is considering to be of the form:so elements of this subgroup can be viewed as comprising a vector space of dimension over the finite field of elements .",
"The automorphisms of this subgroup are therefore given by the invertible linear transformations, so:where is the appropriate general linear group.",
"This is easily shown to have order:In the most general case, where the and are arbitrary, the automorphism group is more difficult to determine.",
"It is known, however, that if one defines:and:then one has in particular , , and:One can check that this yields the orders in the previous examples as special cases (see Hillar & Rhea)."
],
[
"Finitely generated abelian groups",
"An abelian group is finitely generated if it contains a finite set of elements (called ''generators'') such that every element of the group is a linear combination with integer coefficients of elements of .",
"Let be a free abelian group with basis There is a unique group homomorphism such that :This homomorphism is surjective, and its kernel is finitely generated (since integers form a Noetherian ring).",
"Consider the matrix with integer entries, such that the entries of its th column are the coefficients of the th generator of the kernel.",
"Then, the abelian group is isomorphic to the cokernel of linear map defined by .",
"Conversely every integer matrix defines a finitely generated abelian group.It follows that the study of finitely generated abelian groups is totally equivalent with the study of integer matrices.",
"In particular, changing the generating set of is equivalent with multiplying on the left by a unimodular matrix (that is, an invertible integer matrix whose inverse is also an integer matrix).",
"Changing the generating set of the kernel of is equivalent with multiplying on the right by a unimodular matrix.The Smith normal form of is a matrix:where and are unimodular, and is a matrix such that all non-diagonal entries are zero, the non-zero diagonal entries are the first ones, and is a divisor of for .",
"The existence and the shape of the Smith normal form proves that the finitely generated abelian group is the direct sum : where is the number of zero rows at the bottom of (and also the rank of the group).",
"This is the fundamental theorem of finitely generated abelian groups.The existence of algorithms for Smith normal form shows that the fundamental theorem of finitely generated abelian groups is not only a theorem of abstract existence, but provides a way for computing expression of finitely generated abelian groups as direct sums."
],
[
"Infinite abelian groups",
"The simplest infinite abelian group is the infinite cyclic group .",
"Any finitely generated abelian group is isomorphic to the direct sum of copies of and a finite abelian group, which in turn is decomposable into a direct sum of finitely many cyclic groups of prime power orders.",
"Even though the decomposition is not unique, the number , called the rank of , and the prime powers giving the orders of finite cyclic summands are uniquely determined.By contrast, classification of general infinitely generated abelian groups is far from complete.",
"Divisible groups, i.e.",
"abelian groups in which the equation admits a solution for any natural number and element of , constitute one important class of infinite abelian groups that can be completely characterized.",
"Every divisible group is isomorphic to a direct sum, with summands isomorphic to and Prüfer groups for various prime numbers , and the cardinality of the set of summands of each type is uniquely determined.",
"Moreover, if a divisible group is a subgroup of an abelian group then admits a direct complement: a subgroup of such that .",
"Thus divisible groups are injective modules in the category of abelian groups, and conversely, every injective abelian group is divisible (Baer's criterion).",
"An abelian group without non-zero divisible subgroups is called '''reduced'''.Two important special classes of infinite abelian groups with diametrically opposite properties are ''torsion groups'' and ''torsion-free groups'', exemplified by the groups (periodic) and (torsion-free).=== Torsion groups ===An abelian group is called '''periodic''' or '''torsion''', if every element has finite order.",
"A direct sum of finite cyclic groups is periodic.",
"Although the converse statement is not true in general, some special cases are known.",
"The first and second Prüfer theorems state that if is a periodic group, and it either has a '''bounded exponent''', i.e., for some natural number , or is countable and the -heights of the elements of are finite for each , then is isomorphic to a direct sum of finite cyclic groups.",
"The cardinality of the set of direct summands isomorphic to in such a decomposition is an invariant of .",
"These theorems were later subsumed in the '''Kulikov criterion'''.",
"In a different direction, Helmut Ulm found an extension of the second Prüfer theorem to countable abelian -groups with elements of infinite height: those groups are completely classified by means of their Ulm invariants.=== Torsion-free and mixed groups ===An abelian group is called '''torsion-free''' if every non-zero element has infinite order.",
"Several classes of torsion-free abelian groups have been studied extensively:* Free abelian groups, i.e.",
"arbitrary direct sums of * Cotorsion and algebraically compact torsion-free groups such as the -adic integers* Slender groupsAn abelian group that is neither periodic nor torsion-free is called '''mixed'''.",
"If is an abelian group and is its torsion subgroup, then the factor group is torsion-free.",
"However, in general the torsion subgroup is not a direct summand of , so is ''not'' isomorphic to .",
"Thus the theory of mixed groups involves more than simply combining the results about periodic and torsion-free groups.",
"The additive group of integers is torsion-free -module.=== Invariants and classification ===One of the most basic invariants of an infinite abelian group is its rank: the cardinality of the maximal linearly independent subset of .",
"Abelian groups of rank 0 are precisely the periodic groups, while torsion-free abelian groups of rank 1 are necessarily subgroups of and can be completely described.",
"More generally, a torsion-free abelian group of finite rank is a subgroup of .",
"On the other hand, the group of -adic integers is a torsion-free abelian group of infinite -rank and the groups with different are non-isomorphic, so this invariant does not even fully capture properties of some familiar groups.The classification theorems for finitely generated, divisible, countable periodic, and rank 1 torsion-free abelian groups explained above were all obtained before 1950 and form a foundation of the classification of more general infinite abelian groups.",
"Important technical tools used in classification of infinite abelian groups are pure and basic subgroups.",
"Introduction of various invariants of torsion-free abelian groups has been one avenue of further progress.",
"See the books by Irving Kaplansky, László Fuchs, Phillip Griffith, and David Arnold, as well as the proceedings of the conferences on Abelian Group Theory published in ''Lecture Notes in Mathematics'' for more recent findings.=== Additive groups of rings ===The additive group of a ring is an abelian group, but not all abelian groups are additive groups of rings (with nontrivial multiplication).",
"Some important topics in this area of study are:* Tensor product* A.L.S.",
"Corner's results on countable torsion-free groups* Shelah's work to remove cardinality restrictions* Burnside ring"
],
[
"Relation to other mathematical topics",
"Many large abelian groups possess a natural topology, which turns them into topological groups.The collection of all abelian groups, together with the homomorphisms between them, forms the category , the prototype of an abelian category.",
"proved that the first-order theory of abelian groups, unlike its non-abelian counterpart, is decidable.",
"Most algebraic structures other than Boolean algebras are undecidable.There are still many areas of current research:*Amongst torsion-free abelian groups of finite rank, only the finitely generated case and the rank 1 case are well understood;*There are many unsolved problems in the theory of infinite-rank torsion-free abelian groups;*While countable torsion abelian groups are well understood through simple presentations and Ulm invariants, the case of countable mixed groups is much less mature.",
"*Many mild extensions of the first-order theory of abelian groups are known to be undecidable.",
"*Finite abelian groups remain a topic of research in computational group theory.Moreover, abelian groups of infinite order lead, quite surprisingly, to deep questions about the set theory commonly assumed to underlie all of mathematics.",
"Take the Whitehead problem: are all Whitehead groups of infinite order also free abelian groups?",
"In the 1970s, Saharon Shelah proved that the Whitehead problem is:* Undecidable in ZFC (Zermelo–Fraenkel axioms), the conventional axiomatic set theory from which nearly all of present-day mathematics can be derived.",
"The Whitehead problem is also the first question in ordinary mathematics proved undecidable in ZFC;* Undecidable even if ZFC is augmented by taking the generalized continuum hypothesis as an axiom;* Positively answered if ZFC is augmented with the axiom of constructibility (see statements true in L)."
],
[
"A note on typography",
"Among mathematical adjectives derived from the proper name of a mathematician, the word \"abelian\" is rare in that it is often spelled with a lowercase '''a''', rather than an uppercase '''A''', the lack of capitalization being a tacit acknowledgment not only of the degree to which Abel's name has been institutionalized but also of how ubiquitous in modern mathematics are the concepts introduced by him."
],
[
"See also",
"***, the smallest non-abelian group***"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References",
"* * * * * * * * Unabridged and unaltered republication of a work first published by the Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, in 1978.",
"* *"
],
[
"External links",
"*"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty"
],
[
"Introduction",
"The '''Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty''', also known as the '''ABM Treaty''' or '''ABMT''', was an arms control treaty between the United States and the Soviet Union on the limitation of the anti-ballistic missile (ABM) systems used in defending areas against ballistic missile-delivered nuclear weapons.",
"It was intended to reduce pressures to build more nuclear weapons to maintain deterrence.",
"Under the terms of the treaty, each party was limited to two ABM complexes, each of which was to be limited to 100 anti-ballistic missiles.Signed in 1972, it was in force for the next 30 years.",
"In 1997, five years after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, four former Soviet republics agreed with the United States to succeed the USSR's role in the treaty.",
"Citing risks of nuclear blackmail, the United States withdrew from the treaty in June 2002, leading to its termination."
],
[
"Background",
"Deployment history of land based ICBM 1959–2014Throughout the late 1950s and into the 1960s, the United States and the Soviet Union had been developing missile systems with the ability to shoot down incoming Intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) warheads.",
"During this period, the US considered the defense of the US as part of reducing the overall damage inflicted in a full nuclear exchange.",
"As part of this defense, Canada and the US established the North American Air Defense Command (now called North American Aerospace Defense Command).By the early 1950s, US research on the Nike Zeus missile system had developed to the point where small improvements would allow it to be used as the basis of an operational ABM system.",
"Work started on a short-range, high-speed counterpart known as Sprint to provide defense for the ABM sites themselves.",
"By the mid-1960s, both systems showed enough promise to start development of base selection for a limited ABM system dubbed Sentinel.",
"In 1967, the US announced that Sentinel itself would be scaled down to the smaller and less expensive Safeguard.",
"Soviet doctrine called for development of its own ABM system and return to strategic parity with the US.",
"This was achieved with the operational deployment of the A-35 ABM system and its successors, which remain operational to this day.The development of multiple independently targetable reentry vehicle (MIRV) systems allowed a single ICBM to deliver as many as ten separate warheads at a time.",
"An ABM defense system could be overwhelmed with the sheer number of warheads.",
"Upgrading it to counter the additional warheads would be economically unfeasible: The defenders required one rocket per incoming warhead, whereas the attackers could place 10 warheads on a single missile at a reasonable cost.",
"To further protect against ABM systems, the Soviet MIRV missiles were equipped with decoys; R-36M heavy missiles carried as many as 40.These decoys would appear as warheads to an ABM, effectively requiring engagement of five times as many targets and rendering defense even less effective."
],
[
"ABM Treaty",
"Jimmy Carter and Leonid Brezhnev signing SALT II treaty, 18 June 1979, in ViennaThe United States first proposed an anti-ballistic missile treaty at the 1967 Glassboro Summit Conference during discussions between U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara and Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Soviet Union Alexei Kosygin.",
"McNamara argued both that ballistic missile defense could provoke an arms race, and that it might provoke a first-strike against the nation fielding the defense.",
"Kosygin rejected this reasoning.",
"They were trying to minimize the number of nuclear missiles in the world.",
"Following the proposal of the Sentinel and Safeguard decisions on American ABM systems, the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks began in November 1969 (SALT I).",
"By 1972 an agreement had been reached to limit strategic defensive systems.",
"Each country was allowed two sites at which it could base a defensive system, one for the capital and one for ICBM silos.The treaty was signed during the 1972 Moscow Summit on 26 May by the President of the United States, Richard Nixon and the General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Leonid Brezhnev; and ratified by the U.S. Senate on 3 August 1972.The 1974 Protocol reduced the number of sites to one per party, largely because neither country had developed a second site.",
"The sites were Moscow for the USSR and the North Dakota Safeguard Complex for the US, which was already under construction.===Missiles limited by the treaty===The Treaty limited only ABMs capable of defending against \"strategic ballistic missiles\", without attempting to define \"strategic\".",
"It was understood that both ICBMs and SLBMs are obviously \"strategic\".",
"Neither country intended to stop the development of counter-tactical ABMs.",
"The topic became disputable as soon as most potent counter-tactical ABMs started to be capable of shooting down SLBMs (SLBMs naturally tend to be much slower than ICBMs), nevertheless both sides continued counter-tactical ABM development."
],
[
"After the SDI announcement",
"President Reagan delivering the 23 March 1983 speech initiating SDIOn 23 March 1983, Ronald Reagan announced the Strategic Defense Initiative, a research program into ballistic missile defense which would be \"consistent with our obligations under the ABM Treaty\".",
"Reagan was wary of mutual deterrence with what he had recently called an \"Evil Empire\", and wanted to escape the traditional confines of mutual assured destruction.",
"The project was a blow to Yuri Andropov's so-called \"peace offensive\".",
"Andropov said that \"It is time Washington stopped thinking up one option after another in search of the best way of unleashing nuclear war in the hope of winning it.",
"To do this is not just irresponsible.",
"It is madness\".Regardless of the opposition, Reagan gave every indication that SDI would not be used as a bargaining chip and that the United States would do all in its power to build the system.",
"The Soviets were threatened because the Americans might have been able to make a nuclear first strike possible.",
"In ''The Nuclear Predicament,'' Beckman claims that one of the central goals of Soviet diplomacy was to terminate SDI.",
"A surprise attack from the Americans would destroy much of the Soviet ICBM fleet, allowing SDI to defeat a \"ragged\" Soviet retaliatory response.",
"Furthermore, if the Soviets chose to enter this new arms race, they would further cripple their economy.",
"The Soviets could not afford to ignore Reagan's new endeavor, therefore their policy at the time was to enter negotiations with the Americans.",
"By 1987, however, the USSR withdrew its opposition, concluding the SDI posed no threat and scientifically \"would never work\".SDI research went ahead, although it did not achieve the hoped-for result.",
"SDI research was cut back following the end of Reagan's presidency, and in 1995 it was reiterated in a presidential joint statement that \"missile defense systems may be deployed... that will not pose a realistic threat to the strategic nuclear force of the other side and will not be tested to... create that capability.\"",
"This was reaffirmed in 1997."
],
[
"Theater Missile Defense negotiations",
"The ABM Treaty prohibited \"National Missile Defense\" (NMD), but some interpreted it to allow more limited systems called \"Theater Missile Defense\" (TMD).",
"This is because Article II of the treaty defined \"ABM Systems\" as those that \"counter strategic missiles\", which are typically defined as those with \"intercontinental capability\".",
"Thus, TMD supporters argued, the treaty did not prohibit systems that defended against the countering of theatre ballistic missiles.",
"The US had already developed and used such systems, including the Patriot Missile during the Gulf War.The problem arose as TMD systems could also potentially be capable of countering strategic ballistic missiles, not just theatre ballistic missiles.",
"The Clinton administration began negotiations with the Russians in 1993 to make amendments to the treaty.",
"After much discussion, Presidents Clinton and Boris Yeltsin signed addendum to the treaty on September 9, 1997.According to these new agreements, the treaty permitted missile defense systems to have a velocity up to 5 km/s as long as it had not been tested against targets traveling faster than 5 km/s.The 1997 agreement were eventually ratified by the Russian parliament on May 4, 2000 (along with START II treaty).",
"However, it was opposed in the U.S. Senate by some Republican senators led by Jesse Helms.",
"As a result, Clinton never submitted the agreement to Congress, fearing that Helms would stall their ratification or defeat it outright."
],
[
"After the dissolution of the USSR; United States and Russia",
"Presidents Vladimir Putin and George W. Bush sign SORT on 24 May 2002 in Moscow.Although the Soviet Union ceased to exist in December 1991, in the view of the U.S. Department of State, the treaty continued in force.",
"Russia was confirmed as the USSR's successor state in January 1992.Belarus and Ukraine were treated as successors at the ABM review conference in October 1993 and Kazakhstan was added as a successor shortly after.",
"Belarus, Ukraine and Kazakhstan became regular participants at ABM treaty meetings known as Standing Consultative Commissions.",
"An additional memorandum of understanding was prepared in 1997, establishing Belarus, Kazakhstan, the Russian Federation, and Ukraine as successor states to the Soviet Union, for the purposes of the treaty.",
"The US considered only extending the obligations to these countries, and not all, as only these ones had significant ABM assets.",
"As the ABM treaty allowed for only a single ABM deployment, the State Department deemed that only a single ABM system would be collectively permitted among Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Belarus.In the United States, there was a debate on whether after the dissolution of the USSR, the ABM Treaty was still in effect.",
"A month after the USSR's dissolution, President George H. W. Bush affirmed the ABM Treaty and regarded Russia as USSR's successor.",
"Russia also accepted the ABM Treaty.",
"Later on, President Clinton would affirm the validity of the treaty, as would President George W. Bush (before he terminated it).",
"However, some Americans (mostly conservative Republicans) argued that the treaty was not in effect because the USSR had no successor state.",
"This was deemed inconsistent, as Russia did indeed inherit the USSR's obligations (including its UNSC seat, its debts, its agreements on nonproliferation etc.).",
"Former CIA director James Woolsey argued that in order for the treaty to remain in force, both the US and Russia had to accept it, and that President Clinton could not accept it without Congressional approval.",
"According to Michael J. Glennon, Congress acknowledged the treaty in 1996, when it passed a law restricting President Clinton's ability to modify the treaty."
],
[
"United States withdrawal",
"On 13 December 2001, George W. Bush gave Russia notice of the United States' withdrawal from the treaty, in accordance with the clause that required six months' notice before terminating the pact—the first time in recent history that the United States has withdrawn from a major international arms treaty.",
"This led to the eventual creation of the American Missile Defense Agency.Supporters of the withdrawal argued that it was a necessity in order to test and build a limited National Missile Defense to protect the United States from nuclear blackmail by a rogue state.",
"But, the withdrawal had many foreign and domestic critics, who said the construction of a missile defense system would lead to fears of a U.S. nuclear first strike, as the missile defense could blunt the retaliatory strike that would otherwise deter such a preemptive attack.",
"John Rhinelander, a negotiator of the ABM treaty, predicted that the withdrawal would be a \"fatal blow\" to the Non-Proliferation Treaty and would lead to a \"world without effective legal constraints on nuclear proliferation\".",
"Former U.S. Secretary of Defense William Perry also criticized the U.S. withdrawal as a very bad decision.===Russian response===Newly elected Russian president Vladimir Putin responded to the withdrawal by ordering a build-up of Russia's nuclear capabilities, designed to counterbalance U.S. capabilities, although he noted there was no immediate danger stemming from the US withdrawal.Russia and the United States signed the Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty in Moscow on 24 May 2002.This treaty mandates cuts in deployed strategic nuclear warheads, but without actually mandating cuts to total stockpiled warheads, and without any mechanism for enforcement.On June 13, 2002, the US withdrew from ABM (having given notice 6 months earlier).",
"The next day, Russia responded by declaring it would no longer abide by the START II treaty, which had not entered into force.In interviews with Oliver Stone in 2017, Russian president Vladimir Putin said that in trying to persuade Russia to accept US withdrawal from the treaty, both Bill Clinton and George W. Bush had tried, without evidence, to convince him of an emerging nuclear threat from Iran.On 1 March 2018, Russian president Vladimir Putin, in an address to the Federal Assembly, announced the development of a series of technologically new \"super weapons\" in response to U.S. withdrawal from the ABM Treaty.",
"His statements were referred to by an anonymous US official under the Trump administration as largely boastful untruths.",
"He said that the U.S. decision triggered him to order an increase in Russia's nuclear capabilities, designed to counterbalance U.S. ones.In 2021, Putin cited U.S. withdrawal among his grievances against the West: \"We tried to partner with the West for many years, but the partnership was not accepted, it didn't work,\" often citing it as one of America's great post-Cold War sins."
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, official State Department site, includes the text of the treaty and the 1974 Protocol.",
"* US Announcement of withdrawal (2001)"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Austria-Hungary"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Austria-Hungary''', often referred to as the '''Austro-Hungarian Empire''' or the '''Dual Monarchy''', was a multi-national constitutional monarchy in Central Europe between 1867 and 1918.Austria-Hungary was a military and diplomatic alliance of two sovereign states with a single monarch who was titled both emperor of Austria and King of Hungary.",
"Austria-Hungary constituted the last phase in the constitutional evolution of the Habsburg monarchy: it was formed with the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867 in the aftermath of the Austro-Prussian War and was dissolved shortly after Hungary terminated the union with Austria on 31 October 1918.One of Europe's major powers at the time, Austria-Hungary was geographically the second-largest country in Europe, after the Russian Empire, at and the third-most populous (after Russia and the German Empire).",
"The Empire built up the fourth-largest machine-building industry in the world, after the United States, Germany and the United Kingdom.",
"Austria-Hungary also became the world's third-largest manufacturer and exporter of electric home appliances, electric industrial appliances, and power generation apparatus for power plants, after the United States and the German Empire, and it constructed Europe's second-largest railway network, after the German Empire.With the exception of the territory of the Bosnian Condominium, the Empire of Austria and the Kingdom of Hungary were separate sovereign countries in international law.",
"Thus separate representatives from Austria and Hungary signed peace treaties agreeing to territorial changes, for example the Treaty of Saint-Germain and the Treaty of Trianon.",
"Citizenship and passports were also separate.At its core was the dual monarchy, which was a real union between Cisleithania, the northern and western parts of the former Austrian Empire, and the Kingdom of Hungary.",
"Following the 1867 reforms, the Austrian and Hungarian states were co-equal in power.",
"The two countries conducted unified diplomatic and defence policies.",
"For these purposes, \"common\" ministries of foreign affairs and defence were maintained under the monarch's direct authority, as was a third finance ministry responsible only for financing the two \"common\" portfolios.",
"A third component of the union was the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia, an autonomous region under the Hungarian crown, which negotiated the Croatian–Hungarian Settlement in 1868.After 1878, Bosnia and Herzegovina came under Austro-Hungarian joint military and civilian rule until it was fully annexed in 1908, provoking the Bosnian crisis.Austria-Hungary was one of the Central Powers in World War I, which began with an Austro-Hungarian war declaration on the Kingdom of Serbia on 28 July 1914.It was already effectively dissolved by the time the military authorities signed the armistice of Villa Giusti on 3 November 1918.The Kingdom of Hungary and the First Austrian Republic were treated as its successors ''de jure'', whereas the independence of the West Slavs and South Slavs of the Empire as the First Czechoslovak Republic, the Second Polish Republic, and the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, respectively, and most of the territorial demands of the Kingdom of Romania and the Kingdom of Italy were also recognized by the victorious powers in 1920."
],
[
"Name and terminology",
" Silver coin: 5 corona, 1908 – the bust of Franz Joseph I facing right surrounded by the legend \"Franciscus Iosephus I, Dei gratia, imperator Austriae, rex Bohemiae, Galiciae, Illyriae et cetera et apostolicus rex Hungariae\"The realm's official name was in and in (), though in international relations ''Austria–Hungary'' was used (; ).",
"The Austrians also used the names () (in detail ; ) and ''Danubian Monarchy'' (; ) or ''Dual Monarchy'' (; ) and ''The Double Eagle'' (; ), but none of these became widespread either in Hungary or elsewhere.The realm's full name used in internal administration was '''The Kingdoms and Lands Represented in the Imperial Council and the Lands of the Holy Hungarian Crown of St.",
"Stephen'''.",
"* German: * Hungarian: From 1867 onwards, the abbreviations heading the names of official institutions in Austria–Hungary reflected their responsibility:* ('''' or Imperial and Royal) was the label for institutions common to both parts of the monarchy, e.g., the '''' (Navy) and, during the war, the '''' (Army).",
"The common army changed its label from '''' to '''' only in 1889 at the request of the Hungarian government.",
"* '''' ('''') or Imperial-Royal was the term for institutions of Cisleithania (Austria); \"royal\" in this label referred to the Crown of Bohemia.",
"* '''' ('''') or '''' ('''') (\"Royal Hungarian\") referred to Transleithania, the lands of the Hungarian crown.",
"In the Kingdom of Croatia and Slavonia, the autonomous institutions used ''k.''",
"('''') (\"Royal\"), since according to the Croatian–Hungarian Settlement, the only official language in Croatia and Slavonia was Croatian, and the institutions were \"only\" Croatian.Following a decision of Franz Joseph I in 1868, the realm bore the official name '''Austro-Hungarian Monarchy/Realm''' (; ) in its international relations.",
"It was often contracted to the \"Dual Monarchy\" in English or simply referred to as ''Austria''."
],
[
"History",
"===Formation and background===Following Hungary's defeat against the Ottoman Empire in the Battle of Mohács of 1526, the Habsburg Empire became more involved in the Kingdom of Hungary, and subsequently assumed the Hungarian throne.",
"However, as the Ottomans expanded further into Hungary, the Habsburgs came to control only a small north-western portion of the former kingdom's territory.",
"Eventually, following the Treaty of Passarowitz in 1718, all former territories of the Hungarian kingdom were ceded from the Ottomans to the Habsburgs.",
"In the revolutions of 1848, the Kingdom of Hungary called for greater self-government and later even independence from the Austrian Empire.",
"The ensuing Hungarian Revolution of 1848 was crushed by the Austrian military with Russian military assistance, and the level of autonomy that the Hungarian state had enjoyed was replaced with absolutist rule from Vienna.",
"This further increased Hungarian resentment of the Habsburg dominion.In the 1860s, the Empire faced two severe defeats: its loss in the Second Italian War of Independence broke its dominion over much of Italy, while defeat in the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 led to the dissolution of the German Confederation (of which the Habsburg emperor was the hereditary president) and the exclusion of Austria from German affairs.",
"These twin defeats gave the Hungarians the opportunity to remove the shackles of absolutist rule.Realizing the need to compromise with Hungary in order to retain its great power status, the central government in Vienna began negotiations with the Hungarian political leaders, led by Ferenc Deák.",
"On 20 March 1867, the newly re-established Hungarian parliament at Pest started to negotiate the new laws to be accepted on 30 March.",
"However, Hungarian leaders received word that the Emperor's formal coronation as King of Hungary on 8 June had to have taken place in order for the laws to be enacted within the lands of the Holy Crown of Hungary.",
"On 28 July, Franz Joseph, in his new capacity as King of Hungary, approved and promulgated the new laws, which officially gave birth to the Dual Monarchy.===1866–1878: beyond Lesser Germany===Austro-Hungarian occupationThe Austro-Prussian war was ended by the Peace of Prague (1866) which settled the \"German question\" in favor of a Lesser German Solution.",
"Count Friedrich Ferdinand von Beust, who was the foreign minister from 1866 to 1871, hated the Prussian chancellor, Otto von Bismarck, who had repeatedly outmaneuvered him.",
"Beust looked to France for avenging Austria's defeat and attempted to negotiate with Emperor Napoleon III of France and Italy for an anti-Prussian alliance, but no terms could be reached.",
"The decisive victory of the Prusso-German armies in the Franco-Prussian war and the subsequent founding of the German Empire ended all hope of re-establishing Austrian influence in Germany, and Beust retired.After being forced out of Germany and Italy, the Dual Monarchy turned to the Balkans, which were in tumult as nationalistic movements were gaining strength and demanding independence.",
"Both Russia and Austria–Hungary saw an opportunity to expand in this region.",
"Russia took on the role of protector of Slavs and Orthodox Christians.",
"Austria envisioned a multi-ethnic, religiously diverse empire under Vienna's control.",
"Count Gyula Andrássy, a Hungarian who was Foreign Minister (1871–1879), made the centerpiece of his policy one of opposition to Russian expansion in the Balkans and blocking Serbian ambitions to dominate a new South Slav federation.",
"He wanted Germany to ally with Austria, not Russia."
],
[
"Government",
"Hungarian Parliament buildingAustrian Parliament buildingThe Compromise of 1867 turned the Habsburg domains into a real union between the Austrian Empire (\"Lands Represented in the Imperial Council\", or Cisleithania) in the western and northern half and the Kingdom of Hungary (\"Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen\", or Transleithania) in the eastern half.The government of Austria, which had ruled the monarchy until 1867, became the government of the Austrian part, and another government was formed for the Hungarian part.",
"The common government (officially designated Ministerial Council for Common Affairs, or in German) formed for the few matters of common national security - the Common Army, Navy, foreign policy and the imperial household, and the customs union.",
"Although the two halves shared a common monarch and both foreign relations and defense were managed jointly, all other state functions were to be handled separately as there was no common citizenship.Hungary and Austria maintained separate parliaments, each with its own prime minister: the Diet of Hungary (commonly known as the National Assembly) and the Imperial Council () in Cisleithania.",
"Each parliament had its own executive government, appointed by the monarch.After 1878, Bosnia and Herzegovina came under Austro-Hungarian military and civilian rule until it was fully annexed in 1908, provoking the Bosnian crisis with the Great Powers and Austria-Hungary's Balkan neighbors, Serbia and Montenegro.Relations during the half-century after 1867 between the two parts of the dual monarchy featured repeated disputes over shared external tariff arrangements and over the financial contribution of each government to the common treasury.",
"These matters were determined by the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, in which common expenditures were allocated 70% to Austria and 30% to Hungary.",
"This division had to be renegotiated every ten years.",
"There was political turmoil during the build-up to each renewal of the agreement.",
"By 1907, the Hungarian share had risen to 36.4%.",
"The disputes culminated in the early 1900s in a prolonged constitutional crisis.",
"It was triggered by disagreement over which language to use for command in Hungarian army units and deepened by the advent to power in Budapest in April 1906 of a Hungarian nationalist coalition.",
"Provisional renewals of the common arrangements occurred in October 1907 and in November 1917 on the basis of the ''status quo''.",
"The negotiations in 1917 ended with the dissolution of the Dual Monarchy."
],
[
"Demographics",
"Demographics of Empire of Austria and Kingdom of Hungary in Europe before WW1Ethno-linguistic map of Austria-Hungary, 1910 ethnographic map of Austria-Hungary, 1885In July 1849, the Hungarian Revolutionary Parliament proclaimed and enacted ethnic and minority rights (the next such laws were in Switzerland), but these were overturned after the Russian and Austrian armies crushed the Hungarian Revolution.",
"After the Kingdom of Hungary reached the Compromise with the Habsburg Dynasty in 1867, one of the first acts of its restored Parliament was to pass a Law on Nationalities (Act Number XLIV of 1868).",
"It was a liberal piece of legislation and offered extensive language and cultural rights.",
"It did not recognize non-Hungarians to have rights to form states with any territorial autonomy.Article 19 of the 1867 \"Basic State Act\" (''Staatsgrundgesetz''), valid only for the Cisleithanian (Austrian) part of Austria–Hungary, said: The implementation of this principle led to several disputes, as it was not clear which languages could be regarded as \"customary\".",
"The Germans, the traditional bureaucratic, capitalist and cultural elite, demanded the recognition of their language as a customary language in every part of the empire.",
"German nationalists, especially in the Sudetenland (part of Bohemia), looked to Berlin in the new German Empire.The Hungarian Minority Act of 1868 gave the minorities (Slovaks, Romanians, Serbs, et al.)",
"individual (but not also communal) rights to use their language in offices, schools (although in practice often only in those founded by them and not by the state), courts and municipalities (if 20% of the deputies demanded it).",
"Beginning with the 1879 Primary Education Act and the 1883 Secondary Education Act, the Hungarian state made more efforts to reduce the use of non-Magyar languages, in strong violation of the 1868 Nationalities Law.",
"After 1875, all Slovak language schools higher than elementary were closed, including the only three high schools (gymnasiums) in Revúca (Nagyrőce), Turčiansky Svätý Martin (Turócszentmárton) and Kláštor pod Znievom (Znióváralja).Language was, as a proxy for ethnicity, one of the most contentious issues in Austro-Hungarian politics.",
"All governments faced difficult and divisive hurdles in deciding on the languages of government and of instruction.",
"The minorities sought the widest opportunities for education in their own languages, as well as in the \"dominant\" languages—Hungarian and German.",
"By the \"Ordinance of 5 April 1897\", the Austrian Prime Minister Count Kasimir Felix Badeni gave Czech equal standing with German in the internal government of Bohemia; this led to a crisis because of nationalist German agitation throughout the empire.",
"The Crown dismissed Badeni.Physical map of Austria-Hungary in 1914Italian was regarded as an old \"culture language\" ('''') by German intellectuals and had always been granted equal rights as an official language of the Empire, but the Germans had difficulty in accepting the Slavic languages as equal to their own.",
"On one occasion Count A. Auersperg (Anastasius Grün) entered the Diet of Carniola carrying what he claimed to be the whole corpus of Slovene literature under his arm; this was to demonstrate that the Slovene language could not be substituted for German as the language of higher education.The following years saw official recognition of several languages, at least in Austria.",
"Since 1867, laws awarded Croatian equal status with Italian in Dalmatia.",
"Beginning in 1882, there was a Slovene majority in the Diet of Carniola and in the capital Laibach (Ljubljana); they replaced German with Slovene as their primary official language.",
"Galicia designated Polish instead of German in 1869 as the customary language of government.",
"As of June 1907, all public and private schools in Hungary were obliged to ensure that after the fourth grade, the pupils could express themselves fluently in Hungarian.",
"This led to the further closing of minority schools, devoted mostly to the Slovak and Rusyn languages.",
"The two kingdoms sometimes divided their spheres of influence.",
"According to Misha Glenny in his book, ''The Balkans, 1804–1999'', the Austrians responded to Hungarian support of Czechs by supporting the Croatian national movement in Zagreb.",
"In recognition that he reigned in a multi-ethnic country, Emperor Franz Joseph spoke (and used) German, Hungarian and Czech fluently, and Croatian, Serbian, Polish and Italian to some degree.The language disputes were most fiercely fought in Bohemia, where the Czech speakers formed a majority and sought equal status for their language to German.",
"The Czechs had lived primarily in Bohemia since the 6th century and German immigrants had begun settling the Bohemian periphery in the 13th century.",
"The constitution of 1627 made the German language a second official language and equal to Czech.",
"German speakers lost their majority in the Bohemian Diet in 1880 and became a minority to Czech speakers in the cities of Prague and Pilsen (while retaining a slight numerical majority in the city of Brno (Brünn)).",
"The old Charles University in Prague, hitherto dominated by German speakers, was divided into German and Czech-speaking faculties in 1882.At the same time, Hungarian dominance faced challenges from the local majorities of Romanians in Transylvania and in the eastern Banat, Slovaks in today's Slovakia, and Croats and Serbs in the crown lands of Croatia and of Dalmatia (today's Croatia), in Bosnia and Herzegovina and in the provinces known as the Vojvodina (today's northern Serbia).",
"The Romanians and the Serbs began to agitate for union with their fellow nationalists and language speakers in the newly founded states of Romania (1859–1878) and Serbia.Hungary's leaders were generally less willing than their Austrian counterparts to share power with their subject minorities, but they granted a large measure of autonomy to Croatia in 1868.To some extent, they modeled their relationship to that kingdom on their own compromise with Austria of the previous year.",
"In spite of nominal autonomy, the Croatian government was an economic and administrative part of Hungary, which the Croatians resented.",
"In the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia and Bosnia and Herzegovina many advocated the idea of a trialist Austro-Hungaro-Croatian monarchy; among the supporters of the idea were Archduke Leopold Salvator, Archduke Franz Ferdinand and emperor and king Charles I who during his short reign supported the trialist idea only to be vetoed by the Hungarian government and Count Istvan Tisza.",
"The count finally signed the trialist proclamation after heavy pressure from the king on 23 October 1918.===Ethnic relations===In Istria, the Istro-Romanians, a small ethnic group composed by around 2,600 people in the 1880s, suffered severe discrimination.",
"The Croats of the region, who formed the majority, tried to assimilate them, while the Italian minority supported them in their requests for self-determination.",
"In 1888, the possibility of opening the first school for the Istro-Romanians teaching in the Romanian language was discussed in the Diet of Istria.",
"The proposal was very popular among them.",
"The Italian deputies showed their support, but the Croat ones opposed it and tried to show that the Istro-Romanians were in fact Slavs.",
"During Austro-Hungarian rule, the Istro-Romanians lived under poverty conditions, and those living in the island of Krk were fully assimilated by 1875.Romantic-style Great Synagogue in Pécs, built by the Neolog Jewish community in 1869Galicia in Leopoldstadt, Vienna, 1915Around 1900, Jews numbered about two million in the whole territory of the Austro-Hungarian Empire; their position was ambiguous.",
"The populist and antisemitic politics of the Christian Social Party are sometimes viewed as a model for Adolf Hitler's Nazism.",
"Antisemitic parties and movements existed, but the governments of Vienna and Budapest did not initiate pogroms or implement official antisemitic policies.",
"They feared that such ethnic violence could ignite other ethnic minorities and escalate out of control.",
"The antisemitic parties remained on the periphery of the political sphere due to their low popularity among voters in the parliamentary elections.In that period, the majority of Jews in Austria–Hungary lived in small towns (''shtetls'') in Galicia and rural areas in Hungary and Bohemia; however, they had large communities and even local majorities in the downtown districts of Vienna, Budapest, Prague, Kraków and Lwów.",
"Of the pre-World War I military forces of the major European powers, the Austro-Hungarian army was almost alone in its regular promotion of Jews to positions of command.",
"While the Jewish population of the lands of the Dual Monarchy was about 5%, Jews made up nearly 18% of the reserve officer corps.",
"Thanks to the modernity of the constitution and to the benevolence of emperor Franz Joseph, the Austrian Jews came to regard the era of Austria–Hungary as a golden era of their history.",
"By 1910 about 900,000 religious Jews made up approximately 5% of the population of Hungary and about 23% of Budapest's citizenry.",
"In the Austro-Hungarian Empire the generally fiercely patriotic Hungarian Jews were securing the tenuous Hungarian majority in the Kingdom of Hungary.",
"Jews accounted for 54% of commercial business owners, 85% of financial institution directors and owners in banking, and 62% of all employees in commerce, 20% of all general grammar school students, and 37% of all commercial scientific grammar school students, 31.9% of all engineering students, and 34.1% of all students in human faculties of the universities.",
"Jews were accounted for 48.5% of all physicians, and 49.4% of all lawyers/jurists in Hungary.",
"Note: The numbers of Jews were reconstructed from religious censuses.",
"They did not include the people of Jewish origin who had converted to Christianity, or the number of atheists.",
"Among many Hungarian parliament members of Jewish origin, the most famous Jewish members in Hungarian political life were Vilmos Vázsonyi as Minister of Justice, Samu Hazai as Minister of War, János Teleszky as minister of finance, János Harkányi as minister of trade, and József Szterényi as minister of trade."
],
[
"Education",
"===Universities in Cisleithania===Literacy in Austria-Hungary (census 1880)The first university in the Austrian half of the Empire (Charles University) was founded by H.R.",
"Emperor Charles IV in Prague in 1347, the second oldest university was the Jagiellonian University established in Kraków by the King of Poland Casimir III the Great in 1364, while the third oldest (University of Vienna) was founded by Duke Rudolph IV in 1365.The higher educational institutions were predominantly German, but beginning in the 1870s, language shifts began to occur.",
"These establishments, which in the middle of the 19th century had had a predominantly German character, underwent in Galicia a conversion into Polish national institutions, in Bohemia and Moravia a separation into German and Czech ones.",
"Thus Germans, Czechs and Poles were provided for.",
"But now the smaller nations also made their voices heard: the Ruthenians, Slovenes and Italians.",
"The Ruthenians demanded at first, in view of the predominantly Ruthenian character of rural East Galicia, a national partition of the Polish University of Lwów.",
"Since the Poles were at first unyielding, Ruthenian demonstrations and strikes of students arose, and the Ruthenians were no longer content with the reversion of a few separate professorial chairs, and with parallel courses of lectures.",
"By a pact concluded on 28 January 1914 the Poles promised a Ruthenian university; but owing to the war the question lapsed.",
"The Italians could hardly claim a university of their own on grounds of population (in 1910 they numbered 783,000), but they claimed it all the more on grounds of their ancient culture.",
"All parties were agreed that an Italian faculty of laws should be created; the difficulty lay in the choice of the place.",
"The Italians demanded Trieste; but the Government was afraid to let this Adriatic port become the centre of an irredenta; moreover the Southern Slavs of the city wished it kept free from an Italian educational establishment.",
"Bienerth in 1910 brought about a compromise; namely, that it should be founded at once, the situation to be provisionally in Vienna, and to be transferred within four years to Italian national territory.",
"The German National Union (Nationalverband) agreed to extend temporary hospitality to the Italian university in Vienna, but the Southern Slav Hochschule Club demanded a guarantee that a later transfer to the coast provinces should not be contemplated, together with the simultaneous foundation of Slovene professorial chairs in Prague and Cracow, and preliminary steps towards the foundation of a Southern Slav university in Laibach.",
"But in spite of the constant renewal of negotiations for a compromise it was impossible to arrive at any agreement, until the outbreak of war left all the projects for a Ruthenian university at Lemberg, a Slovene one in Laibach, and a second Czech one in Moravia, unrealized.===Universities in Transleithania===Literacy in Hungary by counties in 1910 (excluding Croatia)In the year 1276, the university of Veszprém was destroyed by the troops of Péter Csák and it was never rebuilt.",
"A university was established by Louis I of Hungary in Pécs in 1367.Sigismund established a university at Óbuda in 1395.Another, Universitas Istropolitana, was established 1465 in Pozsony (now Bratislava in Slovakia) by Mattias Corvinus.",
"None of these medieval universities survived the Ottoman wars.",
"Nagyszombat University was founded in 1635 and moved to Buda in 1777 and it is called Eötvös Loránd University today.",
"The world's first institute of technology was founded in Selmecbánya, Kingdom of Hungary (since 1920 Banská Štiavnica, now Slovakia) in 1735.Its legal successor is the University of Miskolc in Hungary.",
"The Budapest University of Technology and Economics (BME) is considered the oldest institute of technology in the world with university rank and structure.",
"Its legal predecessor the Institutum Geometrico-Hydrotechnicum was founded in 1782 by Emperor Joseph II.The high schools included the universities, of which Hungary possessed five, all maintained by the state: at Budapest (founded in 1635), at Kolozsvár (founded in 1872), and at Zagreb (founded in 1874).",
"Newer universities were established in Debrecen in 1912, and Pozsony university was reestablished after a half millennium in 1912.They had four faculties: theology, law, philosophy and medicine (the university at Zagreb was without a faculty of medicine).",
"There were in addition ten high schools of law, called academies, which in 1900 were attended by 1,569 pupils.",
"The Polytechnicum in Budapest, founded in 1844, which contained four faculties and was attended in 1900 by 1,772 pupils, was also considered a high school.",
"There were in Hungary in 1900 forty-nine theological colleges, twenty-nine Catholic, five Greek Uniat, four Greek Orthodox, ten Protestant and one Jewish.",
"Among special schools the principal mining schools were at Selmeczbánya, Nagyág and Felsőbánya; the principal agricultural colleges at Debreczen and Kolozsvár; and there was a school of forestry at Selmeczbánya, military colleges at Budapest, Kassa, Déva and Zagreb, and a naval school at Fiume.",
"There were in addition a number of training institutes for teachers and a large number of schools of commerce, several art schools – for design, painting, sculpture, and music.+ Literacy in Kingdom of Hungary,incl.",
"male and female Major nationalities in Hungary Rate of literacy in 1910German 70.7%Hungarian 67.1%Croatian 62.5%Slovak 58.1%Serbian 51.3%Romanian 28.2%Ruthenian 22.2%"
],
[
"Economy",
"crown banknote of the Dual Monarchy, using all official and recognized languages (the reverse side was Hungarian)Black Friday, 9 May 1873, Vienna Stock Exchange.",
"The Panic of 1873 and Long Depression followed.The heavily rural Austro-Hungarian economy slowly modernised after 1867.Railroads opened up once-remote areas, and cities grew.",
"Many small firms promoted capitalist way of production.",
"Technological change accelerated industrialization and urbanization.",
"The first Austrian stock exchange (the Wiener Börse) was opened in 1771 in Vienna, the first stock exchange of the Kingdom of Hungary (the Budapest Stock Exchange) was opened in Budapest in 1864.The central bank (Bank of issue) was founded as Austrian National Bank in 1816.In 1878, it transformed into Austro-Hungarian National Bank with principal offices in both Vienna and Budapest.",
"The central bank was governed by alternating Austrian or Hungarian governors and vice-governors.The gross national product per capita grew roughly 1.76% per year from 1870 to 1913.That level of growth compared very favorably to that of other European nations such as Britain (1%), France (1.06%), and Germany (1.51%).",
"However, in a comparison with Germany and Britain, the Austro-Hungarian economy as a whole still lagged considerably, as sustained modernization had begun much later.",
"Like the German Empire, that of Austria–Hungary frequently employed liberal economic policies and practices.",
"In 1873, the old Hungarian capital Buda and Óbuda (Ancient Buda) were officially merged with the third city, Pest, thus creating the new metropolis of Budapest.",
"The dynamic Pest grew into Hungary's administrative, political, economic, trade and cultural hub.",
"Many of the state institutions and the modern administrative system of Hungary were established during this period.",
"Economic growth centered on Vienna and Budapest, the Austrian lands (areas of modern Austria), the Alpine region and the Bohemian lands.",
"In the later years of the 19th century, rapid economic growth spread to the central Hungarian plain and to the Carpathian lands.",
"As a result, wide disparities of development existed within the empire.",
"In general, the western areas became more developed than the eastern ones.",
"The Kingdom of Hungary became the world's second-largest flour exporter after the United States.",
"The large Hungarian food exports were not limited to neighbouring Germany and Italy: Hungary became the most important foreign food supplier of the large cities and industrial centres of the United Kingdom.",
"Galicia, which has been described as the poorest province of Austro-Hungary, experienced near-constant famines, resulting in 50,000 deaths a year.",
"The Istro-Romanians of Istria were also poor, as pastoralism lost strength and agriculture was not productive.However, by the end of the 19th century, economic differences gradually began to even out as economic growth in the eastern parts of the monarchy consistently surpassed that in the western.",
"The strong agriculture and food industry of the Kingdom of Hungary with the centre of Budapest became predominant within the empire and made up a large proportion of the export to the rest of Europe.",
"Meanwhile, western areas, concentrated mainly around Prague and Vienna, excelled in various manufacturing industries.",
"This division of labour between the east and west, besides the existing economic and monetary union, led to an even more rapid economic growth throughout Austria–Hungary by the early 20th century.",
"However, since the turn of the twentieth century, the Austrian half of the Monarchy could preserve its dominance within the empire in the sectors of the first industrial revolution, but Hungary had a better position in the modern industries of the second industrial revolution, in these modern sectors of the second industrial revolution (like machine building industry and electric industry) the Austrian competition could not become dominant."
],
[
"Infrastructure",
"===Telecommunications=======Telegraph====The first telegraph connection (Vienna—Brno—Prague) had started operation in 1847.In Hungarian territory the first telegraph stations were opened in Pressburg (''Pozsony'', today's Bratislava) in December 1847 and in Buda in 1848.The first telegraph connection between Vienna and Pest–Buda (later Budapest) was constructed in 1850, and Vienna–Zagreb in 1850.Austria subsequently joined a telegraph union with German states.",
"In the Kingdom of Hungary, 2,406 telegraph post offices operated in 1884.By 1914 the number of telegraph offices reached 3,000 in post offices and further 2,400 were installed in the railway stations of the Kingdom of Hungary.====Telephone====The first telephone exchange was opened in Zagreb (8 January 1881), the second was in Budapest (1 May 1881), and the third was opened in Vienna (3 June 1881).",
"Initially telephony was available in the homes of individual subscribers, companies and offices.",
"Public telephone stations appeared in the 1890s, and they quickly became widespread in post offices and railway stations.",
"Austria–Hungary had 568 million telephone calls in 1913; only two Western European countries had more phone calls: the German Empire and the United Kingdom.",
"The Austro-Hungarian Empire was followed by France with 396 million telephone calls and Italy with 230 million phone calls.",
"In 1916, there were 366 million telephone calls in Cisleithania, among them 8.4 million long distant calls.",
"All telephone exchanges of the cities, towns and larger villages in Transleithania were linked until 1893.By 1914, more than 2000 settlements had telephone exchange in Kingdom of Hungary.====Electronic audio broadcasting====A stentor reading the day's news in the Telefonhírmondó of BudapestThe Telefon Hírmondó (Telephone Herald) news and entertainment service was introduced in Budapest in 1893.Two decades before the introduction of radio broadcasting, people could listen to political, economic and sports news, cabaret, music and opera in Budapest daily.",
"It operated over a special type of telephone exchange system.===Rail transport===Detailed railway map of Austrian and Hungarian railways from 1911By 1913, the combined length of the railway tracks of the Austrian Empire and Kingdom of Hungary reached .",
"In Western Europe only Germany had more extended railway network (); the Austro-Hungarian Empire was followed by France (), the United Kingdom (), Italy () and Spain ().==== Railways in Transleithania====The first Hungarian steam locomotive railway line was opened on 15 July 1846 between Pest and Vác.",
"In 1890 most large Hungarian private railway companies were nationalized as a consequence of the poor management of private companies, except the strong Austrian-owned Kaschau-Oderberg Railway (KsOd) and the Austrian-Hungarian Southern Railway (SB/DV).",
"They also joined the zone tariff system of the MÁV (Hungarian State Railways).",
"By 1910, the total length of the rail networks of Hungarian Kingdom reached , the Hungarian network linked more than 1,490 settlements.",
"Nearly half (52%) of the empire's railways were built in Hungary, thus the railroad density there became higher than that of Cisleithania.",
"This has ranked Hungarian railways the 6th most dense in the world (ahead of Germany and France).Electrified commuter railways: A set of four electric commuter rai lines were built in Budapest, the BHÉV: Ráckeve line (1887), Szentendre line (1888), Gödöllő line (1888), Csepel line (1912)====Tramway lines in the cities====Horse-drawn tramways appeared in the first half of the 19th century.",
"Between the 1850s and 1880s many were built : Vienna (1865), Budapest (1866), Brno (1869), Trieste (1876).",
"Steam trams appeared in the late 1860s.",
"The electrification of tramways started in the late 1880s.",
"The first electrified tramway in Austria–Hungary was built in Budapest in 1887.Electric tramway lines in the Austrian Empire:* Austria: Gmunden (1894); Linz, Vienna (1897); Graz (1898); Trieste (1900); Ljubljana (1901); Innsbruck (1905); Unterlach, Ybbs an der Donau (1907); Salzburg (1909); Klagenfurt, Sankt Pölten (1911); Piran (1912)* Austrian Littoral: Pula (1904).",
"* Bohemia: Prague (1891); Teplice (1895); Liberec (1897); Ústí nad Labem, Plzeň, Olomouc (1899); Moravia, Brno, Jablonec nad Nisou (1900); Ostrava (1901); Mariánské Lázně (1902); Budějovice, České Budějovice, Jihlava (1909)* Austrian Silesia: Opava (Troppau) (1905), Cieszyn (Cieszyn) (1911)* Dalmatia: Dubrovnik (1910)* Galicia: Lviv (1894), Bielsko-Biała (1895); Kraków (1901); Tarnów, Cieszyn (1911)Electric tramway lines in the Kingdom of Hungary:* Hungary: Budapest (1887); Pressburg/Pozsony/Bratislava (1895); Szabadka/Subotica (1897), Szombathely (1897), Miskolc (1897); Temesvár/Timișoara (1899); Sopron (1900); Szatmárnémeti/Satu Mare (1900); Nyíregyháza (1905); Nagyszeben/Sibiu (1905); Nagyvárad/Oradea (1906); Szeged (1908); Debrecen (1911); Újvidék/Novi Sad (1911); Kassa/Košice (1913); Pécs (1913)* Croatia: Fiume (1899); Pula (1904); Opatija – Lovran (1908); Zagreb (1910); Dubrovnik (1910).====Underground====The start of construction of the underground in Budapest (1894–1896)The Budapest Metro Line 1 (originally the \"Franz Joseph Underground Electric Railway Company\") is the second oldest underground railway in the world (the first being the London Underground's Metropolitan Line and the third being Glasgow), and the first on the European mainland.",
"It was built from 1894 to 1896 and opened on 2 May 1896.In 2002, it was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.The M1 line became an IEEE Milestone due to the radically new innovations in its era: \"Among the railway's innovative elements were bidirectional tram cars; electric lighting in the subway stations and tram cars; and an overhead wire structure instead of a third-rail system for power\".===Inland waterways and river regulation===The first Danubian steamer company, Donaudampfschiffahrtsgesellschaft (DDSG), was the world's largest inland shipping company until the collapse of Austria-Hungary.In 1900 the engineer C. Wagenführer drew up plans to link the Danube and the Adriatic Sea by a canal from Vienna to Trieste.",
"It was born from the desire of Austria–Hungary to have a direct link to the Adriatic Sea but was never constructed.====Lower Danube and the Iron Gates====In 1831 a plan had already been drafted to make the passage navigable, at the initiative of the Hungarian politician István Széchenyi.",
"Finally Gábor Baross, Hungary's \"Iron Minister\", succeeded in financing this project.",
"The riverbed rocks and the associated rapids made the gorge valley an infamous passage for shipping.",
"In German, the passage is still known as the Kataraktenstrecke, even though the cataracts are gone.",
"Near the actual \"Iron Gates\" strait the Prigrada rock was the most important obstacle until 1896: the river widened considerably here and the water level was consequently low.",
"Upstream, the Greben rock near the \"Kazan\" gorge was notorious.====Tisza River====The length of the Tisza river in Hungary used to be .",
"It flowed through the Great Hungarian Plain, which is one of the largest flat areas in central Europe.",
"Since plains can cause a river to flow very slowly, the Tisza used to follow a path with many curves and turns, which led to many large floods in the area.After several small-scale attempts, István Széchenyi organised the \"regulation of the Tisza\" (Hungarian: a Tisza szabályozása) which started on 27 August 1846, and substantially ended in 1880.The new length of the river in Hungary was ( total), with of \"dead channels\" and of new riverbed.",
"The resultant length of the flood-protected river comprises (out of of all Hungarian protected rivers).===Shipping and ports===The SS ''Kaiser Franz Joseph I'' (12,567 t) of the Austro-Americana company was the largest passenger ship ever built in Austria.",
"Because of its control over the coast of much of the Balkans, Austria–Hungary had access to several seaports.Dubrovnik, Kingdom of DalmatiaThe most important seaport was Trieste (today part of Italy), where the Austrian merchant marine was based.",
"Two major shipping companies (Austrian Lloyd and Austro-Americana) and several shipyards were located there.",
"From 1815 to 1866, Venice had been part of the Habsburg empire.",
"The loss of Venice prompted the development of the Austrian merchant marine.",
"By 1913, the commercial marine of Austria, comprised 16,764 vessels with a tonnage of 471,252, and crews number-ing 45,567.Of the total (1913) 394 of 422,368 tons were steamers, and 16,370 of 48,884 tons were sailing vessels The Austrian Lloyd was one of the biggest ocean shipping companies of the time.",
"Prior to the beginning of World War I, the company owned 65 middle-sized and large steamers.",
"The Austro-Americana owned one third of this number, including the biggest Austrian passenger ship, the SS ''Kaiser Franz Joseph I''.",
"In comparison to the Austrian Lloyd, the Austro-American concentrated on destinations in North and South America.",
"The Austro-Hungarian Navy became much more significant than previously, as industrialization provided sufficient revenues to develop it.",
"Pola (Pula, today part of Croatia) was especially significant for the navy.The most important seaport for the Hungarian part of the monarchy was Fiume (Rijeka, today part of Croatia), where the Hungarian shipping companies, such as the Adria, operated.",
"The commercial marine of the Kingdom of Hungary in 1913 comprised 545 vessels of 144,433 tons, and crews numbering 3,217.Of the total number of vessels 134,000 of 142,539 tons were steamers, and 411 of 1,894 tons were sailing vessels."
],
[
"Military",
"The Austro-Hungarian Army was under the command of Archduke Albrecht, Duke of Teschen (1817–1895), an old-fashioned bureaucrat who opposed modernization.",
"The military system of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy was similar in both states, and rested since 1868 upon the principle of the universal and personal obligation of the citizen to bear arms.",
"Its military force was composed of the Common Army; the special armies, namely the Austrian Landwehr, and the Hungarian ''Honvéd'', which were separate national institutions, and the Landsturm or levy-en masse.",
"As stated above, the common army stood under the administration of the joint minister of war, while the special armies were under the administration of the respective ministries of national defence.",
"The yearly contingent of recruits for the army was fixed by the military bills voted on by the Austrian and Hungarian parliaments and was generally determined on the basis of the population, according to the last census returns.",
"It amounted in 1905 to 103,100 men, of which Austria furnished 59,211 men, and Hungary 43,889.Besides 10,000 men were annually allotted to the Austrian Landwehr, and 12,500 to the Hungarian Honved.",
"The term of service was two years (three years in the cavalry) with the colours, seven or eight in the reserve and two in the Landwehr; in the case of men not drafted to the active army the same total period of service was spent in various special reserves.The common minister of war was the head for the administration of all military affairs, except those of the Austrian Landwehr and of the Hungarian Honved, which were committed to the ministries for national defence of the two respective states.",
"But the supreme command of the army was nominally vested in the monarch, who had the power to take all measures regarding the whole army.",
"In practice, the emperor's nephew Archduke Albrecht was his chief military advisor and made the policy decisions.The Austro-Hungarian Navy was mainly a coast defence force, and also included a flotilla of monitors for the Danube.",
"It was administered by the naval department of the ministry of war.===1914–1918: World War I=======1878–1914: Congress of Berlin, Balkan instability and the Bosnia Crisis====Recruits from Bosnia-Herzegovina, including Muslim Bosniaks (31%), were drafted into special units of the Austro-Hungarian Army as early as 1879 and were commended for their bravery in service of the Austrian emperor, being awarded more medals than any other unit.",
"The military march \"Die Bosniaken kommen\" was composed in their honor by Eduard Wagnes.Russian Pan-Slavic organizations sent aid to the Balkan rebels and so pressured the tsar's government to declare war on the Ottoman Empire in 1877 in the name of protecting Orthodox Christians.",
"Unable to mediate between the Ottoman Empire and Russia over the control of Serbia, Austria–Hungary declared neutrality when the conflict between the two powers escalated into a war.",
"With help from Romania and Greece, Russia defeated the Ottomans and with the Treaty of San Stefano tried to create a large pro-Russian Bulgaria.This treaty sparked an international uproar that almost resulted in a general European war.",
"Austria–Hungary and Britain feared that a large Bulgaria would become a Russian satellite that would enable the tsar to dominate the Balkans.",
"British prime minister Benjamin Disraeli moved warships into position against Russia to halt the advance of Russian influence in the eastern Mediterranean so close to Britain's route through the Suez Canal.",
"The Treaty of San Stefano was seen in Austria as much too favourable for Russia and its Orthodox-Slavic goals.The Congress of Berlin rolled back the Russian victory by partitioning the large Bulgarian state that Russia had carved out of Ottoman territory and denying any part of Bulgaria full independence from the Ottomans.",
"The Congress of Berlin in 1878 let Austria occupy (but not annex) the province of Bosnia and Herzegovina, a predominantly Slavic area.",
"Austria occupied Bosnia and Herzegovina as a way of gaining power in the Balkans.",
"Serbia, Montenegro and Romania became fully independent.",
"Nonetheless, the Balkans remained a site of political unrest with teeming ambition for independence and great power rivalries.",
"At the Congress of Berlin in 1878 Gyula Andrássy (Minister of Foreign Affairs) managed to force Russia to retreat from further demands in the Balkans.",
"As a result, Greater Bulgaria was broken up and Serbian independence was guaranteed.",
"In that year, with Britain's support, Austria–Hungary stationed troops in Bosnia to prevent the Russians from expanding into nearby Serbia.",
"In another measure to keep the Russians out of the Balkans, Austria–Hungary formed an alliance, the Mediterranean Entente, with Britain and Italy in 1887 and concluded mutual defence pacts with Germany in 1879 and Romania in 1883 against a possible Russian attack.",
"Following the Congress of Berlin the European powers attempted to guarantee stability through a complex series of alliances and treaties.Anxious about Balkan instability and Russian aggression, and to counter French interests in Europe, Austria–Hungary forged a defensive alliance with Germany in October 1879 and in May 1882.In October 1882 Italy joined this partnership in the Triple Alliance largely because of Italy's imperial rivalries with France.",
"Tensions between Russia and Austria–Hungary remained high, so Bismarck replaced the League of the Three Emperors with the Reinsurance Treaty with Russia to keep the Habsburgs from recklessly starting a war over Pan-Slavism.",
"The Sandžak-Raška / Novibazar region was under Austro-Hungarian occupation between 1878 and 1909, when it was returned to the Ottoman Empire, before being ultimately divided between kingdoms of Montenegro and Serbia.On the heels of the Great Balkan Crisis, Austro-Hungarian forces occupied Bosnia and Herzegovina in August 1878 and the monarchy eventually annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina in October 1908 as a common holding of Cisleithania and Transleithania under the control of the Imperial & Royal finance ministry rather than attaching it to either territorial government.",
"The annexation in 1908 led some in Vienna to contemplate combining Bosnia and Herzegovina with Croatia to form a third Slavic component of the monarchy.",
"The deaths of Franz Joseph's brother, Maximilian (1867), and his only son, Rudolf, made the Emperor's nephew, Franz Ferdinand, heir to the throne.",
"The Archduke was rumoured to have been an advocate for this trialism as a means to limit the power of the Hungarian aristocracy.A proclamation issued on the occasion of its annexation to the Habsburg monarchy in October 1908 promised these lands constitutional institutions, which should secure to their inhabitants full civil rights and a share in the management of their own affairs by means of a local representative assembly.",
"In performance of this promise a constitution was promulgated in 1910.The principal players in the Bosnian Crisis of 1908-09 were the foreign ministers of Austria and Russia, Alois Lexa von Aehrenthal and Alexander Izvolsky.",
"Both were motivated by political ambition; the first would emerge successful, and the latter would be broken by the crisis.",
"Along the way, they would drag Europe to the brink of war in 1909.They would also divide Europe into the two armed camps that would go to war in July 1914.Aehrenthal had started with the assumption that the Slavic minorities could never come together, and the Balkan League would never cause any damage to Austria.",
"He turned down an Ottoman proposal for an alliance that would include Austria, Turkey, and Romania.",
"However, his policies alienated the Bulgarians, who turned instead to Russia and Serbia.",
"Although Austria had no intention to embark on additional expansion to the south, Aehrenthal encouraged speculation to that effect, expecting that it would paralyze the Balkan states.",
"Instead, it incited them to feverish activity to create a defensive block to stop Austria.",
"A series of grave miscalculations at the highest level thus significantly strengthened Austria's enemies.In 1914, Slavic militants in Bosnia rejected Austria's plan to fully absorb the area; they assassinated the Austrian heir and precipitated World War I.====Prelude====This picture of the arrest of a suspect in Sarajevo is usually associated with the capture of Gavrilo Princip, although some believe it depicts Ferdinand Behr, a bystander.The 28 June 1914 assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in the Bosnian capital, Sarajevo, excessively intensified the existing traditional religion-based ethnic hostilities in Bosnia.",
"However, in Sarajevo itself, Austrian authorities encouraged violence against the Serb residents, which resulted in the Anti-Serb riots of Sarajevo, in which Catholic Croats and Bosnian Muslims killed two and damaged numerous Serb-owned buildings.",
"Writer Ivo Andrić referred to the violence as the \"Sarajevo frenzy of hate.\"",
"Violent actions against ethnic Serbs were organized not only in Sarajevo but also in many other larger Austro-Hungarian cities in modern-day Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina.",
"Austro-Hungarian authorities in Bosnia and Herzegovina imprisoned and extradited approximately 5,500 prominent Serbs, 700 to 2,200 of whom died in prison.",
"Four hundred sixty Serbs were sentenced to death and a predominantly Muslim special militia known as the ''Schutzkorps'' was established and carried out the persecution of Serbs.Crowds on the streets in the aftermath of the Anti-Serb riots in Sarajevo, 29 June 1914MÁVAG armoured train in 1914Some members of the government, such as Minister of Foreign Affairs Count Leopold Berchtold and Army Commander Count Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf, had wanted to confront the resurgent Serbian nation for some years in a preventive war, but the Emperor and Hungarian prime minister István Tisza were opposed.",
"The foreign ministry of Austro-Hungarian Empire sent ambassador László Szőgyény to Potsdam, where he inquired about the standpoint of the German Emperor on 5 July and received a supportive response.The leaders of Austria–Hungary therefore decided to confront Serbia militarily before it could incite a revolt; using the assassination as an excuse, they presented a list of ten demands called the July Ultimatum, expecting Serbia would never accept.",
"When Serbia accepted nine of the ten demands but only partially accepted the remaining one, Austria–Hungary declared war.",
"Franz Joseph I finally followed the urgent counsel of his top advisers.Over the course of July and August 1914, these events caused the start of World War I, as Russia mobilized in support of Serbia, setting off a series of counter-mobilizations.",
"In support of his German ally, on Thursday, 6 August 1914, Emperor Franz Joseph signed the declaration of war on Russia.",
"Italy initially remained neutral, despite its alliance with Austria–Hungary.",
"In 1915, it switched to the side of the Entente powers, hoping to gain territory from its former ally.====Wartime foreign policy====Franz Josef I and Wilhelm IIwith military commanders during World War IThe Austro-Hungarian Empire played a relatively passive diplomatic role in the war, as it was increasingly dominated and controlled by Germany.",
"The only goal was to punish Serbia and try to stop the ethnic breakup of the Empire, and it completely failed.",
"Starting in late 1916 the new Emperor Karl removed the pro-German officials and opened peace overtures to the Allies, whereby the entire war could be ended by compromise, or perhaps Austria would make a separate peace from Germany.",
"The main effort was vetoed by Italy, which had been promised large slices of Austria for joining the Allies in 1915.Austria was only willing to turn over the Trentino region but nothing more.",
"Karl was seen as a defeatist, which weakened his standing at home and with both the Allies and Germany.====Theaters of operations====The Austro-Hungarian Empire conscripted 7.8 million soldiers during WWI.",
"General von Hötzendorf was the Chief of the Austro-Hungarian General Staff.",
"Franz Joseph I, who was much too old to command the army, appointed Archduke Friedrich von Österreich-Teschen as Supreme Army Commander (Armeeoberkommandant), but asked him to give Von Hötzendorf freedom to take any decisions.",
"Von Hötzendorf remained in effective command of the military forces until Emperor Karl I took the supreme command himself in late 1916 and dismissed Conrad von Hötzendorf in 1917.Meanwhile, economic conditions on the homefront deteriorated rapidly.",
"The Empire depended on agriculture, and agriculture depended on the heavy labor of millions of men who were now in the Army.",
"Food production fell, the transportation system became overcrowded, and industrial production could not successfully handle the overwhelming need for munitions.",
"Germany provided a great deal of help, but it was not enough.",
"Furthermore, the political instability of the multiple ethnic groups of Empire now ripped apart any hope for national consensus in support of the war.",
"Increasingly there was a demand for breaking up the Empire and setting up autonomous national states based on historic language-based cultures.",
"The new Emperor sought peace terms from the Allies, but his initiatives were vetoed by Italy.=====Homefront=====The heavily rural Empire did have a small industrial base, but its major contribution was manpower and food.",
"Nevertheless, Austria–Hungary was more urbanized (25%) than its actual opponents in the First World War, like the Russian Empire (13.4%), Serbia (13.2%) or Romania (18.8%).",
"Furthermore, the Austro-Hungarian Empire had also more industrialized economy and higher GDP per capita than the Kingdom of Italy, which was economically the far most developed actual opponent of the Empire.On the home front, food grew scarcer and scarcer, as did heating fuel.",
"Hungary, with its heavy agricultural base, was somewhat better fed.",
"The Army conquered productive agricultural areas in Romania and elsewhere, but refused to allow food shipments to civilians back home.",
"Morale fell every year, and the diverse nationalities gave up on the Empire and looked for ways to establish their own nation states.Inflation soared, from an index of 129 in 1914 to 1589 in 1918, wiping out the cash savings of the middle-class.",
"In terms of war damage to the economy, the war used up about 20 percent of the GDP.",
"The dead soldiers amounted to about four percent of the 1914 labor force, and the wounded ones to another six percent.",
"Compared all the major countries in the war, the death and casualty rate was toward the high-end regarding the present-day territory of Austria.By summer 1918, \"Green Cadres\" of army deserters formed armed bands in the hills of Croatia-Slavonia and civil authority disintegrated.",
"By late October violence and massive looting erupted and there were efforts to form peasant republics.",
"However, the Croatian political leadership was focused on creating a new state (Yugoslavia) and worked with the advancing Serbian army to impose control and end the uprisings.=====Serbian front 1914–1916=====At the start of the war, the army was divided into two: the smaller part attacked Serbia while the larger part fought against the formidable Imperial Russian Army.",
"The invasion of Serbia in 1914 was a disaster: by the end of the year, the Austro-Hungarian Army had taken no territory, but had lost 227,000 out of a total force of 450,000 men.",
"However, in the autumn of 1915, the Serbian Army was defeated by the Central Powers, which led to the occupation of Serbia.",
"Near the end of 1915, in a massive rescue operation involving more than 1,000 trips made by Italian, French and British steamers, 260,000 Serb surviving soldiers were transported to Brindisi and Corfu, where they waited for the chance of the victory of Allied Powers to reclaim their country.",
"Corfu hosted the Serbian government in exile after the collapse of Serbia and served as a supply base to the Greek front.",
"In April 1916 a large number of Serbian troops were transported in British and French naval vessels from Corfu to mainland Greece.",
"The contingent numbering over 120,000 relieved a much smaller army at the Macedonian front and fought alongside British and French troops.=====Russian front 1914–1917=====Siege of Przemyśl in 1915On the Eastern front, the war started out equally poorly.",
"The government accepted the Polish proposal of establishing the Supreme National Committee as the Polish central authority within the Empire, responsible for the formation of the Polish Legions, an auxiliary military formation within the Austro-Hungarian army.",
"The Austro-Hungarian Army was defeated at the Battle of Lemberg and the great fortress city of Przemyśl was besieged and fell in March 1915.The Gorlice–Tarnów Offensive started as a minor German offensive to relieve the pressure of the Russian numerical superiority on the Austro-Hungarians, but the cooperation of the Central Powers resulted in huge Russian losses and the total collapse of the Russian lines and their long retreat into Russia.",
"The Russian Third Army perished.",
"In summer 1915, the Austro-Hungarian Army, under a unified command with the Germans, participated in the successful Gorlice–Tarnów Offensive.",
"From June 1916, the Russians focused their attacks on the Austro-Hungarian army in the Brusilov Offensive, recognizing the numerical inferiority of the Austro-Hungarian army.",
"By the end of September 1916, Austria–Hungary mobilized and concentrated new divisions, and the successful Russian advance was halted and slowly repelled; but the Austrian armies took heavy losses (about 1 million men) and never recovered.",
"Nevertheless, the huge losses in men and material inflicted on the Russians during the offensive contributed greatly to the revolutions of 1917, and it caused an economic crash in the Russian Empire.The Act of 5 November 1916 was proclaimed then to the Poles jointly by the Emperors Wilhelm II of Germany and Franz Joseph of Austria-Hungary.",
"This act promised the creation of the Kingdom of Poland out of territory of Congress Poland, envisioned by its authors as a puppet state controlled by the Central Powers, with the nominal authority vested in the Regency Council.",
"The origin of that document was the dire need to draft new recruits from German-occupied Poland for the war with Russia.",
"Following the Armistice of 11 November 1918 ending the World War I, in spite of the previous initial total dependence of the kingdom on its sponsors, it ultimately served against their intentions as the cornerstone proto state of the nascent Second Polish Republic, the latter composed also of territories never intended by the Central Powers to be ceded to Poland.The Battle of Zborov (1917) was the first significant action of the Czechoslovak Legions, who fought for the independence of Czechoslovakia against the Austro-Hungarian army.=====Italian front 1915–1918=====Italian troops in Trento on 3 November 1918, after the Battle of Vittorio Veneto.",
"Italy's victory marked the end of the war on the Italian Front and secured the dissolution of Austria–Hungary.In May 1915, Italy attacked Austria–Hungary.",
"Italy was the only military opponent of Austria–Hungary which had a similar degree of industrialization and economic level; moreover, her army was numerous (≈1,000,000 men were immediately fielded), but suffered from poor leadership, training and organization.",
"Chief of Staff Luigi Cadorna marched his army towards the Isonzo river, hoping to seize Ljubljana, and to eventually threaten Vienna.",
"However, the Royal Italian Army were halted on the river, where four battles took place over five months (23 June – 2 December 1915).",
"The fight was extremely bloody and exhausting for both the contenders.On 15 May 1916, the Austrian Chief of Staff Conrad von Hötzendorf launched the ''Strafexpedition'' (\"punitive expedition\"): the Austrians broke through the opposing front and occupied the Asiago plateau.",
"The Italians managed to resist and in a counteroffensive seized Gorizia on 9 August.",
"Nonetheless, they had to stop on the Carso, a few kilometres away from the border.",
"At this point, several months of indecisive trench warfare ensued (analogous to the Western front).",
"As the Russian Empire collapsed as a result of the Bolshevik Revolution and Russians ended their involvement in the war, Germans and Austrians were able to move on the Western and Southern fronts much manpower from the erstwhile Eastern fighting.On 24 October 1917, Austrians (now enjoying decisive German support) attacked at Caporetto using new infiltration tactics; although they advanced more than in the direction of Venice and gained considerable supplies, they were halted and could not cross the Piave river.",
"Italy, although suffering massive casualties, recovered from the blow, and a coalition government under Vittorio Emanuele Orlando was formed.",
"Italy also enjoyed support by the Entente powers: by 1918, large amounts of war materials and a few auxiliary American, British, and French divisions arrived in the Italian battle zone.",
"Cadorna was replaced by General Armando Diaz; under his command, the Italians retook the initiative and won the decisive Battle of the Piave river (15–23 June 1918), in which some 60,000 Austrian and 43,000 Italian soldiers were killed.",
"The final battle at Vittorio Veneto was lost by 31 October 1918 and the armistice was signed at Villa Giusti on 3 November.=====Romanian front 1916–1917=====On 27 August 1916, Romania declared war against Austria–Hungary.",
"The Romanian Army crossed the borders of Eastern Hungary (Transylvania), and despite initial successes, by November 1916, the Central Powers formed by the Austro-Hungarian, German, Bulgarian, and Ottoman armies, had defeated the Romanian and Russian armies of the Entente Powers, and occupied the southern part of Romania (including Oltenia, Muntenia and Dobruja).",
"Within three months of the war, the Central Powers came near Bucharest, the Romanian capital city.",
"On 6 December, the Central Powers captured Bucharest, and part of the population moved to the unoccupied Romanian territory, in Moldavia, together with the Romanian government, royal court and public authorities, which relocated to Iași.",
"In 1917, after several defensive victories (managing to stop the German-Austro-Hungarian advance), with Russia's withdrawal from the war following the October Revolution, Romania was forced to drop out of the war.====Role of Hungary====War memorial in Păuleni-Ciuc, RomaniaAlthough the Kingdom of Hungary comprised only 42% of the population of Austria–Hungary, the thin majority – more than 3.8 million soldiers – of the Austro-Hungarian armed forces were conscripted from the Kingdom of Hungary during the First World War.",
"Roughly 600,000 soldiers were killed in action, and 700,000 soldiers were wounded in the war.Austria–Hungary held on for years, as the Hungarian half provided sufficient supplies for the military to continue to wage war.",
"This was shown in a transition of power after which the Hungarian prime minister, Count István Tisza, and foreign minister, Count István Burián, had decisive influence over the internal and external affairs of the monarchy.",
"By late 1916, food supply from Hungary became intermittent and the government sought an armistice with the Entente powers.",
"However, this failed as Britain and France no longer had any regard for the integrity of the monarchy because of Austro-Hungarian support for Germany.====Analysis of defeat====The setbacks that the Austrian army suffered in 1914 and 1915 can be attributed to a large extent by the incompetence of the Austrian high command.",
"After attacking Serbia, its forces soon had to be withdrawn to protect its eastern frontier against Russia's invasion, while German units were engaged in fighting on the Western Front.",
"This resulted in a greater than expected loss of men in the invasion of Serbia.",
"Furthermore, it became evident that the Austrian high command had had no plans for possible continental war and that the army and navy were also ill-equipped to handle such a conflict.In the last two years of the war the Austro-Hungarian armed forces lost all ability to act independently of Germany.",
"As of 7 September 1916, the German emperor was given full control of all the armed forces of the Central Powers and Austria-Hungary effectively became a satellite of Germany.",
"The Austrians viewed the German army favorably, on the other hand by 1916 the general belief in Germany was that Germany, in its alliance with Austria–Hungary, was \"shackled to a corpse\".",
"The operational capability of the Austro-Hungarian army was seriously affected by supply shortages, low morale and a high casualty rate, and by the army's composition of multiple ethnicities with different languages and customs.===1918: Demise, disintegration, dissolution===Karl I of Austria envisaged the Habsburg Empire as being made up of five Kingdoms, in a last desperate attempt to save the Monarchy.By 1918, the economic situation had deteriorated and governmental failure on the homefront ended popular support for the war.",
"The Austro-Hungarian monarchy collapsed with dramatic speed in the autumn of 1918.Leftist and pacifist political movements organized strikes in factories, and uprisings in the army had become commonplace.",
"As the war went on, the ethnic unity declined; the Allies encouraged breakaway demands from minorities and the Empire faced disintegration.",
"With apparent Allied victory approaching, nationalist movements seized ethnic resentment to erode social unity.",
"The military breakdown of the Italian front marked the start of the rebellion for the numerous ethnicities who made up the multiethnic Empire, as they refused to keep on fighting for a cause that now appeared senseless.",
"The Emperor had lost much of his power to rule, as his realm disintegrated.On 14 October 1918, Foreign Minister Baron István Burián von Rajecz asked for an armistice based on President Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points and two days later Emperor Karl I issued a proclamation (\"Imperial Manifesto of 16 October 1918\") altering the empire into a federal union to give ethnic groups decentralization and representation.",
"However, on 18 October, United States Secretary of State Robert Lansing replied that autonomy for the nationalities – the tenth of the Fourteen Points – was no longer enough.",
"In fact, a Czechoslovak provisional government had joined the Allies on 14 October.",
"The South Slavs in both halves of the monarchy had already declared in favor of uniting with Serbia in a large South Slav state in the 1917 Corfu Declaration signed by members of the Yugoslav Committee.",
"The Croatians had begun disregarding orders from Budapest earlier in October.",
"Lansing's response was, in effect, the death certificate of Austria–Hungary.",
"During the Italian battles, the Czechoslovaks and Southern Slavs declared their independence.",
"With defeat in the war imminent after the Italian offensive in the Battle of Vittorio Veneto on 24 October, Czech politicians peacefully took over command in Prague on 28 October (later declared the birth of Czechoslovakia) and followed up in other major cities in the next few days.",
"On 30 October, the Slovaks did the same.",
"On 29 October, the Slavs in both portions of what remained of Austria–Hungary proclaimed the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs and declared that their ultimate intention was to unite with Serbia and Montenegro in a large South Slav state.",
"On the same day, the Czechs and Slovaks formally proclaimed the establishment of Czechoslovakia as an independent state.On 17 October 1918, the Hungarian Parliament voted in favour of terminating the union with Austria.",
"The most prominent opponent of continued union with Austria, Count Mihály Károlyi, seized power in the Aster Revolution on 31 October.",
"Charles was all but forced to appoint Károlyi as his Hungarian prime minister.",
"One of Károlyi's first acts was to formally repudiate the compromise agreement on 31 October, effectively terminating the personal union with Austria and thus officially dissolving the Austro-Hungarian state.By the end of October, there was nothing left of the Habsburg realm but its majority-German Danubian and Alpine provinces, and Karl's authority was being challenged even there by the German-Austrian state council.",
"Karl's last Austrian prime minister, Heinrich Lammasch, concluded that Karl's position was untenable.",
"Lammasch persuaded Karl that the best course was to relinquish, at least temporarily, his right to exercise sovereign authority.",
"On 11 November, Karl issued a carefully worded proclamation in which he recognized the Austrian people's right to determine the form of the state and \"relinquish(ed) every participation\" in Austrian state affairs.",
"On the day after he announced his withdrawal from Austrian politics, the German-Austrian National Council proclaimed the Republic of German Austria.",
"Károlyi followed suit on 16 November, proclaiming the Hungarian Democratic Republic."
],
[
"Successor states",
"The Treaty of Trianon: Kingdom of Hungary lost 72% of its land and 3.3 million people of Hungarian ethnicity.There were two legal successor states of the former Austro–Hungarian monarchy:* German Austria (which became the Republic of Austria)* Hungarian Democratic Republic (which after a few other short-lived intermediaries became the Kingdom of Hungary)The 1919 Treaties of Saint-Germain-en-Laye (between the victors of World War I and Austria) and Trianon (between the victors and Hungary) regulated the new borders of Austria and Hungary, reducing them to small-sized and landlocked states.",
"In regard to areas without a decisive national majority, the Entente powers ruled in many cases in favour of the newly emancipated independent nation-states, enabling them to claim vast territories containing sizeable German- and Hungarian-speaking populations.",
"The Republic of Austria lost roughly 60% of the old Austrian Empire's territory.",
"It also had to drop its plans for union with Germany, as it was not allowed to unite with Germany without League approval.",
"Hungary, however, was severely disrupted by the loss of 72% of its territory, 64% of its population and most of its natural resources.",
"The Hungarian Democratic Republic was short-lived and was temporarily replaced by the communist Hungarian Soviet Republic.",
"Romanian troops ousted Béla Kun and his communist government during the Hungarian–Romanian War of 1919.In the summer of 1919, a Habsburg, Archduke Joseph August, became regent, but was forced to stand down after only two weeks when it became apparent the Allies would not recognise him.",
"Finally, in March 1920, royal powers were entrusted to a regent, Miklós Horthy, who had been the last commanding admiral of the Austro-Hungarian Navy and had helped organize the counter-revolutionary forces.",
"It was this government that signed the Treaty of Trianon under protest on 4 June 1920 at the Grand Trianon Palace in Versailles, France.",
"The restored Kingdom of Hungary lost roughly 72% of the pre-war territory of the Kingdom of Hungary.===Habsburg banishment===Austria had passed the \"Habsburg Law\", which both dethroned the Habsburgs and banished all Habsburgs from Austrian territory.",
"While Karl was banned from ever returning to Austria again, other Habsburgs could return if they gave up all claims to the defunct throne.",
"In March and again in October 1921, ill-prepared attempts by Karl to regain the throne in Budapest collapsed.",
"The initially wavering Horthy, after receiving threats of intervention from the Allied Powers and the Little Entente, refused his cooperation.",
"Soon afterward, the Hungarian government nullified the Pragmatic Sanction, effectively dethroning the Habsburgs.",
"Subsequently, the British took custody of Karl and removed him and his family to the Portuguese island of Madeira, where he died the following year."
],
[
"Territorial legacy",
"===Immediately after World War I===New hand-drawn borders of Austria–Hungary in the Treaty of Trianon and Saint Germain (1919–1920)New borders of Austria–Hungary after the Treaty of Trianon and Saint GermainPost-WWI borders on an ethnic mapThe following states were formed, re-established or expanded at the dissolution of the former Austro–Hungarian monarchy:* German Austria (which became the Republic of Austria)* First Hungarian Republic which became the Hungarian Soviet Republic, subsequently briefly restored and replaced by the Hungarian Republic, ultimately transformed into the Kingdom of Hungary* First Czechoslovak Republic, later \"Czechoslovakia\"* Second Polish Republic, contested by the short-lived proto-states of Tarnobrzeg Republic and Polish Soviet Socialist Republic* State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs and the Kingdom of Serbia, both later absorbed into the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes* Greater Romania* Kingdom of Italy* Republic of China (former Austro-Hungarian concession of Tianjin)* the short-lived Ruthenian (Ukrainian and Rusyn) proto-states of West Ukrainian People's Republic (later absorbed into Ukrainian People's Republic), Hutsul Republic, Lemko Republic, Komancza Republic and the Galician Soviet Socialist Republic; all were ultimately absorbed mostly into Poland, but also into Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Romania and Yugoslavia.The Principality of Liechtenstein, which had formerly looked to Vienna for protection and whose ruling house held sizable real estate in Cisleithania, formed a customs and defense union with Switzerland, and adopted the Swiss currency instead of the Austrian.",
"In April 1919, Vorarlberg – the westernmost province of Austria – voted by a large majority to join Switzerland; however, both the Swiss and the Allies disregarded this result.===Present===+ Kingdoms and countries of Austria–Hungary 300px'''Cisleithania (Empire of Austria)''': 1.Bohemia, 2.Bukovina, 3.Carinthia, 4.Carniola, 5.Dalmatia, 6.Galicia, 7.Küstenland, 8.Lower Austria, 9.Moravia, 10.Salzburg, 11.Silesia, 12.Styria, 13.Tyrol, 14.Upper Austria, 15.Vorarlberg; '''Transleithania (Kingdom of Hungary)''': 16.Hungary proper 17.Croatia-Slavonia; 18.Bosnia and Herzegovina (Austro-Hungarian condominium)The following present-day countries and parts of countries were within the boundaries of Austria–Hungary when the empire was dissolved.",
"Some other provinces of Europe had been part of the Habsburg monarchy at one time before 1867.",
"'''Empire of Austria''' ('''Cisleithania'''):* Austria (except Burgenland without Sopron)* Czech Republic (except the Hlučínsko area)* Slovenia (except Prekmurje)* Italy (Trentino, South Tyrol, parts of the province of Belluno and small portions of Friuli-Venezia Giulia)* Croatia (Dalmatia, Istria)* Poland (voivodeships of Lesser Poland, Subcarpathia, southernmost part of Silesia (Bielsko and Cieszyn))* Ukraine (oblasts of Lviv, Ivano-Frankivsk, Ternopil (except its northern corner) and most of the oblast of Chernivtsi)* Romania (county of Suceava)* Montenegro (bay of Boka Kotorska, the coast and the immediate hinterland around the cities of Budva, Petrovac and Sutomore)'''Kingdom of Hungary''' ('''Transleithania'''):* Hungary* Slovakia* Austria (Burgenland except Sopron)* Slovenia (Prekmurje)* Croatia (Croatian Baranja and Međimurje county, Fiume as ''corpus separatum'' along with Slavonia and Central Croatia were not part of Hungary proper, the latter two were part of the sovereign Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia)* Ukraine (oblast of Zakarpattia)* Romania (region of Transylvania, Partium and parts of Banat, Crișana, and Maramureș)* Serbia (autonomous province of Vojvodina and northern Belgrade region)* Poland (Polish parts of Orava and Spiš)'''Austro-Hungarian Condominium'''* Bosnia and Herzegovina (the villages of Zavalje, Mali Skočaj and Veliki Skočaj including the immediate surrounding area west of the city of Bihać)* Montenegro (Sutorina – western part of the Municipality of Herceg Novi between present borders with Croatia (SW) and Bosnia and Herzegovina (NW), Adriatic coast (E) and the township of Igalo (NE))* Sandžak-Raška region, Austro-Hungarian occupied 1878 until withdrawal in 1908 whilst formally part of the Ottoman Empire* The Empire treated Bosnia-Herzegovina in much the same way the other powers treated their overseas colonies'''Other possessions of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy'''* People's Republic of China (former Austro-Hungarian concession of Tianjin)"
],
[
"See also",
"* Aftermath of World War I* Austrian nobility* Corporative federalism, a form of administration adopted by the Austro-Hungarian Empire* Diplomatic history of World War I* Austro-Hungarian entry into World War I* Ethnic composition of Austria–Hungary* Former countries in Europe after 1815* Hungarian nobility* Lands of the Bohemian Crown (1867–1918)* United States of Greater Austria"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Bibliography",
"* * * * * * ; highly detailed history; emphasis on ethnicity* * * ; politics and diplomacy* * * *"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* * * * online* * * Fichtner, Paula Sutter.",
"''Historical Dictionary of Austria'' (2nd ed 2009)* Good, David.",
"''The Economic Rise of the Habsburg Empire'' (1984)* Herman, Arthur.",
"''What Life Was Like: At Empire's End : Austro-Hungarian Empire 1848–1918'' (Time Life, 2000); heavily illustrated* Jelavich, Barbara.",
"''Modern Austria: Empire and Republic, 1815–1986'' (Cambridge University Press, 1987, pp. 72–150.",
"* * Johnston, William M. ''The Austrian Mind: An Intellectual and Social History, 1848–1938'' (University of California Press, 1972)* Macartney, Carlile Aylmer ''The Habsburg Empire, 1790–1918'', New York, Macmillan 1969.",
"* Mason, John W. ''The Dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, 1867–1918'' (Routledge, 2014).",
"* May, Arthur J.",
"''The Hapsburg Monarchy 1867–1914'' (Harvard University Press, 1951).",
"online* Milward, Alan, and S. B. Saul.",
"''The Development of the Economies of Continental Europe 1850–1914'' (1977) pp.",
"271–331.online* * Oakes, Elizabeth and Eric Roman.",
"''Austria–Hungary and the Successor States: A Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present'' (2003)* Palmer, Alan.",
"''Twilight of the Habsburgs: The Life and Times of Emperor Francis Joseph''.",
"New York: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1995.",
"* * Redlich, Joseph.",
"''Emperor Francis Joseph Of Austria''.",
"New York: Macmillan, 1929.online free* Roman, Eric.",
"''Austria-Hungary & the Successor States: A Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present'' (2003) online* Rudolph, Richard L. ''Banking and industrialization in Austria-Hungary: the role of banks in the industrialization of the Czech crownlands, 1873–1914'' (1976) online* Sauer, Walter.",
"\"Habsburg Colonial: Austria-Hungary's Role in European Overseas Expansion Reconsidered\", ''Austrian Studies'' (2012) 20:5–23 ONLINE* * Sugar, Peter F. et al.",
"eds.",
"''A History of Hungary'' (1990), pp. 252–294.",
"* Tschuppik, Karl.",
"''The reign of the Emperor Fransis Joseph'' (1930) online* Turnock, David.",
"''Eastern Europe: An Historical Geography: 1815–1945'' (1989)* Usher, Roland G. \"Austro-German Relations Since 1866.\"",
"''American Historical Review'' 23.3 (1918): 577–595 online.",
"* Várdy, Steven, and Agnes Várdy.",
"''The Austro-Hungarian mind: at home and abroad'' (East European Monographs, 1989)* Vermes, Gabor.",
"\"The Impact of the Dual Alliance on the Magyars of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy\" ''East Central Europe'' (1980) vol 7 DOI: 10.1163/187633080x00211* ===World war===* Bassett, Richard.",
"''For God and Kaiser: The Imperial Austrian Army, 1619–1918'' (2016)* * * * * Crankshaw, Edward.",
"''The Fall of the House of Habsburg'' (Viking, 1963).",
"pp. 449.",
"* Deak, John, and Jonathan E. Gumz.",
"\"How to Break a State: The Habsburg Monarchy's Internal War, 1914–1918\" ''American Historical Review'' 122.4 (2017): 1105–1136.online* * * * * online* * * * * Kronenbitter, Günther.",
"\"Pre-war Military Planning (Austria–Hungary).\"",
"online* * Sked, Alan.",
"\"Austria–Hungary and the First World War.\"",
"''Histoire@ Politique'' 1 (2014): 16–49.Online * Tunstall, Graydon A.",
"''Austro-Hungarian Army and the First World War'' (Cambridge University Press 2021) online review* Vermes, Gabor ''István Tisza: The Liberal Vision and Conservative Statecraft of a Magyar Nationalist'' (Columbia University Press, 1986); online review* Wank, Solomon.",
"''In the Twilight of Empire.",
"Count Alois Lexa von Aehrenthal (1854–1912): Imperial Habsburg Patriot and Statesman.",
"Vol.",
"2: From Foreign Minister in Waiting to de facto Chancellor'' (Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2020).",
"* * ===Primary sources===* Austro-Hungarian Monarchy. ''",
"Austro-Hungarian red book.''",
"(1915) English translations of official documents to justify the war.",
"online* * Gooch, G. P. ''Recent Revelations of European Diplomacy'' (1940), pp.",
"103–159 summarizes memoirs of major participants* Steed, Henry Wickham.",
"''The Hapsburg monarchy'' (1919) online detailed contemporary account===Historiography and memory===* Boyd, Kelly, ed.",
"''Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writers'' (Rutledge, 1999) 1:60–63, historiography* * Körner, Axel.",
"\"Beyond Nation States: New Perspectives on the Habsburg Empire.\"",
"''European History Quarterly'' 48.3 (2018): 516–533.online* * * Sked, Alan.",
"\"Explaining the Habsburg Empire, 1830–90.\"",
"in Pamela Pilbeam, ed., ''Themes in Modern European History 1830–1890'' (Routledge, 2002) pp. 141–176.",
"* Sked, Alan.",
"\"Austria–Hungary and the First World War.\"",
"''Histoire Politique'' 1 (2014): 16–49.online free historiography===In German===* ''''.",
"(ed.",
": Rudolf Rothaug), K. u. k. Hof-Kartographische Anstalt G. Freytag & Berndt, Vienna, 1911."
],
[
"External links",
"* Articles relating to Austria–Hungary at the International Encyclopedia of the First World War.",
"* Habsburg Empire Austrian line* Microsoft Encarta: The height of the dual monarchy ( Archived 31 October 2009)* The Austro-Hungarian Military* Heraldry of the Austro-Hungarian Empire* – extensive list of heads of state, ministers, and ambassadors* History of Austro-Hungarian currency* Austria–Hungary, Dual Monarchy* Map of Europe and the collapse of Austria–Hungary at omniatlas.com* Mangham, Arthur Neal.",
"The Social Bases of Austrian Politics: The German Electoral Districts of Cisleithania, 1900–1914.Ph.D.",
"thesis 1974* Austro-Hungarian Land Forces 1848–1918 * Oldphoto.info – Austro-Hungarian Imperial and Royal Army* HABSBURG is an email discussion list dealing with the culture and history of the Habsburg monarchy and its successor states in central Europe since 1500, with discussions, syllabi, book reviews, queries, conferences; edited daily by scholars since 1994"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Abracadabra"
],
[
"Introduction",
"A silver talisman from the 6th or 7th century, inscribed with words similar to ''abracadabra'''''''Abracadabra''''' is a magic word, historically used as an incantation on amulets and common today in stage magic."
],
[
"Etymology",
"''Abracadabra'' is of unknown origin, but according to the ''Oxford English Dictionary'', its first known occurrence is in a second-century work of Serenus Sammonicus (see below).Several folk etymologies are associated with the word: from phrases in Hebrew that mean \"I will create as I speak\", or Aramaic \"I create like the word\" (אברא כדברא), to folk etymologies that point to similar words in Latin and Greek such as abraxas or to its similarity to the first four letters of the Greek alphabet (alpha-beta-gamma-delta or ΑΒΓΔ).",
"According to the ''OED Online'', \"no documentation has been found to support any of the various conjectures.\""
],
[
"History",
"Abracadabra written in a triangular form as represented in ''Encyclopædia Britannica'' The first known mention of the word was in the second century AD in a book called ''Liber Medicinalis'' (sometimes known as ''De Medicina Praecepta Saluberrima'') by Serenus Sammonicus, physician to the Roman emperor Caracalla, who in chapter 52 prescribed that malaria sufferers wear an amulet containing the word written in the form of a triangle.The power of the amulet, he claimed, makes lethal diseases go away.",
"Other Roman emperors, including Geta and Severus Alexander, were followers of the medical teachings of Serenus Sammonicus and may have used the incantation as well.It was used as a magical formula by the Gnostics of the sect of Basilides in invoking the aid of beneficent spirits against disease and misfortune.",
"It is found on Abraxas stones, which were worn as amulets.",
"Subsequently, its use spread beyond the Gnostics.The Puritan minister Increase Mather dismissed the word as bereft of power.",
"Daniel Defoe also wrote dismissively about Londoners who posted the word on their doorways to ward off sickness during the Great Plague of London.The religion of Thelema spells the word 'Abrahadabra', and considers it the magical formula of the current Aeon.",
"The religion's founder, Aleister Crowley (1875-1947), explains in his essay ''Gematria'' that he discovered the word (and his spelling) by qabalistic methods.",
"The word 'Abrahadabra' also appears repeatedly in the 1904 invocation of Horus that led to the founding of Thelema.",
"(''The Equinox'' I, no.",
"7.1912) ''Abracadabra'' is now more commonly used in the performance of stage magic as a magic word at the culmination of a trick."
],
[
"See also",
"* — Spell from the ''Harry Potter'' series****"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* ''Abracadabra'' Robert Todd Carroll, ''Skeptic's Dictionary''*"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Acts of Union 1707"
],
[
"Introduction",
"The '''Acts of Union''' () were two Acts of Parliament: the '''Union with Scotland Act 1706''' passed by the Parliament of England, and the '''Union with England Act 1707''' passed by the Parliament of Scotland.",
"They put into effect the terms of the Treaty of Union that had been agreed on 22 July 1706, following negotiation between commissioners representing the parliaments of the two countries.",
"By the two Acts, the Kingdom of England and the Kingdom of Scotlandwhich at the time were separate states in a personal unionwere, in the words of the Treaty, \"United into One Kingdom by the Name of Great Britain\".The two countries had shared a monarch since the Union of the Crowns in 1603, when King James VI of Scotland inherited the English throne from his double first cousin twice removed, Queen Elizabeth I.",
"Although described as a Union of Crowns, and in spite of James's acknowledgement of his accession to a single Crown, England and Scotland were officially separate Kingdoms until 1707 (as opposed to the implied creation of a single unified Kingdom, exemplified by the later Kingdom of Great Britain).",
"Prior to the Acts of Union, there had been three previous attempts (in 1606, 1667, and 1689) to unite the two countries by Acts of Parliament, but it was not until the early 18th century that both political establishments came to support the idea, albeit for different reasons.The Acts took effect on 1 May 1707.On this date, the Scottish Parliament and the English Parliament united to form the Parliament of Great Britain, based in the Palace of Westminster in London, the previous home of the English Parliament.",
"This specific process is sometimes referred to as the \"union of the Parliaments\" in Scotland."
],
[
"Political background prior to 1707",
"===1603–1660===Prior to 1603, England and Scotland had different monarchs; as Elizabeth I never married, after 1567, her heir-presumptive became the Stuart king of Scotland, James VI, who was brought up as a Protestant.",
"After her death, the two Crowns were held in personal union by James, as James I of England, and James VI of Scotland.",
"He announced his intention to unite the two realms so he would not be \"guilty of bigamy\", and to give a British character to his court and person.The 1603 Union of England and Scotland Act established a joint Commission to agree terms, but the English Parliament was concerned this would lead to the imposition of an absolutist structure similar to that of Scotland.",
"James was forced to withdraw his proposals, exasperated by the English Parliament as \"barren by preconceived opinions\".",
"In 1604 he used the royal prerogative to take the title \"King of Great Britain\", .",
"Attempts to revive the project of union in 1610 were met with hostility.",
"Amongst the King's parliamentary opponents in England, Sir Edwin Sandys argued that changing the name of England ‘were as yf to make a conquest of our name, which was more than ever the Dane or Norman could do’.Scottish opposition to Stuart attempts to impose religious union led to the 1638 National CovenantInstead, King James set about creating a unified Church of Scotland and England, as the first step towards a centralised, Unionist state.",
"However, despite both being nominally Episcopal in structure, the two were very different in doctrine; the Church of Scotland, or kirk, was Calvinist in doctrine, and viewed many Church of England practices as little better than Catholicism.",
"As a result, attempts to impose religious policy by James and his son Charles I ultimately led to the 1639–1651 Wars of the Three Kingdoms.The 1639–1640 Bishops' Wars confirmed the primacy of the kirk, and established a Covenanter government in Scotland.",
"The Scots remained neutral when the First English Civil War began in 1642, before becoming concerned at the impact on Scotland of a Royalist victory.",
"Presbyterian leaders like Argyll viewed union as a way to ensure free trade between England and Scotland, and preserve a Presbyterian kirk.The 1643 Solemn League and Covenant between England and ScotlandUnder the 1643 Solemn League and Covenant, the Covenanters agreed to provide military support for the English Parliament, in return for religious union.",
"Although the treaty referred repeatedly to 'union' between England, Scotland, and Ireland, it did not explicitly commit to political union.The Scots and English Presbyterians were political conservatives, who increasingly viewed the Independents, and associated radical groups like the Levellers, as a bigger threat than the Royalists.",
"Both Royalists and Presbyterians agreed monarchy was divinely ordered, but disagreed on the nature and extent of Royal authority over the church.",
"When Charles I surrendered in 1646, they allied with their former enemies to restore him to the English throne.After defeat in the 1647–1648 Second English Civil War, Scotland was occupied by English troops which were withdrawn once the so-called Engagers whom Cromwell held responsible for the war had been replaced by the Kirk Party.",
"In December 1648, Pride's Purge confirmed Cromwell's political control in England by removing Presbyterian MPs from Parliament, and executing Charles in January 1649.Seeing this as sacrilege, the Kirk Party proclaimed Charles II King of Scotland and England, and agreed to restore him to the English throne.The Battle of Dunbar (1650): Scotland was incorporated into the Commonwealth after defeat in the 1650–1651 Anglo-Scots WarDefeat in the 1649–1651 Third English Civil War or Anglo-Scottish War resulted in Scotland's incorporation into the Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland, largely driven by Cromwell's determination to break the power of the kirk, which he held responsible for the Anglo-Scottish War.",
"The 1652 Tender of Union was followed on 12 April 1654 by ''An Ordinance by the Protector for the Union of England and Scotland,'' creating the Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland.",
"It was ratified by the Second Protectorate Parliament on 26 June 1657, creating a single Parliament in Westminster, with 30 representatives each from Scotland and Ireland added to the existing English members.===1660–1707===While integration into the Commonwealth established free trade between Scotland and England, the economic benefits were diminished by the costs of military occupation.",
"Both Scotland and England associated union with heavy taxes and military rule; it had little popular support in either country, and was dissolved after the Restoration of Charles II in 1660.The Scottish economy was badly damaged by the English Navigation Acts of 1660 and 1663 and England's wars with the Dutch Republic, Scotland's major export market.",
"An Anglo-Scots Trade Commission was set up in January 1668 but the English had no interest in making concessions, as the Scots had little to offer in return.",
"In 1669, Charles II revived talks on political union; his motives may have been to weaken Scotland's commercial and political links with the Dutch, still seen as an enemy and complete the work of his grandfather James I.",
"On the Scottish side, the proposed union received parliamentary support, boosted by the desire to ensure free trade.",
"Continued opposition meant these negotiations were abandoned by the end of 1669.Following the Glorious Revolution of 1688, a Scottish Convention met in Edinburgh in April 1689 to agree a new constitutional settlement; during which the Scottish Bishops backed a proposed union in an attempt to preserve Episcopalian control of the kirk.",
"William and Mary were supportive of the idea but it was opposed both by the Presbyterian majority in Scotland and the English Parliament.",
"Episcopacy in Scotland was abolished in 1690, alienating a significant part of the political class; it was this element that later formed the bedrock of opposition to Union.The 1690s were a time of economic hardship in Europe as a whole and Scotland in particular, a period now known as the Seven ill years which led to strained relations with England.",
"In 1698, the Company of Scotland Trading to Africa and the Indies received a charter to raise capital through public subscription.",
"The Company invested in the Darién scheme, an ambitious plan funded almost entirely by Scottish investors to build a colony on the Isthmus of Panama for trade with East Asia.",
"The scheme was a disaster; the losses of over £150,000 severely impacted the Scottish commercial system."
],
[
"Political motivations",
"The Acts of Union may be seen within a wider European context of increasing state centralisation during the late 17th and early 18th centuries, including the monarchies of France, Sweden, Denmark and Spain.",
"While there were exceptions, such as the Dutch Republic or the Republic of Venice, the trend was clear.The dangers of the monarch using one Parliament against the other first became apparent in 1647 and 1651.It resurfaced during the 1679 to 1681 Exclusion Crisis, caused by English resistance to the Catholic James II (of England, VII of Scotland) succeeding his brother Charles.",
"James was sent to Edinburgh in 1681 as Lord High Commissioner; in August, the Scottish Parliament passed the Succession Act, confirming the divine right of kings, the rights of the natural heir \"regardless of religion\", the duty of all to swear allegiance to that king, and the independence of the Scottish Crown.",
"It then went beyond ensuring James's succession to the Scottish throne by explicitly stating the aim was to make his exclusion from the English throne impossible without \"the fatall and dreadfull consequences of a civil war\".The issue reappeared during the 1688 Glorious Revolution.",
"The English Parliament generally supported replacing James with his Protestant daughter Mary, but resisted making her Dutch husband William of Orange joint ruler.",
"They gave way only when he threatened to return to the Netherlands, and Mary refused to rule without him.",
"In Scotland, conflict over control of the kirk between Presbyterians and Episcopalians and William's position as a fellow Calvinist put him in a much stronger position.",
"He originally insisted on retaining Episcopacy, and the Committee of the Articles, an unelected body that controlled what legislation Parliament could debate.",
"Both would have given the Crown far greater control than in England but he withdrew his demands due to the 1689–1692 Jacobite Rising.=== English perspective ===Queen Anne in 1702The English succession was provided for by the English Act of Settlement 1701, which ensured that the monarch of England would be a Protestant member of the House of Hanover.",
"Until the Union of Parliaments, the Scottish throne might be inherited by a different successor after Queen Anne, who had said in her first speech to the English parliament that a Union was \"very necessary\".",
"The Scottish Act of Security 1704, however, was passed after the English parliament, without consultation with Scotland, had designated Electoress Sophia of Hanover (granddaughter of James I and VI) as Anne's successor, if Anne died childless.",
"The Act of Security granted the Parliament of Scotland, the three Estates, the right to choose a successor and explicitly required a choice different from the English monarch unless the English were to grant free trade and navigation.",
"Then the Alien Act 1705 was passed in the English parliament, designating Scots in England as \"foreign nationals\" and blocking about half of all Scottish trade by boycotting exports to England or its colonies, unless Scotland came back to negotiate a Union.",
"To encourage a Union, \"honours, appointments, pensions and even arrears of pay and other expenses were distributed to clinch support from Scottish peers and MPs\".=== Scottish perspective ===The Scottish economy was severely impacted by privateers during the 1688–1697 Nine Years' War and the 1701 War of the Spanish Succession, with the Royal Navy focusing on protecting English ships.",
"This compounded the economic pressure caused by the Darien scheme, and the seven ill years of the 1690s, when 5–15% of the population died of starvation.",
"The Scottish Parliament was promised financial assistance, protection for its maritime trade, and an end to economic restrictions on trade with England.The votes of the Court party, influenced by Queen Anne's favourite, the Duke of Queensberry, combined with the majority of the Squadrone Volante, were sufficient to ensure passage of the treaty.",
"Article 15 granted £398,085 and ten shillings sterling to Scotland, a sum known as The Equivalent, to offset future liability towards the English national debt, which at the time was £18 million, but as Scotland had no national debt, most of the sum was used to compensate the investors in the Darien scheme, with 58.6% of the fund allocated to its shareholders and creditors.18th-century French illustration of an opening of the Scottish ParliamentThe role played by bribery has long been debated; £20,000 was distributed by the Earl of Glasgow, of which 60% went to James Douglas, 2nd Duke of Queensberry, the Queen's Commissioner in Parliament.",
"Another negotiator, Argyll was given an English peerage.",
"Robert Burns is commonly quoted in support of the argument of corruption: \"We're bought and sold for English Gold, Such a Parcel of Rogues in a Nation.\"",
"As historian Christopher Whatley points out, this was actually a 17th-century Scots folk song; but he agrees money was paid, though suggests the economic benefits were supported by most Scots MPs, with the promises made for benefits to peers and MPs, even if it was reluctantly.",
"Professor Sir Tom Devine agreed that promises of \"favours, sinecures, pensions, offices and straightforward cash bribes became indispensable to secure government majorities\".",
"As for representation going forwards, Scotland was, in the new united parliament, only to get 45 MPs, one more than Cornwall, and only 16 (unelected) peers in the House of Lords.Sir George Lockhart of Carnwath, the only Scottish negotiator to oppose Union, noted \"the whole nation appears against (it)\".",
"Another negotiator, Sir John Clerk of Penicuik, who was an ardent Unionist, observed it was \"contrary to the inclinations of at least three-fourths of the Kingdom\".",
"As the seat of the Scottish Parliament, demonstrators in Edinburgh feared the impact of its loss on the local economy.",
"Elsewhere, there was widespread concern about the independence of the kirk, and possible tax rises.As the Treaty passed through the Scottish Parliament, opposition was voiced by petitions from shires, burghs, presbyteries and parishes.",
"The Convention of Royal Burghs claimedNot one petition in favour of Union was received by Parliament.",
"On the day the treaty was signed, the carillonneur in St Giles Cathedral, Edinburgh, rang the bells in the tune \"Why should I be so sad on my wedding day?\"",
"Threats of widespread civil unrest resulted in Parliament imposing martial law.The Union was carried by members of the Scottish elite against the wishes of the great majority.",
"The Scottish population was overwhelmingly against the union with England, and virtually all of the print discourses of 1699-1706 spoke against incorporating union, creating the conditions for wide spread rejection of the treaty in 1706 and 1707.Country party tracts condemned English influence within the existing framework of the Union of the Crowns and asserted the need to renegotiate this union.",
"During this period, the Darien failure, the succession issue and the Worcester seizure all provided opportunities for Scottish writers to attack the Court Party as unpatriotic and reaffirm the need to fight for true interests of Scotland.",
"According to Scottish historian William Ferguson, the Acts of Union were a 'political job' by England that was achieved by economic incentives, patronage and bribery to secure the passage of the Union treaty in the Scottish Parliament in order satisfy English political imperatives, with the union being unacceptable to the Scottish people including both the Jacobites and Covenanters.",
"The differences between Scottish were \"subsumed by the same sort of patriotism or nationalism that first appeared in the Declaration of Arbroath of 1320.\"",
"Ferguson provides the well-timed payments of salary arrears to members of Parliament as proof of bribery and argues that the Scottish people had been betrayed by their Parliament.===Ireland===Ireland, though a kingdom under the same crown, was not included in the union.",
"It remained a separate kingdom, unrepresented in Parliament, and was legally subordinate to Great Britain until the Renunciation Act of 1783.In July 1707 each House of the Parliament of Ireland passed a congratulatory address to Queen Anne, praying that \"May God put it in your royal heart to add greater strength and lustre to your crown, by a still more comprehensive Union\".",
"The British government did not respond to the invitation and an equal union between Great Britain and Ireland was out of consideration until the 1790s.",
"The union with Ireland finally came about on 1 January 1801."
],
[
"Treaty and passage of the 1707 Acts",
"\"Articles of Union otherwise known as Treaty of Union\", 1707Deeper political integration had been a key policy of Queen Anne from the time she acceded to the throne in 1702.Under the aegis of the Queen and her ministers in both kingdoms, the parliaments of England and Scotland agreed to participate in fresh negotiations for a union treaty in 1705.Both countries appointed 31 commissioners to conduct the negotiations.",
"Most of the Scottish commissioners favoured union, and about half were government ministers and other officials.",
"At the head of the list was Queensberry, and the Lord Chancellor of Scotland, the Earl of Seafield.",
"The English commissioners included the Lord High Treasurer, the Earl of Godolphin, the Lord Keeper, Baron Cowper, and a large number of Whigs who supported union.",
"Tories were not in favour of union and only one was represented among the commissioners.Negotiations between the English and Scottish commissioners took place between 16 April and 22 July 1706 at the Cockpit in London.",
"Each side had its own particular concerns.",
"Within a few days, and with only one face to face meeting of all 62 commissioners, England had gained a guarantee that the Hanoverian dynasty would succeed Queen Anne to the Scottish crown, and Scotland received a guarantee of access to colonial markets, in the hope that they would be placed on an equal footing in terms of trade.After negotiations ended in July 1706, the acts had to be ratified by both Parliaments.",
"In Scotland, about 100 of the 227 members of the Parliament of Scotland were supportive of the Court Party.",
"For extra votes the pro-court side could rely on about 25 members of the Squadrone Volante, led by the Marquess of Montrose and the Duke of Roxburghe.",
"Opponents of the court were generally known as the Country party, and included various factions and individuals such as the Duke of Hamilton, Lord Belhaven and Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun, who spoke forcefully and passionately against the union, when the Scottish Parliament began its debate on the act on 3 October 1706, but the deal had already been done.",
"The Court party enjoyed significant funding from England and the Treasury and included many who had accumulated debts following the Darien Disaster.The Act ratifying the Treaty of Union was finally carried in the Parliament of Scotland by 110 votes to 69 on 16 January 1707, with a number of key amendments.",
"News of the ratification and of the amendments was received in Westminster, where the Act was passed quickly through both Houses and received the royal assent on 6 March.",
"Though the English Act was later in date, it bore the year '1706' while Scotland's was '1707', as the legal year in England began only on 25 March.In Scotland, the Duke of Queensberry was largely responsible for the successful passage of the Union act by the Parliament of Scotland.",
"In Scotland, he also received much criticism from local residents, but in England he was cheered for his action.",
"He had personally received around half of the funding awarded by the Westminster Treasury for himself.",
"In April 1707, he travelled to London to attend celebrations at the royal court, and was greeted by groups of noblemen and gentry lined along the road.",
"From Barnet, the route was lined with crowds of cheering people, and once he reached London a huge crowd had formed.",
"On 17 April, the Duke was gratefully received by the Queen at Kensington Palace."
],
[
"Provisions",
"Heraldic badge of Queen Anne, depicting the Tudor rose and the Scottish thistle growing from the same stemThe Treaty of Union, agreed between representatives of the Parliament of England and the Parliament of Scotland in 1706, consisted of 25 articles, 15 of which were economic in nature.",
"In Scotland, each article was voted on separately and several clauses in articles were delegated to specialised subcommittees.",
"Article 1 of the treaty was based on the political principle of an incorporating union and this was secured by a majority of 116 votes to 83 on 4 November 1706.To minimise the opposition of the Church of Scotland, an Act was also passed to secure the Presbyterian establishment of the Church, after which the Church stopped its open opposition, although hostility remained at lower levels of the clergy.",
"The treaty as a whole was finally ratified on 16 January 1707 by a majority of 110 votes to 69.The two Acts incorporated provisions for Scotland to send representative peers from the Peerage of Scotland to sit in the House of Lords.",
"It guaranteed that the Church of Scotland would remain the established church in Scotland, that the Court of Session would \"remain in all time coming within Scotland\", and that Scots law would \"remain in the same force as before\".",
"Other provisions included the restatement of the Act of Settlement 1701 and the ban on Roman Catholics from taking the throne.",
"It also created a customs union and monetary union.The Act provided that any \"laws and statutes\" that were \"contrary to or inconsistent with the terms\" of the Act would \"cease and become void\".===Related Acts===The Scottish Parliament also passed the Protestant Religion and Presbyterian Church Act 1707 guaranteeing the status of the Presbyterian Church of Scotland.",
"The English Parliament passed a similar Act, 6 Ann.",
"c. 8.Soon after the Union, the Act 6 Ann.",
"c. 40later named the Union with Scotland (Amendment) Act 1707united the English and Scottish Privy Councils and decentralised Scottish administration by appointing justices of the peace in each shire to carry out administration.",
"In effect it took the day-to-day government of Scotland out of the hands of politicians and into those of the College of Justice.On 18 December 1707 the Act for better Securing the Duties of East India Goods was passed which extended the monopoly of the East India Company to Scotland.In the year following the Union, the Treason Act 1708 abolished the Scottish law of treason and extended the corresponding English law across Great Britain."
],
[
"Evaluations",
"Scotland benefited, says historian G.N.",
"Clark, gaining \"freedom of trade with England and the colonies\" as well as \"a great expansion of markets\".",
"The agreement guaranteed the permanent status of the Presbyterian church in Scotland, and the separate system of laws and courts in Scotland.",
"Clark argued that in exchange for the financial benefits and bribes that England bestowed, what it gained wasof inestimable value.",
"Scotland accepted the Hanoverian succession and gave up her power of threatening England's military security and complicating her commercial relations ...",
"The sweeping successes of the eighteenth-century wars owed much to the new unity of the two nations.By the time Samuel Johnson and James Boswell made their tour in 1773, recorded in ''A Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland'', Johnson noted that Scotland was \"a nation of which the commerce is hourly extending, and the wealth increasing\" and in particular that Glasgow had become one of the greatest cities of Britain."
],
[
"Economic perspective",
"Scottish historian Christopher Smout notes that prior to the Union of the Crowns, the Scottish economy had been flourishing completely independently of the English one, with little to no interaction between each other.",
"Developing a closer economic partnership with England was unsustainable, and Scotland's main trade partner was continental Europe, especially the Netherlands, where Scotland could trade its wool and fish for luxurious imports such as iron, spices or wine.",
"Scotland and England were generally hostile to each other and were often at war, and the alliance with France gave Scotland privileges that further encouraged developing cultural and economic ties with the continent rather than England.",
"The union of 1603 only served the political and dynastic ambitions of King James and was detrimental to Scotland economically – exports that Scotland offered were largely irrelevant to English economy, and while the Privy Council of Scotland did keep its ability to manage internal economic policy, the foreign policy of Scotland was now in English hands.",
"This limited Scotland's hitherto expansive trade with continental Europe, and forced it into English wars.While the Scottish economy already suffered because of English wars with France and Spain in 1620s, the civil wars in England had a particularly disastrous effect on Scotland and left it relatively impoverished as a result.",
"The economy would slowly recover after that, but it came at the cost of being increasingly dependent on trade with England.",
"A power struggle developed between Scotland and England in 1680s, as Scotland recovered from the political turmoil and set on its own economic ambitions, which London considered a threat to its dominant and well-established position.",
"English wars with continental powers undermined Scottish trade with France and the Netherlands, countries that used to be the Scotland's main trade partners before the union, and the English Navigation Acts severely limited Scottish ability to trade by sea, and made the Scottish ambitions to expand the trade beyond Europe unachievable.",
"Opinion in Scotland at the time was that England was sabotaging Scottish economic expansion.The frustration caused by economic and political rivalry with England led to the Darien scheme - an unsuccessful attempt to establish a Scottish colony in the Gulf of Darién.",
"Christopher Smout argues that the scheme was successfully sabotaged by England in various ways - it was seen as a threat to the privileged position of the East India Company, and as such England did everything to ensure the plan's failure via political and diplomatic overtures to prevent the Netherlands and Hamburg from investing into the scheme while also refusing to assist the settlers in any way.",
"Following the disastrous failure of the scheme, Scottish economy seemed to be on the brink of collapse, but ultimately Scotland was able to recover from it fairly quickly.By 1703, the Scottish government was highly disillusioned and unsatisfied with the union, and many believed that the only way to let Scottish economy flourish was to separate from England.",
"Fletcher of Saltoun called Scotland 'totally neglected, like a farm managed by servants not under the eye of the master', and the failure of the Darien Scheme was commonly attributed to English sabotage.",
"The Scottish parliament would try to establish its autonomy from England with 1704 Act of Security, which provoked a retaliation from England - Scottish ministers were bribed, and Alien Act 1705 was passed.",
"According to the Alien Act, unless Scotland appointed commissioners to negotiate for union by Christmas, every Scot in England would be treated as an alien, leading to the confiscation of their English estates.",
"Additionally, Scottish wares were to be banned from England.",
"Christopher Smout notes that England desired to expand its influence by annexing Scotland:The act sparked vehement anti-English sentiment in Scotland, and made the already hostile Scottish public even more opposed to England:The Scottish economy was now facing a crisis, and the parliament was polarised into a pro-union and anti-union factions, with the former led by Daniel Defoe.",
"The unionists stressed how important trade with England is to the Scottish economy, and portrayed trade with continental Europe as not beneficial, or nowhere as profitable as trading with England.",
"They argued that the Scottish economy could survive by trading with England, and sanctions that would result from the Alien Act would collapse the economy.",
"For Defoe, joining the union would not only prevent the Alien Act, but would also remove additional limitations and regulations, which could lead Scotland to prosperity.",
"Anti-unionists questioned the English goodwill and criticised the unionist faction for submitting to the English blackmail.",
"They argued that Scotland could make a recovery by trading with the Netherlands, Spain and Norway, with the diverse European markets allowing Scotland to diversify its own industries as well.",
"They noted that the union would make Scotland unable to conduct independent trade policy, meaning that any possibility to remove the flaws in Scottish economy would be gone forever, which would turn Scotland into a \"mere satellite of the richer kingdom\".",
"Ultimately, Scottish ministers voted in favour of the union, which was against the public opinion, as the Scottish population at the time was overwhelmingly against any union with England.",
"Many considered themselves betrayed by their own elite, and Smout argues that the union bill was only able to pass thanks to the English bribery."
],
[
"300th anniversary",
"The £2 coin issued in the United Kingdom in 2007 to commemorate the 300th anniversary of the Acts of UnionA commemorative two-pound coin was issued to mark the tercentennial—300th anniversary—of the Union, which occurred two days before the Scottish Parliament general election on 3 May 2007.The Scottish Government held a number of commemorative events through the year including an education project led by the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland, an exhibition of Union-related objects and documents at the National Museums of Scotland and an exhibition of portraits of people associated with the Union at the National Galleries of Scotland."
],
[
"Scottish voting records",
"Map of commissioner voting on the ratification of the Treaty of Union.+Voting records for 16 January 1707 ratification of the Treaty of UnionCommissionerConstituency/PositionPartyVoteJames Graham, 1st Duke of MontroseLord President of the Council of Scotland/StirlingshireCourt PartyYesJohn Campbell, 2nd Duke of ArgyllCourt PartyYesJohn Hay, 2nd Marquess of TweeddaleSquadrone VolanteYesWilliam Kerr, 2nd Marquess of LothianCourt PartyYesJohn Erskine, Earl of MarCourt PartyYesJohn Gordon, 16th Earl of SutherlandCourt PartyYesJohn Hamilton-Leslie, 9th Earl of RothesSquadrone VolanteYesJames Douglas, 11th Earl of MortonYesWilliam Cunningham, 12th Earl of GlencairnYesJames Hamilton, 6th Earl of AbercornYesJohn Ker, 1st Duke of RoxburgheSquadrone VolanteYesThomas Hamilton, 6th Earl of HaddingtonYesJohn Maitland, 5th Earl of LauderdaleYesDavid Wemyss, 4th Earl of WemyssYesWilliam Ramsay, 5th Earl of DalhousieYesJames Ogilvy, 4th Earl of FindlaterBanffshireYesDavid Leslie, 3rd Earl of LevenYesDavid Carnegie, 4th Earl of NortheskYesEarl of BelcarrasYesArchibald Douglas, 1st Earl of ForfarYesWilliam Boyd, 3rd Earl of KilmarnockYesJohn Keith, 1st Earl of KintoreYesPatrick Hume, 1st Earl of MarchmontSquadrone VolanteYesGeorge Mackenzie, 1st Earl of CromartieYesArchibald Primrose, 1st Earl of RoseberyYesDavid Boyle, 1st Earl of GlasgowYesCharles Hope, 1st Earl of Hopetounlikely LinlithgowshireYesHenry Scott, 1st Earl of DeloraineYesArchibald Campbell, Earl of IllayYesWilliam Hay, Viscount DupplinYesWilliam Forbes, 12th Lord ForbesYesJohn Elphinstone, 8th Lord ElphinstoneYesWilliam Ross, 12th Lord RossYesJames Sandilands, 7th Lord TorphichenYesLord FraserYesGeorge Ogilvy, 3rd Lord BanffYesAlexander Murray, 4th Lord ElibankYesKenneth Sutherland, 3rd Lord DuffusYesRobert Rollo, 4th Lord RolloStirlingshireYesJames Murray, Lord PhiliphaughLord Clerk Register/SelkirkshireYesAdam Cockburn, Lord OrmistonLord Justice ClerkYesSir Robert Dickson of InveraskEdinburghshireYesWilliam Nisbet of DirletounHaddingtonshireSquadrone VolanteYesJohn Cockburn, younger, of OrmestounHaddingtonshireSquadrone VolanteYesSir John Swintoun of that ilkBerwickshireCourt PartyYesSir Alexander Campbell of CessnockBerwickshireYesSir William Kerr of GreenheadRoxburghshireSquadrone VolanteYesArchibald Douglas of CaversRoxburghshireCourt PartyYesWilliam Bennet of GrubbetRoxburghshireCourt PartyYesMr John Murray of BowhillSelkirkshireCourt PartyYesMr John Pringle of HainingSelkirkshireCourt PartyYesWilliam Morison of PrestongrangePeeblesshireCourt PartyYesAlexander Horseburgh of that ilkPeeblesshireYesGeorge Baylie of JerviswoodLanarkshireSquadrone VolanteYesSir John Johnstoun of WesterhallDumfriesshireCourt PartyYesWilliam Dowglass of DornockDumfriesshireYesMr William Stewart of CastlestewartWigtownshireYesMr John Stewart of SorbieWigtownshireCourt PartyYesMr Francis Montgomery of GiffanAyrshireCourt PartyYesMr William Dalrymple of GlenmuirAyrshireCourt PartyYesMr Robert Stewart of TillicultrieButeshireYesSir Robert Pollock of that ilkRenfrewshireCourt PartyYesMr John Montgomery of WraeLinlithgowshireYesJohn Halden of GlenagiesPerthshireSquadrone VolanteYesMongo Graham of GorthiePerthshireSquadrone VolanteYesSir Thomas Burnet of LeyesKincardineshireCourt PartyYesWilliam Seton, younger, of PitmeddenAberdeenshireSquadrone VolanteYesAlexander Grant, younger, of that ilkInverness-shireCourt PartyYesSir William MackenzieYesMr Aeneas McLeod of CadbollCromartyshireYesMr John Campbell of MammoreArgyllshireCourt PartyYesSir James Campbell of AuchinbreckArgyllshireCourt PartyYesJames Campbell, younger, of ArdkinglassArgyllshireCourt PartyYesSir William Anstruther of that ilkFifeYesJames Halyburton of PitcurrForfarshireSquadrone VolanteYesAlexander Abercrombie of GlassochBanffshireCourt PartyYesMr James Dunbarr, younger, of HemprigsCaithnessYesAlexander Douglas of EagleshayOrkney and ShetlandCourt PartyYesSir John Bruce, 2nd BaronetKinross-shireSquadrone VolanteYesJohn ScrimsourDundeeYesLieutenant Colonel John AreskineYesJohn MureLikely AyrYesJames ScottMontroseCourt PartyYesSir John Anstruther, 1st Baronet, of AnstrutherAnstruther EasterYesJames SpittleInverkeithingYesMr Patrick MoncrieffKinghornCourt PartyYesSir Andrew HomeKirkcudbrightSquadrone VolanteYesSir Peter HalketDunfermlineSquadrone VolanteYesSir James SmolletDumbartonCourt PartyYesMr William CarmichellLanarkYesMr William SutherlandElginYesCaptain Daniel McLeodTainYesSir David Dalrymple, 1st BaronetCulrossCourt PartyYesSir Alexander OgilvieBanffYesMr John ClerkWhithornCourt PartyYesJohn RossYesHew Dalrymple, Lord North BerwickNorth BerwickYesMr Patrick OgilvieCullenCourt PartyYesGeorge AllardyceKintoreCourt PartyYesWilliam AvisYesMr James BethunKilrennyYesMr Roderick McKenzieFortroseYesJohn UrquhartDornochYesDaniel CampbellInverarayCourt PartyYesSir Robert ForbesInverurieYesMr Robert DowglassKirkwallYesMr Alexander MaitlandInverbervieCourt PartyYesMr George DalrympleStranraerYesMr Charles CampbellCampbeltownYesJames Hamilton, 4th Duke of HamiltonNoWilliam Johnstone, 1st Marquess of AnnandaleAnnanNoCharles Hay, 13th Earl of ErrollNoWilliam Keith, 9th Earl MarischalNoDavid Erskine, 9th Earl of BuchanNoAlexander Sinclair, 9th Earl of CaithnessNoJohn Fleming, 6th Earl of WigtownNoJames Stewart, 5th Earl of GallowayNoDavid Murray, 5th Viscount of StormontNoWilliam Livingston, 3rd Viscount of KilsythNoWilliam Fraser, 12th Lord SaltounNoFrancis Sempill, 10th Lord SempillNoCharles Oliphant, 7th Lord OliphantNoJohn Elphinstone, 4th Lord BalmerinoNoWalter Stuart, 6th Lord BlantyreLinlithgowNoWilliam Hamilton, 3rd Lord BarganyQueensferryNoJohn Hamilton, 2nd Lord Belhaven and StentonNoLord ColvillNoPatrick Kinnaird, 3rd Lord KinnairdNoSir John Lawder of FountainhallHaddingtonshireNoAndrew Fletcher of SaltounHaddingtonshireNoSir Robert Sinclair, 3rd BaronetBerwickshireNoSir Patrick Home of RentounBerwickshireNoSir Gilbert Elliot of MintoRoxburghshireNoWilliam Bayllie of LamingtounLanarkshireNoJohn Sinclair, younger, of StevensoneLanarkshireNoJames Hamilton of AikenheadLanarkshireNoMr Alexander Fergusson of IsleDumfriesshireNoSir Hugh Cathcart of CarletounAyrshireNoJohn Brisbane, younger, of BishoptounAyrshireNoMr William Cochrane of KilmaronockDumbartonshireNoSir Humphray Colquhoun of LussDumbartonshireNoSir John Houstoun of that ilkRenfrewshireNoRobert Rollo of PowhouseNoThomas Sharp of HoustounLinlithgowshireNoJohn Murray of StrowanNoAlexander Gordon of PitlurgAberdeenshireNoJohn Forbes of CollodenNairnshireNoDavid Bethun of BalfourFifeNoMajor Henry Balfour of DunboogFifeNoMr Thomas Hope of RankeillorNoMr Patrick Lyon of AuchterhouseForfarshireNoMr James Carnagie of PhinhavenForfarshireNoDavid Graham, younger, of FintrieForfarshireNoWilliam Maxwell of CardinesKirkcudbrightshireNoAlexander McKye of PalgownKirkcudbrightshireNoJames Sinclair of StempsterCaithnessNoSir Henry Innes, younger, of that ilkElginshireNoMr George McKenzie of InchcoulterRoss-shireNoRobert InglisEdinburghNoAlexander RobertsonPerthNoWalter StewartNoHugh MontgomeryGlasgowCourt PartyNoAlexander EdgarHaddingtonNoAlexander DuffBanffshireNoFrancis MolisonBrechinNoWalter ScottJedburghNoRobert ScottSelkirkNoRobert KellieDunbarNoJohn HutchesoneArbroathNoArchibald ScheillsPeeblesNoMr John LyonForfarNoGeorge BrodieForresNoGeorge SpensRutherglenNoSir David CuninghamLauderNoMr John CarruthersLochmabenNoGeorge HomeNew GallowayNoJohn BayneDingwallNoMr Robert FraserWickNoTotal Ayes106Total Noes69Total Votes175Sources: Records of the Parliament of Scotland, Parliamentary Register, p.598"
],
[
"See also",
"* Acts of Union 1800 (Kingdom of Great Britain with Kingdom of Ireland)**Kingdom of Ireland* English independence* List of treaties* ''MacCormick v Lord Advocate''* Parliament of the United Kingdom* Political union* Real union* Scottish independence* Unionism in Scotland* Welsh independence"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References",
"=== Works cited ===* * Campbell, R. H. \"The Anglo-Scottish Union of 1707.II.",
"The Economic Consequences\".",
"''Economic History Review'' vol.",
"16, no.",
"3, 1964, pp.",
"468–477 online * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Smout, T. C. \"The Anglo-Scottish Union of 1707.I.",
"The Economic Background\".",
"''Economic History Review'' vol.",
"16, no.",
"3, 1964, pp.",
"455–467.online * * * * *"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* Defoe, Daniel.",
"''A Tour thro' the Whole Island of Great Britain'', 1724–1727* Defoe, Daniel.",
"''The Letters of Daniel Defoe'', GH Healey editor.",
"Oxford: 1955.",
"* Fletcher, Andrew (Saltoun).",
"''An Account of a Conversation''* Lockhart, George, \"The Lockhart Papers\", 1702–1728"
],
[
"External links",
"* * Union with England Act and Union with Scotland Act – Full original text* Treaty of Union and the Darien Experiment, University of Guelph, McLaughlin Library, Library and Archives Canada* * * Union with England Act 1707, from Records of the Parliaments of Scotland* Image of original act from the Parliamentary Archives website"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Admiralty (United Kingdom)"
],
[
"Introduction",
"The '''Admiralty''' was a department of the Government of the United Kingdom responsible for the command of the Royal Navy until 1964, historically under its titular head, the Lord High Admiral – one of the Great Officers of State.",
"For much of its history, from the early 18th century until its abolition, the role of the Lord High Admiral was almost invariably put \"in commission\" and exercised by the Lords Commissioner of the Admiralty, who sat on the governing Board of Admiralty, rather than by a single person.",
"The Admiralty was replaced by the Admiralty Board in 1964, as part of the reforms that created the Ministry of Defence and its Navy Department (later Navy Command).Before the Acts of Union 1707, the '''Office of the Admiralty and Marine Affairs''' administered the Royal Navy of the Kingdom of England, which merged with the Royal Scots Navy and then absorbed the responsibilities of the Lord High Admiral of the Kingdom of Scotland with the unification of the Kingdom of Great Britain.",
"The Admiralty was among the most important departments of the British Government, because of the Royal Navy's role in the expansion and maintenance of the English overseas possessions in the 17th century, the British Empire in the 18th century, and subsequently.The modern Admiralty Board, to which the functions of the Admiralty were transferred in 1964, is a committee of the tri-service Defence Council of the United Kingdom.",
"This Admiralty Board meets only twice a year, and the day-to-day running of the Royal Navy is controlled by a Navy Board (not to be confused with the historic Navy Board).",
"It is common for the various authorities now in charge of the Royal Navy to be referred to as simply 'The Admiralty'.The title of Lord High Admiral of the United Kingdom was vested in the monarch from 1964 to 2011.The title was awarded to Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh by Queen Elizabeth II on his 90th birthday and since his 2021 death has reverted to the monarch.",
"There also continues to be a Vice-Admiral of the United Kingdom and a Rear-Admiral of the United Kingdom, both of which are honorary offices."
],
[
"History",
"Flag of the Lord High AdmiralThe office of Admiral of England (later Lord Admiral, and later Lord High Admiral) was created around 1400; there had previously been Admirals of the northern and western seas.",
"King Henry VIII established the Council of the Marine—later to become the Navy Board—in 1546, to oversee administrative affairs of the naval service.",
"Operational control of the Royal Navy remained the responsibility of the Lord High Admiral, who was one of the nine Great Officers of State.",
"This management approach would continue in force in the Royal Navy until 1832.King Charles I put the office of Lord High Admiral into commission in 1628, and control of the Royal Navy passed to a committee in the form of the Board of Admiralty.",
"The office of Lord High Admiral passed a number of times in and out of commission until 1709, after which the office was almost permanently in commission (the last Lord High Admiral being the future King William IV in the early 19th century).In this organization a dual system operated the Lord High Admiral (from 1546) then Commissioners of the Admiralty (from 1628) exercised the function of general control (military administration) of the Navy and they were usually responsible for the conduct of any war, while the actual supply lines, support and services were managed by four principal officers, namely, the Treasurer, Comptroller, Surveyor and Clerk of the Acts, responsible individually for finance, supervision of accounts, Shipbuilding and maintenance of ships, and record of business.",
"These principal officers came to be known as the Navy Board responsible for 'civil administration' of the navy, from 1546 to 1832.This structure of administering the navy lasted for 285 years, however, the supply system was often inefficient and corrupt its deficiencies were due as much to its limitations of the times they operated in.",
"The various functions within the Admiralty were not coordinated effectively and lacked inter-dependency with each other, with the result that in 1832, Sir James Graham abolished the Navy Board and merged its functions within those of the Board of Admiralty.",
"At the time this had distinct advantages; however, it failed to retain the principle of distinctions between the Admiralty and supply, and a lot of bureaucracy followed with the merger.In 1860 saw big growth in the development of technical crafts, the expansion of more admiralty branches that really began with age of steam that would have an enormous influence on the navy and naval thought.",
"Between 1860 and 1908, there was no real study of strategy and of staff work conducted within the naval service; it was practically ignored.",
"All the Navy's talent flowed to the great technical universities.",
"This school of thought for the next 50 years was exclusively technically based.",
"The first serious attempt to introduce a sole management body to administer the naval service manifested itself in the creation of the Admiralty Navy War Council in 1909.Following this, a new advisory body called the Admiralty War Staff was then instituted in 1912, headed by the Chief of the War Staff who was responsible for administering three new sub-divisions responsible for operations, intelligence and mobilisation.",
"The new War Staff had hardly found its feet and it continually struggled with the opposition to its existence by senior officers they were categorically opposed to a staff.",
"The deficiencies of the system within this department of state could be seen in the conduct of the Dardanelles campaign.",
"There were no mechanisms in place to answer the big strategic questions.",
"A Trade Division was created in 1914.Sir John Jellicoe came to the Admiralty in 1916.He re-organized the war staff as following: Chief of War Staff, Operations, Intelligence, Signal Section, Mobilisation, Trade.It was not until 1917 that the admiralty department was again properly reorganized and began to function as a professional military staff.",
"In May 1917, the term \"Admiralty War Staff\" was renamed and that department and its functional role were superseded by a new \"Admiralty Naval Staff\"; in addition, the newly created office of Chief of the Naval Staff was merged in the office of the First Sea Lord.",
"Also appointed was a new post, that of Deputy Chief of the Naval Staff, and an Assistant Chief of the Naval Staff; all were given seats on the Board of Admiralty.",
"This for the first time gave the naval staff direct representation on the board; the presence of three senior naval senior members on the board ensured the necessary authority to carry through any operation of war.",
"The Deputy Chief of Naval Staff would direct all operations and movements of the fleet, while the Assistant Chief of Naval Staff would be responsible for mercantile movements and anti-submarine operations.The office of Controller would be re-established to deal with all questions relating to supply; on 6 September 1917, a Deputy First Sea Lord, was added to the Board who would administer operations abroad and deal with questions of foreign policy.",
"In October 1917, the development of the staff was carried one step further by the creation of two sub-committees of the Board—the Operations Committee and the Maintenance Committee.",
"The First Lord of the Admiralty was chairman of both committees, and the Operations Committee consisted of the First Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Staff, the Deputy First Sea Lord, Assistant Chief of Naval Staff, and Fifth Sea Lord.Full operational control of the Royal Navy was finally handed over to the Chief of Naval Staff (CNS) by an order in Council, effective October 1917, under which he became responsible for the issuing of orders affecting all war operations directly to the fleet.",
"It also empowered the CNS to issue orders in their own name, as opposed to them previously being issued by the Permanent Secretary of the Admiralty in the name of the Board.",
"In 1964, the Admiralty—along with the War Office and the Air Ministry—were abolished as separate departments of state, and placed under one single new Ministry of Defence.",
"Within the expanded Ministry of Defence are the new Admiralty Board which has a separate Navy Board responsible for the day-to-day running of the Royal Navy, the Army Board and the Air Force Board, each headed by the Secretary of State for Defence."
],
[
"Organizational structure",
"Board of Admiralty, about 1810In the 20th century the structure of the Admiralty Headquarters was predominantly organized into four parts:# The Board of Admiralty, which directs and controls the whole machine chaired by a civilian government minister the First Lord of the Admiralty.",
"His chief military adviser was the First Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Staff as the Senior Naval Lord to the board.# The Admiralty Naval Staff, advised and assisted the Board in chief strategic and operational planning, in the distributing of fleets and the allocating of assets to major naval commands and stations and in formulating official policy on tactical doctrine and requirements in regard to men and material.",
"In order to deliver this the Naval Staff was organised into specialist Divisions and Sections.",
"When the Admiralty unified with the Ministry of Defence in 1964 they were re designated as Directorates of the Naval Staff.# The Admiralty Departments, which provides the men, ships, aircraft and supplies to carry out the approved policy.",
"The departments are superintended by the various offices of the Sea Lords.# The Department of the Permanent Secretary which was the general co-ordinating agency, regulating naval finance, providing advice on policy, conducing all correspondence on behalf of the Board and maintaining admiralty records.",
"Its primary component to deliver this is the Admiralty Secretariat, sections of the Secretariat (other than those which provide Common Services) were known as Branches.",
"'''Board of Admiralty'''When the office of Lord High Admiral was in commission, as it was for most of the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries, until it reverted to the Crown, it was exercised by a Board of Admiralty, officially known as the ''Commissioners for Exercising the Office of Lord High Admiral of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, &c.'' (alternatively of England, Great Britain or the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland depending on the period).",
"The Board of Admiralty consisted of a number of Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty.",
"The Lords Commissioners were always a mixture of admirals, known as Naval Lords or Sea Lords and Civil Lords, normally politicians.",
"The quorum of the Board was two commissioners and a secretary.",
"The president of the Board was known as the First Lord of the Admiralty, who was a member of the Cabinet.",
"After 1806, the First Lord of the Admiralty was always a civilian, while the professional head of the navy came to be (and is still today) known as the First Sea Lord.",
"'''Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty (1628–1964)'''The Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty were the members of The Board of Admiralty, which exercised the office of Lord High Admiral when it was not vested in a single person.",
"The commissioners were a mixture of politicians without naval experience and professional naval officers, the proportion of naval officers generally increasing over time.",
"'''Key Officials''''''First Lord of the Admiralty'''The First Lord of the Admiralty or formally the Office of the First Lord of the Admiralty was the British government's senior civilian adviser on all naval affairs and the minister responsible for the direction and control of the Admiralty and Marine Affairs Office later the Department of Admiralty.",
"(+) His office was supported by the Naval Secretariat.",
"'''First Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Staff'''The First Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Staff was the Chief Naval Adviser on the Board of Admiralty to the First Lord and superintended the offices of the sea lords and the admiralty naval staff.",
"'''Navy Board'''The Navy Board was an independent board from 1546 until 1628 when it became subordinate to, yet autonomous of the Board of Admiralty until 1832.Its principal commissioners of the Navy advised the board in relation to civil administration of the naval affairs.",
"The Navy Board was based at the Navy Office.",
"'''Board of Admiralty civilian members responsible other important civil functions'''# Office of the Civil Lord of the Admiralty.# Office of the Additional Civil Lord of the Admiralty.# Office of the Parliamentary and Financial Secretary to the Admiralty.",
"'''Admiralty Naval Staff'''It evolved from *Admiralty Navy War Council, (1909–1912) which in turn became the Admiralty War Staff, (1912–1917) before finally becoming the Admiralty Naval Staff in 1917.It was the former senior command, operational planning, policy and strategy department within the British Admiralty.",
"It was established in 1917 and existed until 1964 when the department of the Admiralty was abolished, and the staff departments function continued within the Navy Department of the Ministry of Defence until 1971 when its functions became part of the new Naval Staff, Navy Department of the Ministry of Defence.",
"'''Offices of the Naval Staff'''# Office of Deputy Chief of the Naval Staff.# Office of the Vice Chief of the Naval Staff.",
"# Offices of the Assistant Chiefs of the Naval Staff.",
"'''Admiralty Departments'''The Admiralty Departments were distinct and component parts of the Department of Admiralty that were superintended by the various offices of the Sea Lords responsible for them; they were primarily administrative, research, scientific and logistical support organisations.",
"The departments role was to provide the men, ships, aircraft and supplies to carry out the approved policy of the Board of Admiralty and conveyed to them during 20th century by the Admiralty Naval Staff.",
"'''Offices of the Sea Lords'''# Office of the Deputy First Sea Lord # Office of the Second Sea Lord.",
"# Office of the Third Sea Lord.# Office of the Fourth Sea Lord.# Office of Fifth Sea Lord'''Department of the Permanent Secretary'''The Secretary's Department consisted of members of the civil service it was directed and controlled by a senior civil servant Permanent Secretary to the Board of Admiralty he was not a Lord Commissioner of the Admiralty, he functioned as a member of the board, and attended all of its meetings.===Organizational structure by time period==="
],
[
"\"Admiralty\" as a metonym for \"sea power\"",
"In some cases, the term ''admiralty'' is used in a wider sense, as meaning ''sea power'' or ''rule over the seas'', rather than in strict reference to the institution exercising such power.",
"For example, the well-known lines from Kipling's ''Song of the Dead'':"
],
[
"See also",
"* Admiralty administration* Admiralty buildings* Admiralty chart* Admiralty Inlet* Admiralty Peak* Navy Department (Ministry of Defence)* List of lords high admiral* List of first lords of the Admiralty* List of lords commissioners of the Admiralty* Lord High Admiral of Scotland* St Boniface's Catholic College"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* Daniel A. Baugh, ''Naval Administration in the Age of Walpole'' (Princeton, 1965).",
"* Sir John Barrow, ''An Autobiographical Memoir of Sir John Barrow, Bart., Late of the Admiralty'' (London, 1847).",
"* John Ehrman, ''The Navy in the War of William III: Its State and Direction'' (Cambridge, 1953).",
"* C. I. Hamilton, ''The Making of the Modern Admiralty: British Naval Policy-Making 1805–1927'' (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011).",
"* C. I. Hamilton, \"Selections from the Phinn Committee of Inquiry of October–November 1853 into the State of the Office of Secretary to the Admiralty, in ''The Naval Miscellany'', volume V, edited by N. A. M. Rodger, (London: Navy Records Society, London, 1984).",
"* C. S. Knighton, ''Pepys and the Navy'' (Stroud: Sutton Publishing, 2003).",
"* Christopher Lloyd, ''Mr Barrow of the Admiralty'' (London, 1970).",
"* Malcolm H. Murfett, ''The First Sea Lords: From Fisher to Mountbatten'' (Westport: Praeger, 1995).",
"* Lady Murray, ''The Making of a Civil Servant: Sir Oswyn Murray, Secretary of the Admiralty 1917–1936'' (London, 1940).",
"* N.A.M.",
"Rodger, ''The Admiralty'' (Lavenham, 1979)* J.C. Sainty, ''Admiralty Officials, 1660–1870'' (London, 1975)* Sir Charles Walker, ''Thirty-Six Years at the Admiralty'' (London, 1933)"
],
[
"External links",
"* The Admiralty at the ''Survey of London'' online"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Amphibian (disambiguation)"
],
[
"Introduction",
"An '''amphibian''' is a member of the class Amphibia of ectothermic, tetrapod vertebrates'''Amphibian''' may also refer to:*Amphibian (comics), two superheroes from Marvel Comics*\"Amphibian\" (song), by Björk*Amphibious aircraft, an aircraft that can operate from water or land*Loening OL or Loening Amphibian, an amphibious biplane built for the US Army Air Corps and Navy*Mark IV Amphibian, a type of World War II period British rebreather"
],
[
"See also",
"* Amphibia (disambiguation)* Amphibious (disambiguation)"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Amputation"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Amputation''' is the removal of a limb by trauma, medical illness, or surgery.",
"As a surgical measure, it is used to control pain or a disease process in the affected limb, such as malignancy or gangrene.",
"In some cases, it is carried out on individuals as a preventive surgery for such problems.",
"A special case is that of congenital amputation, a congenital disorder, where fetal limbs have been cut off by constrictive bands.",
"In some countries, amputation is currently used to punish people who commit crimes.",
"Amputation has also been used as a tactic in war and acts of terrorism; it may also occur as a war injury.",
"In some cultures and religions, minor amputations or mutilations are considered a ritual accomplishment.",
"When done by a person, the person executing the amputation is an amputator.",
"The oldest evidence of this practice comes from a skeleton found buried in Liang Tebo cave, East Kalimantan, Indonesian Borneo dating back to at least 31,000 years ago, where it was done when the amputee was a young child."
],
[
"Types",
"=== Leg ===Lower limb amputations can be divided into two broad categories: minor and major amputations.",
"Minor amputations generally refer to the amputation of digits.",
"Major amputations are commonly below-knee- or above-knee amputations.",
"Common partial foot amputations include the Chopart, Lisfranc, and ray amputations.Common forms of ankle disarticulations include Pyrogoff, Boyd, and Syme amputations.",
"A less common major amputation is the Van Nes rotation, or rotationplasty, i.e.",
"the turning around and reattachment of the foot to allow the ankle joint to take over the function of the knee.Types of amputations include:An above-knee amputation; partial foot amputation: amputation of the lower limb distal to the ankle joint; ankle disarticulation: amputation of the lower limb at the ankle joint; trans-tibial amputation: amputation of the lower limb between the knee joint and the ankle joint, commonly referred to as a below-knee amputation; knee disarticulation: amputation of the lower limb at the knee joint; trans-femoral amputation: amputation of the lower limb between the hip joint and the knee joint, commonly referred to an above-knee amputation; hip disarticulation: amputation of the lower limb at the hip joint; trans-pelvic disarticulation: amputation of the whole lower limb together with all or part of the pelvis, also known as a hemipelvectomy or hindquarter amputation===Arm===The 18th century guide to amputationsTypes of upper extremity amputations include:* partial hand amputation* wrist disarticulation* trans-radial amputation, commonly referred to as below-elbow or forearm amputation* elbow disarticulation* trans-humeral amputation, commonly referred to as above-elbow amputation* shoulder disarticulation* forequarter amputationA variant of the trans-radial amputation is the Krukenberg procedure in which the radius and ulna are used to create a stump capable of a pincer action.===Other===Partial amputation of index finger.",
"* Facial amputations include but are not limited to:** amputation of the ears** amputation of the nose (rhinotomy)** amputation of the tongue (glossectomy).",
"** amputation of the eyes (enucleation).",
"** amputation of the teeth (Dental evulsion).",
"Removal of teeth, mainly incisors, is or was practiced by some cultures for ritual purposes (for instance in the Iberomaurusian culture of Neolithic North Africa).",
"* Breasts:** amputation of the breasts (mastectomy).",
"* Genitals:** amputation of the testicles (castration).",
"** amputation of the penis (penectomy).",
"** amputation of the foreskin (circumcision).",
"** amputation of the clitoris (clitoridectomy).Hemicorporectomy, or amputation at the waist, and decapitation, or amputation at the neck, are the most radical amputations.Genital modification and mutilation may involve amputating tissue, although not necessarily as a result of injury or disease.===Self-amputation===In some rare cases when a person has become trapped in a deserted place, with no means of communication or hope of rescue, the victim has amputated their own limb.",
"The most notable case of this is Aron Ralston, a hiker who amputated his own right forearm after it was pinned by a boulder in a hiking accident and he was unable to free himself for over five days.Body integrity identity disorder is a psychological condition in which an individual feels compelled to remove one or more of their body parts, usually a limb.",
"In some cases, that individual may take drastic measures to remove the offending appendages, either by causing irreparable damage to the limb so that medical intervention cannot save the limb, or by causing the limb to be severed.===Urgent===In surgery, a '''guillotine amputation''' is an amputation performed without closure of the skin in an urgent setting.",
"Typical indications include catastrophic trauma or infection control in the setting of infected gangrene.",
"A guillotine amputation is typically followed with a more time-consuming, definitive amputation such as an above or below knee amputation."
],
[
"Causes",
"===Circulatory disorders===* Diabetic vasculopathy* Sepsis with peripheral necrosis* Peripheral artery disease which can lead to gangrene* A severe deep vein thrombosis (phlegmasia cerulea dolens) can cause compartment syndrome and gangrene===Neoplasm===Transfemoral amputation due to liposarcoma* Cancerous bone or soft tissue tumors (e.g.",
"osteosarcoma, chondrosarcoma, fibrosarcoma, epithelioid sarcoma, Ewing's sarcoma, synovial sarcoma, sacrococcygeal teratoma, liposarcoma), melanoma===Trauma===Three fingers from a soldier's right hand were traumatically amputated during World War I.",
"* Severe limb injuries in which the efforts to save the limb fail or the limb cannot be saved.",
"* Traumatic amputation (an unexpected amputation that occurs at the scene of an accident, where the limb is partially or entirely severed as a direct result of the accident, for example, a finger that is severed from the blade of a table saw)* Amputation in utero (Amniotic band)===Congenital anomalies===* Deformities of digits and/or limbs (e.g., proximal femoral focal deficiency, Fibular hemimelia)* Extra digits and/or limbs (e.g., polydactyly)===Infection===* Bone infection (osteomyelitis) and/or diabetic foot infections* Gangrene* Trench foot* Necrosis* Meningococcal meningitis* Streptococcus* Vibrio vulnificus* Necrotizing fasciitis* Gas gangrene* Legionella* Influenza A Virus* Animal bites* Sepsis* Bubonic plague=== Frostbite ===Frostbite is a cold-related injury occurring when an area (typically a limb or other extremity) is exposed to extreme low temperatures, causing the freezing of the skin or other tissues.",
"Its pathophysiology involves the formation of ice crystals upon freezing and blood clots upon thawing, leading to cell damage and cell death.",
"Treatment of severe frostbite may require surgical amputation of the affected tissue or limb; if there is deep injury autoamputation may occur.===Athletic performance===Sometimes professional athletes may choose to have a non-essential digit amputated to relieve chronic pain and impaired performance.",
"* Australian Rules footballer Daniel Chick elected to have his left ring finger amputated as chronic pain and injury was limiting his performance.",
"* Rugby union player Jone Tawake also had a finger removed.",
"* National Football League safety Ronnie Lott had the tip of his little finger removed after it was damaged in the 1985 NFL season.=== Criminal penalty ===* According to Quran 5:38, the punishment for stealing is the amputation of the hand.",
"Under Sharia law, after repeated offense, the foot may also be cut off.",
"This is still in practice today in countries like Brunei, the United Arab Emirates, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, and 11 of the 36 states within Nigeria.",
"* In 1779, Thomas Jefferson proposed a bill to the Virginia Assembly that ostensibly would have replaced capital punishment with other penalties, including amputation, for certain crimes, although not all were really punishable by death at the time.",
"For the crimes of rape, sodomy, and polygamy (the latter removed from a later version), the punishment was to be castration for men or rhinotomy for women.",
"For intentional maiming, the bill specified literal eye for an eye retribution.",
"The bill never passed, due to the combination of its perceived barbarity in some parts and perceived leniency in others.",
"* From the 16th century, English law provided for cutting off a hand as punishment for striking someone inside a courtroom.",
"Thomas Jefferson's punishments revision bill also intended to repeal this.",
"* As of 2021, this form of punishment is controversial, as most modern cultures consider it to be morally abhorrent, as it has the effect of permanently disabling a person and constitutes torture.",
"It is thus seen as grossly disproportionate for crimes less than those such as murder."
],
[
"Surgery",
"===Method===Curved knives such as this one were used, in the past, for some kinds of amputations.Surgeons performing an amputation have to first litigate the supplying artery and vein, so as to prevent hemorrhage (bleeding).",
"The muscles are transected, and finally, the bone is sawed through with an oscillating saw.",
"Sharp and rough edges of bones are filed, skin and muscle flaps are then transposed over the stump, occasionally with the insertion of elements to attach a prosthesis.Amputation of the leg of First Lieutenant Antônio Carlos de Mariz e Barros, commander of the Brazilian Battleship ''Tamandaré'' (Henrique Fleiuss, ''Semana Illustrada'', 1866).Distal stabilisation of muscles is often performed.",
"This allows effective muscle contraction which reduces atrophy, allows functional use of the stump and maintains soft tissue coverage of the remnant bone.",
"The preferred stabilisation technique is myodesis where the muscle is attached to the bone or its periosteum.",
"In joint disarticulation amputations tenodesis may be used where the muscle tendon is attached to the bone.",
"Muscles are attached under similar tension to normal physiological conditions.An experimental technique known as the \"Ewing amputation\" aims to improve post-amputation proprioception.",
"Another technique with similar goals, which has been tested in a clinical trial, is Agonist-antagonist Myoneural Interface (AMI).In 1920, Dr. Janos Ertl Sr. of Hungary, developed the Ertl procedure in order to return a high number of amputees to the work force.",
"The Ertl technique, an osteomyoplastic procedure for transtibial amputation, can be used to create a highly functional residual limb.",
"Creation of a tibiofibular bone bridge provides a stable, broad tibiofibular articulation that may be capable of some distal weight bearing.",
"Several different modified techniques and fibular bridge fixation methods have been used; however, no current evidence exists regarding comparison of the different techniques.=== Post-operative management ===A 2019 Cochrane systematic review aimed to determine whether rigid dressings were more effective than soft dressings in helping wounds heal following transtibial (below the knee) amputations.",
"Due to the limited and very low certainty evidence available, the authors concluded that it was uncertain what the benefits and harms were for each dressing type.",
"They recommended that clinicians consider the pros and cons of each dressing type on a case-by-case basis: rigid dressings may potentially benefit patients who have a high risk of falls; soft dressings may potentially benefit patients who have poor skin integrity.A 2017 review found that the use of rigid removable dressings (RRD's) in trans-tibial amputations, rather than soft bandaging, improved healing time, reduced edema, prevented knee flexion contractures and reduced complications, including further amputation, from external trauma such as falls onto the stump.Post-operative management, in addition to wound healing, considers maintenance of limb strength, joint range, edema management, preservation of the intact limb (if applicable) and stump desensitization."
],
[
"Trauma",
"Traumatic amputation is the partial or total avulsion of a part of a body during a serious accident, like traffic, labor, or combat.Traumatic amputation of a human limb, either partial or total, creates the immediate danger of death from blood loss.Orthopedic surgeons often assess the severity of different injuries using the Mangled Extremity Severity Score.",
"Given different clinical and situational factors, they can predict the likelihood of amputation.",
"This is especially useful for emergency physicians to quickly evaluate patients and decide on consultations.===Causes===Private Lewis Francis was wounded July 21, 1861, at the First Battle of Bull Run by a bayonet to the knee.Traumatic amputation is uncommon in humans (1 per 20,804 population per year).",
"Loss of limb usually happens immediately during the accident, but sometimes a few days later after medical complications.",
"Statistically, the most common causes of traumatic amputations are:* Vehicle accidents (cars, motorcycles, bicycles, trains, etc.",
")* Labor accidents (equipment, instruments, cylinders, chainsaws, press machines, meat machines, wood machines, etc.",
")* Agricultural accidents, with machines and mower equipment* Electric shock hazards* Firearms, bladed weapons, explosives* Violent rupture of ship rope or industry wire rope* Ring traction (ring amputation, de-gloving injuries)* Building doors and car doors* Animal attacks* Gas cylinder explosions* Other rare accidents===Treatment===The development of the science of microsurgery over the last 40 years has provided several treatment options for a traumatic amputation, depending on the patient's specific trauma and clinical situation:* 1st choice: Surgical amputation - break - prosthesis* 2nd choice: Surgical amputation - transplantation of other tissue - plastic reconstruction.",
"* 3rd choice: Replantation - reconnection - revascularisation of amputated limb, by microscope (after 1969)* 4th choice: Transplantation of cadaveric hand (after 2000)===Epidemiology===* In the United States in 1999, there were 14,420 non-fatal traumatic amputations according to the American Statistical Association.",
"Of these, 4,435 occurred as a result of traffic and transportation accidents and 9,985 were due to labor accidents.",
"Of all traumatic amputations, the distribution percentage is 30.75% for traffic accidents and 69.24% for labor accidents.",
"* The population of the United States in 1999 was about 300,000,000, so the conclusion is that there is one amputation per 20,804 persons per year.",
"In the group of labor amputations, 53% occurred in laborers and technicians, 30% in production and service workers, 16% in silviculture and fishery workers.",
"* A study found that in 2010, 22.8% of patients undergoing amputation of a lower extremity in the United States were readmitted to the hospital within 30 days.",
"* In 2017, an estimated 57.7 million people globally were living with existing traumatic limb injuries.",
"Of these 57.7 million, the leading causes of amputation \"were falls (36.2%), road injuries (15.7%), other transportation injuries (11.2%), and mechanical forces (10.4%).\""
],
[
"Prevention",
"Methods in preventing amputation, limb-sparing techniques, depend on the problems that might cause amputations to be necessary.",
"Chronic infections, often caused by diabetes or decubitus ulcers in bedridden patients, are common causes of infections that lead to gangrene, which, when widespread, necessitates amputation.There are two key challenges: first, many patients have impaired circulation in their extremities, and second, they have difficulty curing infections in limbs with poor blood circulation.Crush injuries where there is extensive tissue damage and poor circulation also benefit from hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT).",
"The high level of oxygenation and revascularization speed up recovery times and prevent infections.A study found that the patented method called Circulator Boot achieved significant results in prevention of amputation in patients with diabetes and arteriosclerosis.",
"Another study found it also effective for healing limb ulcers caused by peripheral vascular disease.",
"The boot checks the heart rhythm and compresses the limb between heartbeats; the compression helps cure the wounds in the walls of veins and arteries, and helps to push the blood back to the heart.For victims of trauma, advances in microsurgery in the 1970s have made replantations of severed body parts possible.The establishment of laws, rules, and guidelines, and employment of modern equipment help protect people from traumatic amputations."
],
[
"Prognosis",
"The individual may experience psychological trauma and emotional discomfort.",
"The stump will remain an area of reduced mechanical stability.",
"Limb loss can present significant or even drastic practical limitations.A large proportion of amputees (50–80%) experience the phenomenon of phantom limbs; they feel body parts that are no longer there.",
"These limbs can itch, ache, burn, feel tense, dry or wet, locked in or trapped or they can feel as if they are moving.",
"Some scientists believe it has to do with a kind of neural map that the brain has of the body, which sends information to the rest of the brain about limbs regardless of their existence.",
"Phantom sensations and phantom pain may also occur after the removal of body parts other than the limbs, e.g.",
"after amputation of the breast, extraction of a tooth (phantom tooth pain) or removal of an eye (phantom eye syndrome).A similar phenomenon is unexplained sensation in a body part unrelated to the amputated limb.",
"It has been hypothesized that the portion of the brain responsible for processing stimulation from amputated limbs, being deprived of input, expands into the surrounding brain, (''Phantoms in the Brain'': V.S.",
"Ramachandran and Sandra Blakeslee) such that an individual who has had an arm amputated will experience unexplained pressure or movement on his face or head.In many cases, the phantom limb aids in adaptation to a prosthesis, as it permits the person to experience proprioception of the prosthetic limb.",
"To support improved resistance or usability, comfort or healing, some type of stump socks may be worn instead of or as part of wearing a prosthesis.Another side effect can be heterotopic ossification, especially when a bone injury is combined with a head injury.",
"The brain signals the bone to grow instead of scar tissue to form, and nodules and other growth can interfere with prosthetics and sometimes require further operations.",
"This type of injury has been especially common among soldiers wounded by improvised explosive devices in the Iraq War.Due to technological advances in prosthetics, many amputees live active lives with little restriction.",
"Organizations such as the Challenged Athletes Foundation have been developed to give amputees the opportunity to be involved in athletics and adaptive sports such as amputee soccer.Nearly half of the individuals who have an amputation due to vascular disease will die within 5 years, usually secondary to the extensive co-morbidities rather than due to direct consequences of amputation.",
"This is higher than the five year mortality rates for breast cancer, colon cancer, and prostate cancer.",
"Of persons with diabetes who have a lower extremity amputation, up to 55% will require amputation of the second leg within two to three years."
],
[
"Etymology",
"The word amputation is borrowed from Latin ''amputātus,'' past participle of ''amputāre'' \"to prune back (a plant), prune away, remove by cutting (unwanted parts or features), cut off (a branch, limb, body part),\" from ''am-,'' assimilated variant of ''amb-'' \"about, around\" + ''putāre'' \"to prune, make clean or tidy, scour (wool)\".",
"The English word \"Poes\" was first applied to surgery in the 17th century, possibly first in Peter Lowe's ''A discourse of the Whole Art of Chirurgerie'' (published in either 1597 or 1612); his work was derived from 16th-century French texts and early English writers also used the words \"extirpation\" (16th-century French texts tended to use ''extirper''), \"disarticulation\", and \"dismemberment\" (from the Old French ''desmembrer'' and a more common term before the 17th century for limb loss or removal), or simply \"cutting\", but by the end of the 17th century \"amputation\" had come to dominate as the accepted medical term."
],
[
"Notable cases",
"* Patch Adams* Rick Allen* Douglas Bader* Götz of the Iron Hand* Carl Brashear* Lisa Bufano* Roberto Carlos* Tammy Duckworth* Kalamandalam Sankaran Embranthiri* Terry Fox* Zach Gowen * Pete Gray* Shaquem Griffin* Robert David Hall* Bethany Hamilton* Hugh Herr* Frida Kahlo* Ronnie Lott* Hari Budha Magar* Aimee Mullins* Oscar Pistorius* Amy Purdy* Aron Ralston* Hans-Ulrich Rudel* Alex Zanardi"
],
[
"See also",
"* Acrotomophilia* Adapted automobile* Flail limb* Robotic prosthesis control"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* Miller, Brian Craig.",
"''Empty Sleeves: Amputation in the Civil War South'' (University of Georgia Press, 2015).",
"xviii, 257 pp."
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Anemometer"
],
[
"Introduction",
"John Thomas Romney Robinson.In meteorology, an '''anemometer''' () is a device that measures wind speed and direction.",
"It is a common instrument used in weather stations.",
"The earliest known description of an anemometer was by Italian architect and author Leon Battista Alberti (1404–1472) in 1450."
],
[
"History",
"The anemometer has changed little since its development in the 15th century.",
"Alberti is said to have invented it around 1450.In the ensuing centuries numerous others, including Robert Hooke(1635–1703), developed their own versions, with some mistakenly credited as its inventor.",
"In 1846, Thomas Romney Robinson (1792–1882) improved the design by using four hemispherical cups and mechanical wheels.",
"In 1926, Canadian meteorologist John Patterson (1872–1956) developed a three-cup anemometer, which was improved by Brevoort and Joiner in 1935.In 1991, Derek Weston added the ability to measure wind direction.",
"In 1994, Andreas Pflitsch developed the sonic anemometer."
],
[
"Velocity anemometers",
"===Cup anemometers===Cup anemometer animationA simple type of anemometer was invented in 1845 by Rev Dr John Thomas Romney Robinson of Armagh Observatory.",
"It consisted of four hemispherical cups on horizontal arms mounted on a vertical shaft.",
"The air flow past the cups in any horizontal direction turned the shaft at a rate roughly proportional to the wind's speed.",
"Therefore, counting the shaft's revolutions over a set time interval produced a value proportional to the average wind speed for a wide range of speeds.",
"This type of instrument is also called a ''rotational'' anemometer.With a four-cup anemometer, the wind always has the hollow of one cup presented to it, and is blowing on the back of the opposing cup.",
"Since a hollow hemisphere has a drag coefficient of .38 on the spherical side and 1.42 on the hollow side, more force is generated on the cup that presenting its hollow side to the wind.",
"Because of this asymmetrical force, torque is generated on the anemometer's axis, causing it to spin.Theoretically, the anemometer's speed of rotation should be proportional to the wind speed because the force produced on an object is proportional to the speed of the gas or fluid flowing past it.",
"However, in practice, other factors influence the rotational speed, including turbulence produced by the apparatus, increasing drag in opposition to the torque produced by the cups and support arms, and friction on the mount point.",
"When Robinson first designed his anemometer, he asserted that the cups moved one-third of the speed of the wind, unaffected by cup size or arm length.",
"This was apparently confirmed by some early independent experiments, but it was incorrect.",
"Instead, the ratio of the speed of the wind and that of the cups, the ''anemometer factor'', depends on the dimensions of the cups and arms, and can have a value between two and a little over three.",
"Once the error was discovered, all previous experiment involving anemometers had to be repeated.The three-cup anemometer developed by Canadian John Patterson in 1926, and subsequent cup improvements by Brevoort & Joiner of the United States in 1935, led to a cupwheel design with a nearly linear response and an error of less than 3% up to .",
"Patterson found that each cup produced maximum torque when it was at 45° to the wind flow.",
"The three-cup anemometer also had a more constant torque and responded more quickly to gusts than the four-cup anemometer.The three-cup anemometer was further modified by Australian Dr. Derek Weston in 1991 to also measure wind direction.",
"He added a tag to one cup, causing the cupwheel speed to increase and decrease as the tag moved alternately with and against the wind.",
"Wind direction is calculated from these cyclical changes in speed, while wind speed is determined from the average cupwheel speed.Three-cup anemometers are currently the industry standard for wind resource assessment studies and practice.===Vane anemometers===One of the other forms of mechanical velocity anemometer is the ''vane anemometer''.",
"It may be described as a windmill or a propeller anemometer.",
"Unlike the Robinson anemometer, whose axis of rotation is vertical, the vane anemometer must have its axis parallel to the direction of the wind and is therefore horizontal.",
"Furthermore, since the wind varies in direction and the axis has to follow its changes, a wind vane or some other contrivance to fulfill the same purpose must be employed.A ''vane anemometer'' thus combines a propeller and a tail on the same axis to obtain accurate and precise wind speed and direction measurements from the same instrument.",
"The speed of the fan is measured by a rev counter and converted to a windspeed by an electronic chip.",
"Hence, volumetric flow rate may be calculated if the cross-sectional area is known.In cases where the direction of the air motion is always the same, as in ventilating shafts of mines and buildings, wind vanes known as air meters are employed, and give satisfactory results.File:Wind speed and direction instrument - NOAA.jpg|Vane style of anemometerFile:Prop vane anemometer.jpg|Helicoid propeller anemometer incorporating a wind vane for orientationFile:Anemometer-IMG 4734-white.jpg|Hand-held low-speed vane anemometerFile:Digital_Handheld_Anemometer.jpg|Hand-held digital anemometer or Byram anenometer.===Hot-wire anemometers===Hot-wire sensorHot wire anemometers use a fine wire (on the order of several micrometres) electrically heated to some temperature above the ambient.",
"Air flowing past the wire cools the wire.",
"As the electrical resistance of most metals is dependent upon the temperature of the metal (tungsten is a popular choice for hot-wires), a relationship can be obtained between the resistance of the wire and the speed of the air.",
"In most cases, they cannot be used to measure the direction of the airflow, unless coupled with a wind vane.Several ways of implementing this exist, and hot-wire devices can be further classified as CCA (constant current anemometer), CVA (constant voltage anemometer) and CTA (constant-temperature anemometer).",
"The voltage output from these anemometers is thus the result of some sort of circuit within the device trying to maintain the specific variable (current, voltage or temperature) constant, following Ohm's law.Additionally, PWM (pulse-width modulation) anemometers are also used, wherein the velocity is inferred by the time length of a repeating pulse of current that brings the wire up to a specified resistance and then stops until a threshold \"floor\" is reached, at which time the pulse is sent again.Hot-wire anemometers, while extremely delicate, have extremely high frequency-response and fine spatial resolution compared to other measurement methods, and as such are almost universally employed for the detailed study of turbulent flows, or any flow in which rapid velocity fluctuations are of interest.An industrial version of the fine-wire anemometer is the thermal flow meter, which follows the same concept, but uses two pins or strings to monitor the variation in temperature.",
"The strings contain fine wires, but encasing the wires makes them much more durable and capable of accurately measuring air, gas, and emissions flow in pipes, ducts, and stacks.",
"Industrial applications often contain dirt that will damage the classic hot-wire anemometer.Drawing of a laser anemometer.",
"The laser light is emitted (1) through the front lens (6) of the anemometer and is backscattered off the air molecules (7).",
"The backscattered radiation (dots) re-enters the device and is reflected and directed into a detector (12).===Laser Doppler anemometers===In laser Doppler velocimetry, laser Doppler anemometers use a beam of light from a laser that is divided into two beams, with one propagated out of the anemometer.",
"Particulates (or deliberately introduced seed material) flowing along with air molecules near where the beam exits reflect, or backscatter, the light back into a detector, where it is measured relative to the original laser beam.",
"When the particles are in great motion, they produce a Doppler shift for measuring wind speed in the laser light, which is used to calculate the speed of the particles, and therefore the air around the anemometer.Fixed mounted 2D ultrasonic anemometer with 3 paths.",
"Central spike keeps birds away.===Ultrasonic anemometers===3D ultrasonic anemometerUltrasonic anemometers, first developed in the 1950s, use ultrasonic sound waves to measure wind velocity.",
"They measure wind speed based on the time of flight of sonic pulses between pairs of transducers.",
"Measurements from pairs of transducers can be combined to yield a measurement of velocity in 1-, 2-, or 3-dimensional flow.",
"The spatial resolution is given by the path length between transducers, which is typically 10 to 20 cm.",
"Ultrasonic anemometers can take measurements with very fine temporal resolution, 20 Hz or better, which makes them well suited for turbulence measurements.",
"The lack of moving parts makes them appropriate for long-term use in exposed automated weather stations and weather buoys where the accuracy and reliability of traditional cup-and-vane anemometers are adversely affected by salty air or dust.",
"Their main disadvantage is the distortion of the air flow by the structure supporting the transducers, which requires a correction based upon wind tunnel measurements to minimize the effect.",
"An international standard for this process, ISO 16622 ''Meteorology—Ultrasonic anemometers/thermometers—Acceptance test methods for mean wind measurements'' is in general circulation.",
"Another disadvantage is lower accuracy due to precipitation, where rain drops may vary the speed of sound.Since the speed of sound varies with temperature, and is virtually stable with pressure change, ultrasonic anemometers are also used as thermometers.Two-dimensional (wind speed and wind direction) sonic anemometers are used in applications such as weather stations, ship navigation, aviation, weather buoys and wind turbines.",
"Monitoring wind turbines usually requires a refresh rate of wind speed measurements of 3 Hz, easily achieved by sonic anemometers.",
"Three-dimensional sonic anemometers are widely used to measure gas emissions and ecosystem fluxes using the eddy covariance method when used with fast-response infrared gas analyzers or laser-based analyzers.Two-dimensional wind sensors are of two types:* '''Two ultrasounds paths''': These sensors have four arms.",
"The disadvantage of this type of sensor is that when the wind comes in the direction of an ultrasound path, the arms disturb the airflow, reducing the accuracy of the resulting measurement.",
"* '''Three ultrasounds paths''': These sensors have three arms.",
"They give one path redundancy of the measurement which improves the sensor accuracy and reduces aerodynamic turbulence.====Acoustic resonance anemometers====Acoustic resonance anemometerAcoustic resonance anemometers are a more recent variant of sonic anemometer.",
"The technology was invented by Savvas Kapartis and patented in 1999.Whereas conventional sonic anemometers rely on time of flight measurement, acoustic resonance sensors use resonating acoustic (ultrasonic) waves within a small purpose-built cavity in order to perform their measurement.Acoustic resonance principleBuilt into the cavity is an array of ultrasonic transducers, which are used to create the separate standing-wave patterns at ultrasonic frequencies.",
"As wind passes through the cavity, a change in the wave's property occurs (phase shift).",
"By measuring the amount of phase shift in the received signals by each transducer, and then by mathematically processing the data, the sensor is able to provide an accurate horizontal measurement of wind speed and direction.Because acoustic resonance technology enables measurement within a small cavity, the sensors tend to be typically smaller in size than other ultrasonic sensors.",
"The small size of acoustic resonance anemometers makes them physically strong and easy to heat, and therefore resistant to icing.",
"This combination of features means that they achieve high levels of data availability and are well suited to wind turbine control and to other uses that require small robust sensors such as battlefield meteorology.",
"One issue with this sensor type is measurement accuracy when compared to a calibrated mechanical sensor.",
"For many end uses, this weakness is compensated for by the sensor's longevity and the fact that it does not require recalibration once installed.===Ping-pong ball anemometers===A common anemometer for basic use is constructed from a ping-pong ball attached to a string.",
"When the wind blows horizontally, it presses on and moves the ball; because ping-pong balls are very lightweight, they move easily in light winds.",
"Measuring the angle between the string-ball apparatus and the vertical gives an estimate of the wind speed.This type of anemometer is mostly used for middle-school level instruction, which most students make on their own, but a similar device was also flown on the Phoenix Mars Lander."
],
[
"Pressure anemometers",
"Britannia Yacht Club clubhouse tour, burgee, and wind gauge on roofThe first designs of anemometers that measure the pressure were divided into plate and tube classes.===Plate anemometers===These are the first modern anemometers.",
"They consist of a flat plate suspended from the top so that the wind deflects the plate.",
"In 1450, the Italian art architect Leon Battista Alberti invented the first mechanical anemometer; in 1664 it was re-invented by Robert Hooke (who is often mistakenly considered the inventor of the first anemometer).",
"Later versions of this form consisted of a flat plate, either square or circular, which is kept normal to the wind by a wind vane.",
"The pressure of the wind on its face is balanced by a spring.",
"The compression of the spring determines the actual force which the wind is exerting on the plate, and this is either read off on a suitable gauge, or on a recorder.",
"Instruments of this kind do not respond to light winds, are inaccurate for high wind readings, and are slow at responding to variable winds.",
"Plate anemometers have been used to trigger high wind alarms on bridges.===Tube anemometers===Tube anemometer invented by William Henry Dines.",
"The movable part (right) is mounted on the fixed part (left).Instruments at Mount Washington Observatory.",
"The pitot tube static anemometer is on the right.The pointed head is the pitot port.",
"The small holes are connected to the static port.James Lind's anemometer of 1775 consisted of a vertically mounted glass U tube containing a liquid manometer (pressure gauge), with one end bent out in a horizontal direction to face the wind flow and the other vertical end capped.",
"Though the Lind was not the first it was the most practical and best known anemometer of this type.",
"If the wind blows into the mouth of a tube it causes an increase of pressure on one side of the manometer.",
"The wind over the open end of a vertical tube causes little change in pressure on the other side of the manometer.",
"The resulting elevation difference in the two legs of the U tube is an indication of the wind speed.",
"However, an accurate measurement requires that the wind speed be directly into the open end of the tube; small departures from the true direction of the wind causes large variations in the reading.The successful metal pressure tube anemometer of William Henry Dines in 1892 utilized the same pressure difference between the open mouth of a straight tube facing the wind and a ring of small holes in a vertical tube which is closed at the upper end.",
"Both are mounted at the same height.",
"The pressure differences on which the action depends are very small, and special means are required to register them.",
"The recorder consists of a float in a sealed chamber partially filled with water.",
"The pipe from the straight tube is connected to the top of the sealed chamber and the pipe from the small tubes is directed into the bottom inside the float.",
"Since the pressure difference determines the vertical position of the float this is a measure of the wind speed.The great advantage of the tube anemometer lies in the fact that the exposed part can be mounted on a high pole, and requires no oiling or attention for years; and the registering part can be placed in any convenient position.",
"Two connecting tubes are required.",
"It might appear at first sight as though one connection would serve, but the differences in pressure on which these instruments depend are so minute, that the pressure of the air in the room where the recording part is placed has to be considered.",
"Thus if the instrument depends on the pressure or suction effect alone, and this pressure or suction is measured against the air pressure in an ordinary room, in which the doors and windows are carefully closed and a newspaper is then burnt up the chimney, an effect may be produced equal to a wind of 10 mi/h (16 km/h); and the opening of a window in rough weather, or the opening of a door, may entirely alter the registration.While the Dines anemometer had an error of only 1% at , it did not respond very well to low winds due to the poor response of the flat plate vane required to turn the head into the wind.",
"In 1918 an aerodynamic vane with eight times the torque of the flat plate overcame this problem.====Pitot tube static anemometers====Modern tube anemometers use the same principle as in the Dines anemometer but using a different design.",
"The implementation uses a pitot-static tube which is a pitot tube with two ports, pitot and static, that is normally used in measuring the airspeed of aircraft.",
"The pitot port measures the dynamic pressure of the open mouth of a tube with pointed head facing wind, and the static port measures the static pressure from small holes along the side on that tube.",
"The pitot tube is connected to a tail so that it always makes the tube's head to face the wind.",
"Additionally, the tube is heated to prevent rime ice formation on the tube.",
"There are two lines from the tube down to the devices to measure the difference in pressure of the two lines.",
"The measurement devices can be manometers, pressure transducers, or analog chart recorders.===Effect of density on measurements===In the tube anemometer the dynamic pressure is actually being measured, although the scale is usually graduated as a velocity scale.",
"If the actual air density differs from the calibration value, due to differing temperature, elevation or barometric pressure, a correction is required to obtain the actual wind speed.",
"Approximately 1.5% (1.6% above 6,000 feet) should be added to the velocity recorded by a tube anemometer for each 1000 ft (5% for each kilometer) above sea-level."
],
[
"Effect of icing",
"At airports, it is essential to have accurate wind data under all conditions, including freezing precipitation.",
"Anemometry is also required in monitoring and controlling the operation of wind turbines, which in cold environments are prone to in-cloud icing.",
"Icing alters the aerodynamics of an anemometer and may entirely block it from operating.",
"Therefore, anemometers used in these applications must be internally heated.",
"Both cup anemometers and sonic anemometers are presently available with heated versions."
],
[
"Instrument location",
"In order for wind speeds to be comparable from location to location, the effect of the terrain needs to be considered, especially in regard to height.",
"Other considerations are the presence of trees, and both natural canyons and artificial canyons (urban buildings).",
"The standard anemometer height in open rural terrain is 10 meters."
],
[
"See also",
"* Air flow meter* Anemoi, for the ancient origin of the name of this technology* Anemoscope, ancient device for measuring or predicting wind direction or weather* Automated airport weather station* Night of the Big Wind* Particle image velocimetry* Savonius wind turbine* Wind power forecasting* Wind run* Windsock, a simple high-visibility indicator of approximate wind speed and direction"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References",
"*Meteorological Instruments, W.E.",
"Knowles Middleton and Athelstan F. Spilhaus, Third Edition revised, University of Toronto Press, Toronto, 1953*Invention of the Meteorological Instruments, W. E. Knowles Middleton, The Johns Hopkins Press, Baltimore, 1969"
],
[
"External links",
"* * * Description of the development and the construction of an ultrasonic anemometer* Animation Showing Sonic Principle of Operation (Time of Flight Theory) – Gill Instruments* Collection of historical anemometer* Principle of Operation: Acoustic Resonance measurement – FT Technologies* Thermopedia, \"Anemometers (laser doppler)\"* Thermopedia, \"Anemometers (pulsed thermal)\"* Thermopedia, \"Anemometers (vane)\"* The Rotorvane Anemometer.",
"Measuring both wind speed and direction using a tagged three-cup sensor"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Archaeopteryx"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''''Archaeopteryx''''' (; ), sometimes referred to by its German name, '''\"\"''' ( ''Primeval Bird''), is a genus of avian dinosaurs.",
"The name derives from the ancient Greek (''archaīos''), meaning \"ancient\", and (''ptéryx''), meaning \"feather\" or \"wing\".",
"Between the late 19th century and the early 21st century, ''Archaeopteryx'' was generally accepted by palaeontologists and popular reference books as the oldest-known bird (member of the group Avialae).",
"Older potential avialans have since been identified, including ''Anchiornis'', ''Xiaotingia'', and ''Aurornis''.",
"''Archaeopteryx'' lived in the Late Jurassic around 150 million years ago, in what is now southern Germany, during a time when Europe was an archipelago of islands in a shallow warm tropical sea, much closer to the equator than it is now.",
"Similar in size to a Eurasian magpie, with the largest individuals possibly attaining the size of a raven, the largest species of ''Archaeopteryx'' could grow to about in length.",
"Despite their small size, broad wings, and inferred ability to fly or glide, ''Archaeopteryx'' had more in common with other small Mesozoic dinosaurs than with modern birds.",
"In particular, they shared the following features with the dromaeosaurids and troodontids: jaws with sharp teeth, three fingers with claws, a long bony tail, hyperextensible second toes (\"killing claw\"), feathers (which also suggest warm-bloodedness), and various features of the skeleton.These features make ''Archaeopteryx'' a clear candidate for a transitional fossil between non-avian dinosaurs and birds.",
"Thus, ''Archaeopteryx'' plays an important role, not only in the study of the origin of birds, but in the study of dinosaurs.",
"It was named from a single feather in 1861, the identity of which has been controversial.",
"That same year, the first complete specimen of ''Archaeopteryx'' was announced.",
"Over the years, ten more fossils of ''Archaeopteryx'' have surfaced.",
"Despite variation among these fossils, most experts regard all the remains that have been discovered as belonging to a single species, although this is still debated.",
"''Archaeopteryx'' was long considered to be the beginning of the evolutionary tree of birds.",
"However, in recent years, the discovery of several small, feathered dinosaurs has created a mystery for palaeontologists, raising questions about which animals are the ancestors of modern birds and which are their relatives.",
"Most of these eleven fossils include impressions of feathers.",
"Because these feathers are of an advanced form (flight feathers), these fossils are evidence that the evolution of feathers began before the Late Jurassic.",
"The type specimen of ''Archaeopteryx'' was discovered just two years after Charles Darwin published ''On the Origin of Species''.",
"''Archaeopteryx'' seemed to confirm Darwin's theories and has since become a key piece of evidence for the origin of birds, the transitional fossils debate, and confirmation of evolution."
],
[
"History of discovery",
"Timeline of ''Archaeopteryx'' discoveries until 2007Over the years, twelve body fossil specimens of ''Archaeopteryx'' have been found.",
"All of the fossils come from the limestone deposits, quarried for centuries, near , Germany.",
"These quarries excavate sediments from the Solnhofen Limestone formation and related units.The single featherThe initial discovery, a single feather, was unearthed in 1860 or 1861 and described in 1861 by .",
"It is currently located at the Natural History Museum of Berlin.",
"Though it was the initial holotype, there were indications that it might not have been from the same animal as the body fossils.",
"In 2019 it was reported that laser imaging had revealed the structure of the quill (which had not been visible since some time after the feather was described), and that the feather was inconsistent with the morphology of all other ''Archaeopteryx'' feathers known, leading to the conclusion that it originated from another dinosaur.",
"This conclusion was challenged in 2020 as being unlikely; the feather was identified on the basis of morphology as most likely having been an upper major primary covert feather.The first skeleton, known as the '''London Specimen''' (BMNH 37001), was unearthed in 1861 near , Germany, and perhaps given to local physician in return for medical services.",
"He then sold it for £700 (roughly £83,000 in 2020) to the Natural History Museum in London, where it remains.",
"Missing most of its head and neck, it was described in 1863 by Richard Owen as ''Archaeopteryx macrura'', allowing for the possibility it did not belong to the same species as the feather.",
"In the subsequent fourth edition of his ''On the Origin of Species'', Charles Darwin described how some authors had maintained \"that the whole class of birds came suddenly into existence during the eocene period; but now we know, on the authority of Professor Owen, that a bird certainly lived during the deposition of the upper greensand; and still more recently, that strange bird, the ''Archaeopteryx'', with a long lizard-like tail, bearing a pair of feathers on each joint, and with its wings furnished with two free claws, has been discovered in the oolitic slates of Solnhofen.",
"Hardly any recent discovery shows more forcibly than this how little we as yet know of the former inhabitants of the world.",
"\"The Greek word () means 'ancient, primeval'.",
"primarily means 'wing', but it can also be just 'feather'.",
"Meyer suggested this in his description.",
"At first he referred to a single feather which appeared to resemble a modern bird's remex (wing feather), but he had heard of and been shown a rough sketch of the London specimen, to which he referred as a \"\" (\"skeleton of an animal covered in similar feathers\").",
"In German, this ambiguity is resolved by the term which does not necessarily mean a wing used for flying.",
"was the favoured translation of ''Archaeopteryx'' among German scholars in the late nineteenth century.",
"In English, 'ancient pinion' offers a rough approximation to this.Since then, twelve specimens have been recovered:The '''Berlin Specimen''' (HMN 1880/81) was discovered in 1874 or 1875 on the Blumenberg near , Germany, by farmer Jakob Niemeyer.",
"He sold this precious fossil for the money to buy a cow in 1876, to innkeeper Johann Dörr, who again sold it to Ernst Otto Häberlein, the son of K. Häberlein.",
"Placed on sale between 1877 and 1881, with potential buyers including O. C. Marsh of Yale University's Peabody Museum, it eventually was bought for 20,000 Goldmark by the Berlin's Natural History Museum, where it now is displayed.",
"The transaction was financed by Ernst Werner von Siemens, founder of the company that bears his name.",
"Described in 1884 by Wilhelm Dames, it is the most complete specimen, and the first with a complete head.",
"In 1897 it was named by Dames as a new species, ''A.",
"siemensii''; though often considered a synonym of ''A.",
"lithographica'', several 21st century studies have concluded that it is a distinct species which includes the Berlin, Munich, and Thermopolis specimens.Cast of the Maxberg SpecimenComposed of a torso, the '''Maxberg Specimen''' (S5) was discovered in 1956 near Langenaltheim; it was brought to the attention of professor Florian Heller in 1958 and described by him in 1959.The specimen is missing its head and tail, although the rest of the skeleton is mostly intact.",
"Although it was once exhibited at the Maxberg Museum in Solnhofen, it is currently missing.",
"It belonged to Eduard Opitsch, who loaned it to the museum until 1974.After his death in 1991, it was discovered that the specimen was missing and may have been stolen or sold.The '''Haarlem Specimen''' (TM 6428/29, also known as the ''Teylers Specimen'') was discovered in 1855 near , Germany, and described as a ''Pterodactylus crassipes'' in 1857 by Meyer.",
"It was reclassified in 1970 by John Ostrom and is currently located at the Teylers Museum in Haarlem, the Netherlands.",
"It was the very first specimen found, but was incorrectly classified at the time.",
"It is also one of the least complete specimens, consisting mostly of limb bones, isolated cervical vertebrae, and ribs.",
"In 2017 it was named as a separate genus ''Ostromia'', considered more closely related to ''Anchiornis'' from China.Eichstätt Specimen, once considered a distinct genus, ''Jurapteryx''The '''Eichstätt Specimen''' (JM 2257) was discovered in 1951 near Workerszell, Germany, and described by Peter Wellnhofer in 1974.Currently located at the Jura Museum in Eichstätt, Germany, it is the smallest known specimen and has the second-best head.",
"It is possibly a separate genus (''Jurapteryx recurva'') or species (''A.",
"recurva'').The '''Solnhofen Specimen''' (unnumbered specimen) was discovered in the 1970s near Eichstätt, Germany, and described in 1988 by Wellnhofer.",
"Currently located at the Bürgermeister-Müller-Museum in Solnhofen, it originally was classified as ''Compsognathus'' by an amateur collector, the same mayor Friedrich Müller after which the museum is named.",
"It is the largest specimen known and may belong to a separate genus and species, ''Wellnhoferia grandis''.",
"It is missing only portions of the neck, tail, backbone, and head.The '''Munich Specimen''' (BSP 1999 I 50, formerly known as the ''Solenhofer-Aktien-Verein Specimen'') was discovered on 3 August 1992 near Langenaltheim and described in 1993 by Wellnhofer.",
"It is currently located at the Paläontologisches Museum München in Munich, to which it was sold in 1999 for 1.9 million Deutschmark.",
"What was initially believed to be a bony sternum turned out to be part of the coracoid, but a cartilaginous sternum may have been present.",
"Only the front of its face is missing.",
"It has been used as the basis for a distinct species, ''A.",
"bavarica'', but more recent studies suggest it belongs to ''A.",
"siemensii''.Daiting Specimen, the holotype of ''A.",
"albersdoerferi''An eighth, fragmentary specimen was discovered in 1990 in the younger Mörnsheim Formation at Daiting, Suevia.",
"Therefore, it is known as the '''Daiting Specimen''', and had been known since 1996 only from a cast, briefly shown at the Naturkundemuseum in Bamberg.",
"The original was purchased by palaeontologist Raimund Albertsdörfer in 2009.It was on display for the first time with six other original fossils of ''Archaeopteryx'' at the Munich Mineral Show in October 2009.The Daiting Specimen was subsequently named ''Archaeopteryx albersdoerferi'' by Kundrat et al.",
"(2018).",
"After a lengthy period in a closed private collection, it was moved to the Museum of Evolution at Knuthenborg Safaripark (Denmark) in 2022, where it has since been on display and also been made available for researchers.Bürgermeister-Müller (\"chicken wing\") SpecimenAnother fragmentary fossil was found in 2000.It is in private possession and, since 2004, on loan to the Bürgermeister-Müller Museum in Solnhofen, so it is called the '''Bürgermeister-Müller Specimen'''; the institute itself officially refers to it as the \"Exemplar of the families Ottman & Steil, Solnhofen\".",
"As the fragment represents the remains of a single wing of ''Archaeopteryx'', it is colloquially known as \"chicken wing\".Details of the Wyoming Dinosaur Center Archaeopteryx (WDC-CSG-100)Long in a private collection in Switzerland, the '''Thermopolis Specimen''' (WDC CSG 100) was discovered in Bavaria and described in 2005 by Mayr, Pohl, and Peters.",
"Donated to the Wyoming Dinosaur Center in Thermopolis, Wyoming, it has the best-preserved head and feet; most of the neck and the lower jaw have not been preserved.",
"The \"Thermopolis\" specimen was described on 2 December 2005 ''Science'' journal article as \"A well-preserved ''Archaeopteryx'' specimen with theropod features\"; it shows that ''Archaeopteryx'' lacked a reversed toe—a universal feature of birds—limiting its ability to perch on branches and implying a terrestrial or trunk-climbing lifestyle.",
"This has been interpreted as evidence of theropod ancestry.",
"In 1988, Gregory S. Paul claimed to have found evidence of a hyperextensible second toe, but this was not verified and accepted by other scientists until the Thermopolis specimen was described.",
"\"Until now, the feature was thought to belong only to the species' close relatives, the deinonychosaurs.\"",
"The Thermopolis Specimen was assigned to ''Archaeopteryx siemensii'' in 2007.The specimen is considered to represent the most complete and best-preserved ''Archaeopteryx'' remains yet.The eleventh specimenThe discovery of an eleventh specimen was announced in 2011; it was described in 2014.It is one of the more complete specimens, but is missing much of the skull and one forelimb.",
"It is privately owned and has yet to be given a name.",
"Palaeontologists of the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich studied the specimen, which revealed previously unknown features of the plumage, such as feathers on both the upper and lower legs and metatarsus, and the only preserved tail tip.A twelfth specimen had been discovered by an amateur collector in 2010 at the Schamhaupten quarry, but the finding was only announced in February 2014.It was scientifically described in 2018.It represents a complete and mostly articulated skeleton with skull.",
"It is the only specimen lacking preserved feathers.",
"It is from the Painten Formation and somewhat older than the other specimens.=== Authenticity ===Beginning in 1985, an amateur group including astronomer Fred Hoyle and physicist Lee Spetner, published a series of papers claiming that the feathers on the Berlin and London specimens of ''Archaeopteryx'' were forged.",
"Their claims were repudiated by Alan J. Charig and others at the Natural History Museum in London.",
"Most of their supposed evidence for a forgery was based on unfamiliarity with the processes of lithification; for example, they proposed that, based on the difference in texture associated with the feathers, feather impressions were applied to a thin layer of cement, without realizing that feathers themselves would have caused a textural difference.",
"They also misinterpreted the fossils, claiming that the tail was forged as one large feather, when visibly this is not the case.",
"In addition, they claimed that the other specimens of ''Archaeopteryx'' known at the time did not have feathers, which is incorrect; the Maxberg and Eichstätt specimens have obvious feathers.They also expressed disbelief that slabs would split so smoothly, or that one half of a slab containing fossils would have good preservation, but not the counterslab.",
"These are common properties of Solnhofen fossils, because the dead animals would fall onto hardened surfaces, which would form a natural plane for the future slabs to split along and would leave the bulk of the fossil on one side and little on the other.Finally, the motives they suggested for a forgery are not strong, and are contradictory; one is that Richard Owen wanted to forge evidence in support of Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, which is unlikely given Owen's views toward Darwin and his theory.",
"The other is that Owen wanted to set a trap for Darwin, hoping the latter would support the fossils so Owen could discredit him with the forgery; this is unlikely because Owen wrote a detailed paper on the London specimen, so such an action would certainly backfire.Charig ''et al.''",
"pointed to the presence of hairline cracks in the slabs running through both rock and fossil impressions, and mineral growth over the slabs that had occurred before discovery and preparation, as evidence that the feathers were original.",
"Spetner ''et al.''",
"then attempted to show that the cracks would have propagated naturally through their postulated cement layer, but neglected to account for the fact that the cracks were old and had been filled with calcite, and thus were not able to propagate.",
"They also attempted to show the presence of cement on the London specimen through X-ray spectroscopy, and did find something that was not rock; it was not cement either, and is most probably a fragment of silicone rubber left behind when moulds were made of the specimen.",
"Their suggestions have not been taken seriously by palaeontologists, as their evidence was largely based on misunderstandings of geology, and they never discussed the other feather-bearing specimens, which have increased in number since then.",
"Charig ''et al.''",
"reported a discolouration: a dark band between two layers of limestone – they say it is the product of sedimentation.",
"It is natural for limestone to take on the colour of its surroundings and most limestones are coloured (if not colour banded) to some degree, so the darkness was attributed to such impurities.",
"They also mention that a complete absence of air bubbles in the rock slabs is further proof that the specimen is authentic."
],
[
"Description",
"Specimens compared to a human in scaleMost of the specimens of ''Archaeopteryx'' that have been discovered come from the Solnhofen limestone in Bavaria, southern Germany, which is a , a rare and remarkable geological formation known for its superbly detailed fossils laid down during the early Tithonian stage of the Jurassic period, approximately 150.8–148.5million years ago.",
"''Archaeopteryx'' was roughly the size of a raven, with broad wings that were rounded at the ends and a long tail compared to its body length.",
"It could reach up to in body length and in wingspan, with an estimated mass of .",
"''Archaeopteryx'' feathers, although less documented than its other features, were very similar in structure to modern-day bird feathers.",
"Despite the presence of numerous avian features, ''Archaeopteryx'' had many non-avian theropod dinosaur characteristics.",
"Unlike modern birds, ''Archaeopteryx'' had small teeth, as well as a long bony tail, features which ''Archaeopteryx'' shared with other dinosaurs of the time.Because it displays features common to both birds and non-avian dinosaurs, ''Archaeopteryx'' has often been considered a link between them.",
"In the 1970s, John Ostrom, following Thomas Henry Huxley's lead in 1868, argued that birds evolved within theropod dinosaurs and ''Archaeopteryx'' was a critical piece of evidence for this argument; it had several avian features, such as a wishbone, flight feathers, wings, and a partially reversed first toe along with dinosaur and theropod features.",
"For instance, it has a long ascending process of the ankle bone, interdental plates, an obturator process of the ischium, and long chevrons in the tail.",
"In particular, Ostrom found that ''Archaeopteryx'' was remarkably similar to the theropod family Dromaeosauridae.Archaeopteryx had three separate digits on each fore-leg each ending with a \"claw\".",
"Few birds have such features.",
"Some birds, such as ducks, swans, Jacanas (''Jacana'' sp.",
"), and the hoatzin (''Opisthocomus hoazin''), have them concealed beneath their leg-feathers.=== Plumage ===Anatomical illustration comparing the \"frond-tail\" of ''Archaeopteryx'' with the \"fan-tail\" of a modern birdSpecimens of ''Archaeopteryx'' were most notable for their well-developed flight feathers.",
"They were markedly asymmetrical and showed the structure of flight feathers in modern birds, with vanes given stability by a barb-barbule-barbicel arrangement.",
"The tail feathers were less asymmetrical, again in line with the situation in modern birds and also had firm vanes.",
"The thumb did not yet bear a separately movable tuft of stiff feathers.The body plumage of ''Archaeopteryx'' is less well-documented and has only been properly researched in the well-preserved Berlin specimen.",
"Thus, as more than one species seems to be involved, the research into the Berlin specimen's feathers does not necessarily hold true for the rest of the species of ''Archaeopteryx''.",
"In the Berlin specimen, there are \"trousers\" of well-developed feathers on the legs; some of these feathers seem to have a basic contour feather structure, but are somewhat decomposed (they lack barbicels as in ratites).",
"In part they are firm and thus capable of supporting flight.A patch of pennaceous feathers is found running along its back, which was quite similar to the contour feathers of the body plumage of modern birds in being symmetrical and firm, although not as stiff as the flight-related feathers.",
"Apart from that, the feather traces in the Berlin specimen are limited to a sort of \"proto-down\" not dissimilar to that found in the dinosaur ''Sinosauropteryx'': decomposed and fluffy, and possibly even appearing more like fur than feathers in life (although not in their microscopic structure).",
"These occur on the remainder of the body—although some feathers did not fossilize and others were obliterated during preparation, leaving bare patches on specimens—and the lower neck.There is no indication of feathering on the upper neck and head.",
"While these conceivably may have been nude, this may still be an artefact of preservation.",
"It appears that most ''Archaeopteryx'' specimens became embedded in anoxic sediment after drifting some time on their backs in the sea—the head, neck and the tail are generally bent downward, which suggests that the specimens had just started to rot when they were embedded, with tendons and muscle relaxing so that the characteristic shape (death pose) of the fossil specimens was achieved.",
"This would mean that the skin already was softened and loose, which is bolstered by the fact that in some specimens the flight feathers were starting to detach at the point of embedding in the sediment.",
"So it is hypothesized that the pertinent specimens moved along the sea bed in shallow water for some time before burial, the head and upper neck feathers sloughing off, while the more firmly attached tail feathers remained.==== Colouration ====Artist's restoration illustrating one interpretation of Carney's studyIn 2011, graduate student Ryan Carney and colleagues performed the first colour study on an ''Archaeopteryx'' specimen.",
"Using scanning electron microscopy technology and energy-dispersive X-ray analysis, the team was able to detect the structure of melanosomes in the isolated feather specimen described in 1861.The resultant measurements were then compared to those of 87modern bird species, and the original colour was calculated with a 95% likelihood to be black.",
"The feather was determined to be black throughout, with heavier pigmentation in the distal tip.",
"The feather studied was most probably a dorsal covert, which would have partly covered the primary feathers on the wings.",
"The study does not mean that ''Archaeopteryx'' was entirely black, but suggests that it had some black colouration which included the coverts.",
"Carney pointed out that this is consistent with what is known of modern flight characteristics, in that black melanosomes have structural properties that strengthen feathers for flight.",
"In a 2013 study published in the ''Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry'', new analyses of ''Archaeopteryx''s feathers revealed that the animal may have had complex light- and dark-coloured plumage, with heavier pigmentation in the distal tips and outer vanes.",
"This analysis of colour distribution was based primarily on the distribution of sulphate within the fossil.",
"An author on the previous ''Archaeopteryx'' colour study argued against the interpretation of such biomarkers as an indicator of eumelanin in the full ''Archaeopteryx'' specimen.",
"Carney and other colleagues also argued against the 2013 study's interpretation of the sulphate and trace metals, and in a 2020 study published in ''Scientific Reports'' demonstrated that the isolated covert feather was entirely matte black (as opposed to black and white, or iridescent) and that the remaining \"plumage patterns of ''Archaeopteryx'' remain unknown\"."
],
[
"Classification",
"The Thermopolis SpecimenToday, fossils of the genus ''Archaeopteryx'' are usually assigned to one or two species, ''A.",
"lithographica'' and ''A.",
"siemensii'', but their taxonomic history is complicated.",
"Ten names have been published for the handful of specimens.",
"As interpreted today, the name ''A.",
"lithographica'' only referred to the single feather described by Meyer.",
"In 1954 Gavin de Beer concluded that the London specimen was the holotype.",
"In 1960, Swinton accordingly proposed that the name ''Archaeopteryx lithographica'' be placed on the official genera list making the alternative names ''Griphosaurus'' and ''Griphornis'' invalid.",
"The ICZN, implicitly accepting De Beer's standpoint, did indeed suppress the plethora of alternative names initially proposed for the first skeleton specimens, which mainly resulted from the acrimonious dispute between Meyer and his opponent Johann Andreas Wagner (whose ''Griphosaurus problematicus''—'problematic riddle-lizard'—was a vitriolic sneer at Meyer's ''Archaeopteryx'').",
"In addition, in 1977, the Commission ruled that the first species name of the Haarlem specimen, ''crassipes'', described by Meyer as a pterosaur before its true nature was realized, was not to be given preference over ''lithographica'' in instances where scientists considered them to represent the same species.It has been noted that the feather, the first specimen of ''Archaeopteryx'' described, does not correspond well with the flight-related feathers of ''Archaeopteryx''.",
"It certainly is a flight feather of a contemporary species, but its size and proportions indicate that it may belong to another, smaller species of feathered theropod, of which only this feather is known so far.",
"As the feather had been designated the type specimen, the name ''Archaeopteryx'' should then no longer be applied to the skeletons, thus creating significant nomenclatorial confusion.",
"In 2007, two sets of scientists therefore petitioned the ICZN requesting that the London specimen explicitly be made the type by designating it as the new holotype specimen, or neotype.",
"This suggestion was upheld by the ICZN after four years of debate, and the London specimen was designated the neotype on 3 October 2011.The twelfth specimenBelow is a cladogram published in 2013 by Godefroit ''et al.",
"''=== Species ===Skeletal restorations of various specimensIt has been argued that all the specimens belong to the same species, ''A.",
"lithographica''.",
"Differences do exist among the specimens, and while some researchers regard these as due to the different ages of the specimens, some may be related to actual species diversity.",
"In particular, the Munich, Eichstätt, Solnhofen, and Thermopolis specimens differ from the London, Berlin, and Haarlem specimens in being smaller or much larger, having different finger proportions, having more slender snouts lined with forward-pointing teeth, and the possible presence of a sternum.",
"Due to these differences, most individual specimens have been given their own species name at one point or another.",
"The Berlin specimen has been designated as ''Archaeornis siemensii'', the Eichstätt specimen as ''Jurapteryx recurva'', the Munich specimen as ''Archaeopteryx bavarica'', and the Solnhofen specimen as ''Wellnhoferia grandis''.In 2007, a review of all well-preserved specimens including the then-newly discovered Thermopolis specimen concluded that two distinct species of ''Archaeopteryx'' could be supported: ''A.",
"lithographica'' (consisting of at least the London and Solnhofen specimens), and ''A.",
"siemensii'' (consisting of at least the Berlin, Munich, and Thermopolis specimens).",
"The two species are distinguished primarily by large flexor tubercles on the foot claws in ''A.",
"lithographica'' (the claws of ''A.",
"siemensii'' specimens being relatively simple and straight).",
"''A.",
"lithographica'' also had a constricted portion of the crown in some teeth and a stouter metatarsus.",
"A supposed additional species, ''Wellnhoferia grandis'' (based on the Solnhofen specimen), seems to be indistinguishable from ''A.",
"lithographica'' except in its larger size.=== Synonyms ===The Solnhofen Specimen, by some considered as belonging to the genus ''Wellnhoferia''If two names are given, the first denotes the original describer of the \"species\", the second the author on whom the given name combination is based.",
"As always in zoological nomenclature, putting an author's name in parentheses denotes that the taxon was originally described in a different genus.",
"* '''''Archaeopteryx lithographica''''' Meyer, 1861 conserved name**''Archaeopterix lithographica'' Anon., 1861 ''lapsus''** ''Griphosaurus problematicus'' Wagner, 1862 rejected name 1961 per ICZN Opinion 607** ''Griphornis longicaudatus'' Owen ''vide'' Woodward, 1862 rejected name 1961 per ICZN Opinion 607** ''Archaeopteryx macrura'' Owen, 1862 rejected name 1961 per ICZN Opinion 607** ''Archaeopteryx oweni'' Petronievics, 1917 rejected name 1961 per ICZN Opinion 607** ''Archaeopteryx recurva'' Howgate, 1984** ''Jurapteryx recurva'' (Howgate, 1984) Howgate, 1985** ''Wellnhoferia grandis'' Elżanowski, 2001* '''''Archaeopteryx siemensii''''' Dames, 1897**''Archaeornis siemensii'' (Dames, 1897) Petronievics, 1917** ''Archaeopteryx bavarica'' Wellnhofer, 1993''\"Archaeopteryx\" vicensensis'' (Anon.",
"''fide'' Lambrecht, 1933) is a ''nomen nudum'' for what appears to be an undescribed pterosaur.=== Phylogenetic position ===Comparison of the forelimb of ''Archaeopteryx'' (right) with that of ''Deinonychus'' (left)Modern palaeontology has often classified ''Archaeopteryx'' as the most primitive bird.",
"However, it is not thought to be a true ancestor of modern birds, but rather a close relative of that ancestor.",
"Nonetheless, ''Archaeopteryx'' was often used as a model of the true ancestral bird.",
"Several authors have done so.",
"Lowe (1935) and Thulborn (1984) questioned whether ''Archaeopteryx'' truly was the first bird.",
"They suggested that ''Archaeopteryx'' was a dinosaur that was no more closely related to birds than were other dinosaur groups.",
"Kurzanov (1987) suggested that ''Avimimus'' was more likely to be the ancestor of all birds than ''Archaeopteryx''.",
"Barsbold (1983) and Zweers and Van den Berge (1997) noted that many maniraptoran lineages are extremely birdlike, and they suggested that different groups of birds may have descended from different dinosaur ancestors.The discovery of the closely related ''Xiaotingia'' in 2011 led to new phylogenetic analyses that suggested that ''Archaeopteryx'' is a deinonychosaur rather than an avialan, and therefore, not a \"bird\" under most common uses of that term.",
"A more thorough analysis was published soon after to test this hypothesis, and failed to arrive at the same result; it found ''Archaeopteryx'' in its traditional position at the base of ''Avialae'', while ''Xiaotingia'' was recovered as a basal dromaeosaurid or troodontid.",
"The authors of the follow-up study noted that uncertainties still exist, and that it may not be possible to state confidently whether or not ''Archaeopteryx'' is a member of Avialae or not, barring new and better specimens of relevant species.Phylogenetic studies conducted by Senter, ''et al.''",
"(2012) and Turner, Makovicky, and Norell (2012) also found ''Archaeopteryx'' to be more closely related to living birds than to dromaeosaurids and troodontids.",
"On the other hand, Godefroit ''et al.''",
"(2013) recovered ''Archaeopteryx'' as more closely related to dromaeosaurids and troodontids in the analysis included in their description of ''Eosinopteryx brevipenna''.",
"The authors used a modified version of the matrix from the study describing ''Xiaotingia'', adding ''Jinfengopteryx elegans'' and ''Eosinopteryx brevipenna'' to it, as well as adding four additional characters related to the development of the plumage.",
"Unlike the analysis from the description of ''Xiaotingia'', the analysis conducted by Godefroit, ''et al.''",
"did not find ''Archaeopteryx'' to be related particularly closely to ''Anchiornis'' and ''Xiaotingia'', which were recovered as basal troodontids instead.Agnolín and Novas (2013) found ''Archaeopteryx'' and (possibly synonymous) ''Wellnhoferia'' to be form a clade sister to the lineage including ''Jeholornis'' and Pygostylia, with Microraptoria, Unenlagiinae, and the clade containing ''Anchiornis'' and ''Xiaotingia'' being successively closer outgroups to the Avialae (defined by the authors as the clade stemming from the last common ancestor of ''Archaeopteryx'' and Aves).",
"Another phylogenetic study by Godefroit, ''et al.",
"'', using a more inclusive matrix than the one from the analysis in the description of ''Eosinopteryx brevipenna'', also found ''Archaeopteryx'' to be a member of Avialae (defined by the authors as the most inclusive clade containing ''Passer domesticus'', but not ''Dromaeosaurus albertensis'' or ''Troodon formosus'').",
"''Archaeopteryx'' was found to form a grade at the base of Avialae with ''Xiaotingia'', ''Anchiornis'', and ''Aurornis''.",
"Compared to ''Archaeopteryx'', ''Xiaotingia'' was found to be more closely related to extant birds, while both ''Anchiornis'' and ''Aurornis'' were found to be more distantly so.Hu ''et al''.",
"(2018), Wang ''et al''.",
"(2018) and Hartman ''et al''.",
"(2019) found ''Archaeopteryx'' to have been a deinonychosaur instead of an avialan.",
"More specifically, it and closely related taxa were considered basal deinonychosaurs, with dromaeosaurids and troodontids forming together a parallel lineage within the group.",
"Because Hartman ''et al''.",
"found ''Archaeopteryx'' isolated in a group of flightless deinonychosaurs (otherwise considered \"anchiornithids\"), they considered it highly probable that this animal evolved flight independently from bird ancestors (and from ''Microraptor'' and ''Yi'').",
"The following cladogram illustrates their hypothesis regarding the position of ''Archaeopteryx'':The authors, however, found that the ''Archaeopteryx'' being an avialan was only slightly less likely than this hypothesis, and as likely as Archaeopterygidae and Troodontidae being sister clades."
],
[
"Palaeobiology",
"=== Flight ===1880 photo of the Berlin Specimen, showing leg feathers that were removed subsequently, during preparationAs in the wings of modern birds, the flight feathers of ''Archaeopteryx'' were somewhat asymmetrical and the tail feathers were rather broad.",
"This implies that the wings and tail were used for lift generation, but it is unclear whether ''Archaeopteryx'' was capable of flapping flight or simply a glider.",
"The lack of a bony breastbone suggests that ''Archaeopteryx'' was not a very strong flier, but flight muscles might have attached to the thick, boomerang-shaped wishbone, the platelike coracoids, or perhaps, to a cartilaginous sternum.",
"The sideways orientation of the glenoid (shoulder) joint between scapula, coracoid, and humerus—instead of the dorsally angled arrangement found in modern birds—may indicate that ''Archaeopteryx'' was unable to lift its wings above its back, a requirement for the upstroke found in modern flapping flight.",
"According to a study by Philip Senter in 2006, ''Archaeopteryx'' was indeed unable to use flapping flight as modern birds do, but it may well have used a downstroke-only flap-assisted gliding technique.",
"However, a more recent study solves this issue by suggesting a different flight stroke configuration for non-avian flying theropods.",
"''Archaeopteryx'' wings were relatively large, which would have resulted in a low stall speed and reduced turning radius.",
"The short and rounded shape of the wings would have increased drag, but also could have improved its ability to fly through cluttered environments such as trees and brush (similar wing shapes are seen in birds that fly through trees and brush, such as crows and pheasants).",
"The presence of \"hind wings\", asymmetrical flight feathers stemming from the legs similar to those seen in dromaeosaurids such as ''Microraptor'', also would have added to the aerial mobility of ''Archaeopteryx''.",
"The first detailed study of the hind wings by Longrich in 2006, suggested that the structures formed up to 12% of the total airfoil.",
"This would have reduced stall speed by up to 6% and turning radius by up to 12%.The feathers of ''Archaeopteryx'' were asymmetrical.",
"This has been interpreted as evidence that it was a flyer, because flightless birds tend to have symmetrical feathers.",
"Some scientists, including Thomson and Speakman, have questioned this.",
"They studied more than 70 families of living birds, and found that some flightless types do have a range of asymmetry in their feathers, and that the feathers of ''Archaeopteryx'' fall into this range.",
"The degree of asymmetry seen in ''Archaeopteryx'' is more typical for slow flyers than for flightless birds.The Munich SpecimenIn 2010, Robert L. Nudds and Gareth J. Dyke in the journal ''Science'' published a paper in which they analysed the rachises of the primary feathers of ''Confuciusornis'' and ''Archaeopteryx''.",
"The analysis suggested that the rachises on these two genera were thinner and weaker than those of modern birds relative to body mass.",
"The authors determined that ''Archaeopteryx'' and ''Confuciusornis'', were unable to use flapping flight.",
"This study was criticized by Philip J. Currie and Luis Chiappe.",
"Chiappe suggested that it is difficult to measure the rachises of fossilized feathers, and Currie speculated that ''Archaeopteryx'' and ''Confuciusornis'' must have been able to fly to some degree, as their fossils are preserved in what is believed to have been marine or lake sediments, suggesting that they must have been able to fly over deep water.",
"Gregory Paul also disagreed with the study, arguing in a 2010 response that Nudds and Dyke had overestimated the masses of these early birds, and that more accurate mass estimates allowed powered flight even with relatively narrow rachises.",
"Nudds and Dyke had assumed a mass of for the Munich specimen ''Archaeopteryx'', a young juvenile, based on published mass estimates of larger specimens.",
"Paul argued that a more reasonable body mass estimate for the Munich specimen is about .",
"Paul also criticized the measurements of the rachises themselves, noting that the feathers in the Munich specimen are poorly preserved.",
"Nudds and Dyke reported a diameter of for the longest primary feather, which Paul could not confirm using photographs.",
"Paul measured some of the inner primary feathers, finding rachises across.",
"Despite these criticisms, Nudds and Dyke stood by their original conclusions.",
"They claimed that Paul's statement, that an adult ''Archaeopteryx'' would have been a better flyer than the juvenile Munich specimen, was dubious.",
"This, they reasoned, would require an even thicker rachis, evidence for which has not yet been presented.",
"Another possibility is that they had not achieved true flight, but instead used their wings as aids for extra lift while running over water after the fashion of the basilisk lizard, which could explain their presence in lake and marine deposits (see Origin of avian flight).Replica of the London SpecimenIn 2004, scientists analysing a detailed CT scan of the braincase of the London ''Archaeopteryx'' concluded that its brain was significantly larger than that of most dinosaurs, indicating that it possessed the brain size necessary for flying.",
"The overall brain anatomy was reconstructed using the scan.",
"The reconstruction showed that the regions associated with vision took up nearly one-third of the brain.",
"Other well-developed areas involved hearing and muscle coordination.",
"The skull scan also revealed the structure of its inner ear.",
"The structure more closely resembles that of modern birds than the inner ear of non-avian reptiles.",
"These characteristics taken together suggest that ''Archaeopteryx'' had the keen sense of hearing, balance, spatial perception, and coordination needed to fly.",
"''Archaeopteryx'' had a cerebrum-to-brain-volume ratio 78% of the way to modern birds from the condition of non-coelurosaurian dinosaurs such as ''Carcharodontosaurus'' or ''Allosaurus'', which had a crocodile-like anatomy of the brain and inner ear.",
"Newer research shows that while the ''Archaeopteryx'' brain was more complex than that of more primitive theropods, it had a more generalized brain volume among Maniraptora dinosaurs, even smaller than that of other non-avian dinosaurs in several instances, which indicates the neurological development required for flight was already a common trait in the maniraptoran clade.Recent studies of flight feather barb geometry reveal that modern birds possess a larger barb angle in the trailing vane of the feather, whereas ''Archaeopteryx'' lacks this large barb angle, indicating potentially weak flight abilities.Reconstructed skeleton, Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University''Archaeopteryx'' continues to play an important part in scientific debates about the origin and evolution of birds.",
"Some scientists see it as a semi-arboreal climbing animal, following the idea that birds evolved from tree-dwelling gliders (the \"trees down\" hypothesis for the evolution of flight proposed by O. C. Marsh).",
"Other scientists see ''Archaeopteryx'' as running quickly along the ground, supporting the idea that birds evolved flight by running (the \"ground up\" hypothesis proposed by Samuel Wendell Williston).",
"Still others suggest that ''Archaeopteryx'' might have been at home both in the trees and on the ground, like modern crows, and this latter view is what currently is considered best supported by morphological characters.",
"Altogether, it appears that the species was not particularly specialized for running on the ground or for perching.",
"A scenario outlined by Elżanowski in 2002 suggested that ''Archaeopteryx'' used its wings mainly to escape predators by glides punctuated with shallow downstrokes to reach successively higher perches, and alternatively, to cover longer distances (mainly) by gliding down from cliffs or treetops.In March 2018, scientists reported that ''Archaeopteryx'' was likely capable of a flight stroke cycle morphologically closer to the grabbing motion of maniraptorans and distinct from that of modern birds.",
"This study on ''Archaeopteryx''s bone histology identified biomechanical and physiological adaptations exhibited by modern volant birds that perform intermittent flapping, such as pheasants and other burst flyers.Studies of ''Archaeopteryx's'' feather sheaths revealed that like modern birds, it had a center-out, flight related molting strategy.",
"As it was a weak flier, this was extremely advantageous in preserving its maximum flight performance.=== Growth ===Growth trends compared with other dinosaurs and birdsAn histological study by Erickson, Norell, Zhongue, and others in 2009 estimated that ''Archaeopteryx'' grew relatively slowly compared to modern birds, presumably because the outermost portions of ''Archaeopteryx'' bones appear poorly vascularized; in living vertebrates, poorly vascularized bone is correlated with slow growth rate.",
"They also assume that all known skeletons of ''Archaeopteryx'' come from juvenile specimens.",
"Because the bones of ''Archaeopteryx'' could not be histologically sectioned in a formal skeletochronological (growth ring) analysis, Erickson and colleagues used bone vascularity (porosity) to estimate bone growth rate.",
"They assumed that poorly vascularized bone grows at similar rates in all birds and in ''Archaeopteryx''.",
"The poorly vascularized bone of ''Archaeopteryx'' might have grown as slowly as that in a mallard (2.5micrometres per day) or as fast as that in an ostrich (4.2micrometres per day).",
"Using this range of bone growth rates, they calculated how long it would take to \"grow\" each specimen of ''Archaeopteryx'' to the observed size; it may have taken at least 970 days (there were 375 days in a Late Jurassic year) to reach an adult size of .",
"The study also found that the avialans ''Jeholornis'' and ''Sapeornis'' grew relatively slowly, as did the dromaeosaurid ''Mahakala''.",
"The avialans ''Confuciusornis'' and ''Ichthyornis'' grew relatively quickly, following a growth trend similar to that of modern birds.",
"One of the few modern birds that exhibit slow growth is the flightless kiwi, and the authors speculated that ''Archaeopteryx'' and the kiwi had similar basal metabolic rate.=== Daily activity patterns ===Comparisons between the scleral rings of ''Archaeopteryx'' and modern birds and reptiles indicate that it may have been diurnal, similar to most modern birds."
],
[
"Palaeoecology",
"Restoration of ''Archaeopteryx'' chasing a juvenile ''Compsognathus''The richness and diversity of the Solnhofen limestones in which all specimens of ''Archaeopteryx'' have been found have shed light on an ancient Jurassic Bavaria strikingly different from the present day.",
"The latitude was similar to Florida, though the climate was likely to have been drier, as evidenced by fossils of plants with adaptations for arid conditions and a lack of terrestrial sediments characteristic of rivers.",
"Evidence of plants, although scarce, include cycads and conifers while animals found include a large number of insects, small lizards, pterosaurs, and ''Compsognathus''.The excellent preservation of ''Archaeopteryx'' fossils and other terrestrial fossils found at Solnhofen indicates that they did not travel far before becoming preserved.",
"The ''Archaeopteryx'' specimens found were therefore likely to have lived on the low islands surrounding the Solnhofen lagoon rather than to have been corpses that drifted in from farther away.",
"''Archaeopteryx'' skeletons are considerably less numerous in the deposits of Solnhofen than those of pterosaurs, of which seven genera have been found.",
"The pterosaurs included species such as ''Rhamphorhynchus'' belonging to the Rhamphorhynchidae, the group which dominated the ecological niche currently occupied by seabirds, and which became extinct at the end of the Jurassic.",
"The pterosaurs, which also included ''Pterodactylus'', were common enough that it is unlikely that the specimens found are vagrants from the larger islands to the north.The islands that surrounded the Solnhofen lagoon were low lying, semi-arid, and sub-tropical with a long dry season and little rain.",
"The closest modern analogue for the Solnhofen conditions is said to be Orca Basin in the northern Gulf of Mexico, although it is much deeper than the Solnhofen lagoons.",
"The flora of these islands was adapted to these dry conditions and consisted mostly of low () shrubs.",
"Contrary to reconstructions of ''Archaeopteryx'' climbing large trees, these seem to have been mostly absent from the islands; few trunks have been found in the sediments and fossilized tree pollen also is absent.The lifestyle of ''Archaeopteryx'' is difficult to reconstruct and there are several theories regarding it.",
"Some researchers suggest that it was primarily adapted to life on the ground, while other researchers suggest that it was principally arboreal on the basis of the curvature of the claws which has since been questioned.",
"The absence of trees does not preclude ''Archaeopteryx'' from an arboreal lifestyle, as several species of bird live exclusively in low shrubs.",
"Various aspects of the morphology of ''Archaeopteryx'' point to either an arboreal or ground existence, including the length of its legs and the elongation in its feet; some authorities consider it likely to have been a generalist capable of feeding in both shrubs and open ground, as well as along the shores of the lagoon.",
"It most likely hunted small prey, seizing it with its jaws if it was small enough, or with its claws if it was larger."
],
[
"See also",
"* Dinosaur coloration* Evolution of birds* Feathered dinosaur* Origin of birds* ''Ostromia''* ''Rhamphorhynchus''* Temporal paradox (paleontology)* ''Xiaotingia''"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* G. R. de Beer (1954).",
"''Archaeopteryx lithographica: a study based upon the British Museum specimen''.",
"Trustees of the British Museum, London.",
"* P. Chambers (2002).",
"''Bones of Contention: The Fossil that Shook Science.''",
"John Murray, London.",
".",
"* A. Feduccia (1996).",
"''The Origin and Evolution of Birds''.",
"Yale University Press, New Haven.",
".",
"* Heilmann, G. (1926).",
"''The Origin of Birds''.",
"Witherby, London.",
"* T. H. Huxley.",
"(1871).",
"''Manual of the anatomy of vertebrate animals''.",
"London.",
"* H. von Meyer (1861).",
"''Archaeopterix lithographica (Vogel-Feder) und Pterodactylus von Solenhofen''.",
".",
"''1861'': 678–679, plate V. Article in German.",
"Full text, Google Books.",
"* P. Shipman (1998).",
"''Taking Wing: Archaeopteryx and the Evolution of Bird Flight''.",
"Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London.",
".",
"* P. Wellnhofer (2008).",
"''Archaeopteryx – Der Urvogel von Solnhofen'' (in German).",
"Verlag Friedrich Pfeil, Munich.",
"."
],
[
"External links",
"* All About ''Archaeopteryx'', from Talk.Origins.",
"* Use of SSRL X-ray takes 'transformative glimpse' – A look at chemicals linking birds and dinosaurs* ''Archaeopteryx'': An Early Bird – University of California Museum of Paleontology* Are Birds Really Dinosaurs?",
"– University of California Museum of Paleontology"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Arthur Laurents"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Arthur Laurents''' (July 14, 1917 – May 5, 2011) was an American playwright, theatre director, film producer and screenwriter.",
"With a career spanning seven decades he received numerous accolades including two Tony Awards, a Drama Desk Award, and nominations for two Academy Awards, two BAFTA Awards, and a Golden Globe Award.After writing scripts for radio shows after college and then training films for the U.S. Army during World War II, Laurents turned to writing for Broadway, producing a body of work that includes ''West Side Story'' (1957), ''Gypsy'' (1959), and ''Hallelujah, Baby!''",
"(1967), winning the Tony Award for Best Musical for the latter.",
"He directed the musical ''La Cage aux Folles'' in 1983 and received the Tony Award for Best Direction of a Musical.Laurents also worked as a screenwriter on Hollywood films such as Alfred Hitchcock's thriller ''Rope'' (1948), ''Anastasia'' (1956), ''Bonjour Tristesse'' (1958) and Sydney Pollack's romance ''The Way We Were'' (1973).",
"He received two Academy Award nominations for Best Picture and Best Original Screenplay for the Herbert Ross drama film ''The Turning Point'' (1977)."
],
[
"Early life",
"Born '''Arthur Levine''', Laurents was the son of middle-class Jewish parents, his father a lawyer and his mother a schoolteacher, who gave up her career when she married.",
"He was born and raised in the Flatbush section of Brooklyn, a borough of New York City, New York, the elder of two children, and attended Erasmus Hall High School.",
"His sister Edith suffered from chorea as a child.His paternal grandparents were Orthodox Jews, and his mother's parents, although born Jewish, were atheists.",
"His mother kept a kosher home for her husband's sake, but was lax about attending synagogue and observing the Jewish holidays.",
"His Bar Mitzvah marked the end of Laurents's religious education and the beginning of his rejection of all fundamentalist religions, although he continued to identify himself as Jewish.",
"However, late in life he admitted to having changed his last name from Levine to the less Jewish-sounding Laurents, \"to get a job.",
"\"After graduating from Cornell University, Laurents took an evening class in radio writing at New York University.",
"William N. Robson, his instructor, a CBS Radio director/producer, submitted his script ''Now Playing Tomorrow'', a comedic fantasy about clairvoyance, to the network, and it was produced in the Columbia Workshop series on January 30, 1939, with Shirley Booth in the lead role.",
"It was Laurents' first professional credit.",
"The show's success led to him being hired to write scripts for various radio shows, among them ''Lux Radio Theater''.",
"Laurents' career was interrupted when he was drafted into the U.S. Army in the middle of World War II.",
"Through a series of clerical errors, he never saw battle, but instead was assigned to the U.S. Army Pictorial Service located in a film studio in Astoria, Queens, where he wrote training films and met, among others, George Cukor and William Holden.",
"He later was reassigned to write plays for ''Armed Service Force Presents'', a radio show that dramatized the contributions of all branches of the armed forces."
],
[
"Career",
"=== Theatre ===Left to right:Harvey Fierstein, Jerry Herman, Arthur Laurents, creators of the musical ''La Cage Aux Folles'', in front of the Palace theater where it is playing, 1983According to John Clum, \"Laurents was always a mirror of his times.",
"Through his best work, one sees a staged history of leftist, gender, and gay politics in the decades after World War II.\"",
"After graduating from Cornell University in 1937, Laurents, who was gay, went to work as a writer for radio drama at CBS in New York.",
"His military duties during World War II, which consisted of writing training films and radio scripts for ''Armed Service Force Presents'', brought him into contact with some of the best film directors—distinguished director George Cukor directed his first script.",
"Laurents's work in radio and film during World War II was an excellent apprenticeship for a budding playwright and screenwriter.",
"He also had the good fortune to be based in New York City.",
"His first stage play, ''Home of the Brave'', was produced in 1945.The sale of the play to a film studio gave Laurents the entrée he needed to become a Hollywood screenwriter though he continued, with mixed success, to write plays.",
"The most important of his early screenplays is his adaptation of ''Rope'' for Alfred Hitchcock.Soon after being discharged from the Army, Laurents met ballerina Nora Kaye, and the two became involved in an on-again, off-again romantic relationship.",
"While Kaye was on tour with ''Fancy Free'', Laurents continued to write for the radio but was becoming discontented with the medium.",
"In 1962, Laurents directed ''I Can Get It for You Wholesale'', which helped to turn then-unknown Barbra Streisand into a star.",
"His next project was the stage musical ''Anyone Can Whistle'', which he directed and for which he wrote the book, but it proved to be an infamous flop.",
"He later had success with the musicals ''Hallelujah, Baby!''",
"(written for Lena Horne but ultimately starring Leslie Uggams) and ''La Cage Aux Folles'' (1983), which he directed, however ''Nick & Nora'' was not successful.Laurents in 2009In 2008, Laurents directed a Broadway revival of ''Gypsy'' starring Patti LuPone, and in 2009, he tackled a bilingual revival of ''West Side Story'', with Spanish translations of some dialogue and lyrics by Lin-Manuel Miranda.",
"While preparing ''West Side Story'', he noted, \"The musical theatre and cultural conventions of 1957 made it next to impossible for the characters to have authenticity.\"",
"Following the production's March 19 opening at the Palace Theatre, Ben Brantley of ''The New York Times'' called the translations \"an only partly successful experiment\" and added, \"Mr. Laurents has exchanged insolence for innocence and, as with most such bargains, there are dividends and losses.\"",
"The national tour (2011-2012) was directed by David Saint, who was Laurents' assistant director on the Broadway production.",
"The Spanish lyrics and dialog were reduced from about 18% of the total to about 10%.=== Hollywood ===Laurents' first Hollywood experience proved to be a frustrating disappointment.",
"Director Anatole Litvak, unhappy with the script submitted by Frank Partos and Millen Brand for ''The Snake Pit'' (1948), hired Laurents to rewrite it.",
"Partos and Brand later insisted the bulk of the shooting script was theirs, and produced carbon copies of many of the pages Laurents actually had written to bolster their claim.",
"Having destroyed the original script and all his notes and rewritten pages after completing the project, Laurents had no way to prove most of the work was his, and the Writers Guild of America denied him screen credit.",
"Brand later confessed he and Partos had copied scenes written by Laurents and apologized for his role in the deception.",
"Four decades later, Laurents learned he was ineligible for WGA health benefits because he had failed to accumulate enough credits to qualify.",
"He was short by one, the one he failed to get for ''The Snake Pit''.Upon hearing 20th Century Fox executives were pleased with Laurents' work on ''The Snake Pit'', Alfred Hitchcock hired him for his next project, the film ''Rope'' starring James Stewart.",
"Hitchcock wanted Laurents to Americanize the British play ''Rope'' (1929) by Patrick Hamilton for the screen.",
"With his then-lover Farley Granger set to star, Laurents was happy to accept the assignment.",
"His dilemma was how to make the audience aware of the fact the three main characters were homosexual without blatantly saying so.",
"The Hays Office kept close tabs on his work, and the final script was so discreet that Laurents was unsure whether co-star James Stewart ever realized that his character was gay.",
"In later years, Hitchcock asked him to script both ''Torn Curtain'' (1966) and ''Topaz'' (1969), However, Laurents, in both cases unenthused by the material, declined the offers.Laurents also scripted ''Anastasia'' (1956) and ''Bonjour Tristesse'' (1958).",
"''The Way We Were'' (1973), in which he incorporated many of his own experiences, particularly those with the HUAC, reunited him with Barbra Streisand, and ''The Turning Point'' (1977), inspired in part by his love for Nora Kaye, was directed by her husband Herbert Ross.",
"The Fox animated feature film ''Anastasia'' (1997) was based in part on his screenplay of the live-action 1956 film of the same title.=== Blacklist ===Because of a casual remark made by Russel Crouse, Laurents was called to Washington, D.C., to account for his political views.",
"He explained himself to the House Un-American Activities Committee, and his appearance had no obvious impact on his career, which at the time was primarily in the theatre.",
"When the McCarran Internal Security Act, which prohibited individuals suspected of engaging in subversive activities from obtaining a passport, was passed in 1950, Laurents and Granger immediately applied for and received passports and departed for Paris with Harold Clurman and his wife Stella Adler.",
"Laurents and Granger remained abroad, traveling throughout Europe and northern Africa, for about 18 months.Years earlier, Laurents and Jerome Robbins had developed ''Look Ma, I'm Dancin'!''",
"(1948), a stage musical about the world of ballet that ran for 188 performances on Broadway, and starred Nancy Walker and Harold Lang.",
"Laurents left the project, however, and the musical was ultimately produced with a book by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee.",
"When Robbins approached Paramount Pictures about directing a screen version, the studio agreed as long as Laurents was not part of the package.It was only then that Laurents learned he officially had been blacklisted, primarily because a review of ''Home of the Brave'' had been published in the ''Daily Worker''.",
"He decided to return to Paris, but the State Department refused to renew his passport.",
"Laurents spent three months trying to clear his name, and after submitting a lengthy letter explaining his political beliefs in detail, it was determined they were so idiosyncratic he could not have been a member of any subversive groups.",
"Within a week his passport was renewed, and the following day he sailed for Europe on the ''Ile de France''.",
"While on board, he received a cable from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer offering him a screenwriting assignment.",
"The blacklisting had ended.=== Memoirs ===Laurents wrote ''Original Story By Arthur Laurents: A Memoir of Broadway and Hollywood'', published in 2000.In it, he discusses his lengthy career and his many gay affairs and long-term relationships, including those with Farley Granger and Tom Hatcher (August 24, 1929 - October 26, 2006).",
"Hatcher was an aspiring actor whom Gore Vidal suggested Laurents seek out at the Beverly Hills men's clothing store Hatcher was managing at the time.",
"The couple remained together for 52 years until Hatcher's death on October 26, 2006.Laurents wrote ''Mainly on Directing: Gypsy, West Side Story and Other Musicals'', published in 2009, in which he discussed musicals he directed and the work of other directors he admired.His last memoir titled ''The Rest of the Story'' was published posthumously in September 2012."
],
[
"Death",
"Laurents died from complications of pneumonia at his home in Manhattan on May 5, 2011, aged 93.Following a long tradition, Broadway theatre lights were dimmed at 8 p.m. on May 6, 2011, for one minute in his memory.",
"His ashes were buried alongside those of Tom Hatcher in a memorial bench in Quogue, Long Island, New York."
],
[
"Work",
"===Writing===;Musicals*''West Side Story'' – 1957 – Tony Nomination for Best Musical*''Gypsy'' – 1959 – Tony Nomination for Best Musical*''Anyone Can Whistle'' – 1964*''Do I Hear a Waltz?''",
"– 1965*''Hallelujah, Baby!''",
"– 1967 – Tony Award for Best Musical*''The Madwoman of Central Park West'' – 1979*''Nick & Nora'' – 1991;Novels*''The Way We Were'' – 1972; Harper & Row (New York City)*''The Turning Point'' – 1977; New American Library (New York City); ;Plays*''Home of the Brave'' – 1945*'' The Bird Cage'' – 1950*''The Time of the Cuckoo'' – 1952*''A Clearing in the Woods'' – 1957*''Invitation to a March'' – 1960===Directing======Additional credits==="
],
[
"Accolades",
"YearAwardCategoryWorkResultRef.",
"1977 Academy Awards Best Picture ''The Turning Point'' Best Screenplay – Written Directly for the Screen 1957 British Academy Film Awards Best British Screenplay ''Anastasia'' 1958 ''Bonjour Tristesse'' 1975 Drama Desk Awards Outstanding Director of a Musical ''Gypsy'' 1948 Edgar Allan Poe Awards Best Motion Picture ''Rope'' 1977 Golden Globe Awards Best Screenplay – Motion Picture ''The Turning Point'' 1999 National Board of Review Awards Best Screenplay (for career achievement) 1958 Tony Awards Best Musical ''West Side Story'' 1960 ''Gypsy'' 1968 ''Hallelujah, Baby!''",
"1975 Best Direction of a Musical ''Gypsy'' 1984 ''La Cage aux Folles'' 2008 ''Gypsy'' 1973 Writers Guild of America Awards Best Drama – Written Directly for the Screen ''The Way We Were'' 1977 ''The Turning Point'' ''' Honors '''A new award was established in 2010, The Laurents/Hatcher Foundation Award.",
"This is awarded annually \"for an un-produced, full-length play of social relevance by an emerging American playwright.\"",
"The Laurents/Hatcher Foundation will give $50,000 to the writer with a grant of $100,000 towards production costs at a nonprofit theatre.",
"The first award will be given in 2011."
],
[
"See also",
"*List of Jewish American playwrights*List of novelists from the United States*List of pneumonia victims*List of people from Brooklyn, New York*List of playwrights from the United States*List of theatre directors"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"*Laurents, Arthur (2000).",
"''Original Story by Arthur Laurents: A Memoir of Broadway and Hollywood''.",
"New York: Knopf.",
".",
"*Laurents, Arthur (2009).",
"''Mainly on Directing: Gypsy, West Side Story, and Other Musicals''.",
"New York: Knopf.",
".",
"*Clum, John (2014).",
"''The Works of Arthur Laurents: Politics, Love, and Betrayal''.",
"Amherst, NY: Cambria Press.",
"."
],
[
"External links",
"** Arthur Laurents at the Internet Off-Broadway Database** American Theatre Wing biography*"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Adrian Lamo"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Adrián Alfonso Lamo Atwood''' (February 20, 1981 – March 14, 2018) was an American threat analyst and hacker.",
"Lamo first gained media attention for breaking into several high-profile computer networks, including those of ''The New York Times'', Yahoo!, and Microsoft, culminating in his 2003 arrest.Lamo was best known for reporting U.S. soldier Chelsea Manning to Army criminal investigators in 2010 for leaking hundreds of thousands of sensitive U.S. government documents to WikiLeaks.",
"Lamo died on March 14, 2018, at the age of 37."
],
[
"Early life and education",
"Adrian Lamo was born in Malden, Massachusetts His father, Mario Ricardo Lamo, was Colombian.",
"Adrian Lamo attended high schools in Bogotá and San Francisco, from which he did not graduate, but received a GED and was court-ordered to take courses at American River College, a community college in Sacramento County, California.",
"Lamo began his hacking efforts by hacking games on the Commodore 64 and through phone phreaking."
],
[
"Activities and legal issues",
"Lamo first became known for operating AOL watchdog site ''Inside-AOL.com''.===Security compromise===Lamo was a grey hat hacker who viewed the rise of the World Wide Web with a mixture of excitement and alarm.",
"He felt that others failed to see the importance of internet security in the Web's early days.",
"Lamo broke into corporate computer systems, but never damaged them.",
"Instead, he would offer to fix the security flaws free of charge, and if the flaw was not fixed, he would alert the media.",
"Lamo hoped to be hired by a corporation to attempt to break into systems and test their security, a practice that came to be known as red teaming.",
"But by the time this practice was common, his felony conviction prevented him from being hired.In December 2001, Worldcom praised Lamo for helping to fortify its corporate security.",
"In February 2002, he broke into the internal computer network of ''The New York Times'', added his name to the internal database of expert sources, and used the paper's LexisNexis account to conduct research on high-profile subjects.",
"''The New York Times'' filed a complaint, and a warrant for Lamo's arrest was issued in August 2003 following a 15-month investigation by federal prosecutors in New York.",
"At 10:15 a.m. on September 9, after spending a few days in hiding, he surrendered to the US Marshals in Sacramento, California.",
"He surrendered to the FBI in New York City on September 11, and pleaded guilty to one felony count of computer crimes against Microsoft, LexisNexis, and ''The New York Times'' on January 8, 2004.In July 2004, Lamo was sentenced to two years' probation, with six months to be served in home detention, and ordered to pay $65,000 in restitution.",
"He was convicted of compromising security at ''The New York Times'', Microsoft, Yahoo!, and WorldCom.When challenged for a response to allegations that he was glamorizing crime for the sake of publicity, he responded: \"Anything I could say about my person or my actions would only cheapen what they have to say for themselves\".",
"When approached for comment during his criminal case, Lamo frustrated reporters with non-sequiturs, such as \"Faith manages\" and \"It's a beautiful day.",
"\"At his sentencing, Lamo expressed remorse for harm his intrusions had caused.",
"The court record quotes him as adding: \"I want to answer for what I have done and do better with my life.",
"\"He subsequently declared on the question-and-answer site Quora: \"We all own our actions in fullness, not just the pleasant aspects of them.\"",
"Lamo accepted that he had made mistakes.===DNA controversy===Lamo in San Francisco in 2006On May 9, 2006, while 18 months into a two-year probation sentence, Lamo refused to give the United States government a blood sample it had demanded to record his DNA in its CODIS system.",
"According to his attorney at the time, Lamo had a religious objection to giving blood but was willing to give his DNA in another form.",
"On June 15, 2006, Lamo's lawyers filed a motion citing the Book of Genesis as one basis for Lamo's religious opposition to giving blood.On June 20, 2007, Lamo's legal counsel reached a settlement agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice whereby Lamo would submit a cheek swab instead of a blood sample.===WikiLeaks and Chelsea Manning===In February 2009, a partial list of the anonymous donors to the WikiLeaks website was leaked and published on the site.",
"Some media sources indicated at the time that Lamo was among the donors on the list.",
"Lamo commented on his Twitter page, \"Thanks WikiLeaks, for leaking your donor list... That's dedication.",
"\"In May 2010, Lamo informed U.S. Army authorities that Chelsea Manning had claimed to have leaked a large body of classified documents, including 260,000 classified United States diplomatic cables.",
"He said that Manning also \"took credit for leaking\" the video footage of the July 12, 2007, Baghdad airstrike, which has since come to be known as the \"Collateral Murder\" video.Lamo said he would not have turned Manning in \"if lives weren't in danger\".",
"He characterized her as \"in a war zone and basically trying to vacuum up as much classified information as she could, and just throwing it up into the air.\"",
"WikiLeaks responded by denouncing Lamo and the author of the article as \"notorious felons, informers & manipulators\", and said: \"journalists should take care.",
"\"Lamo was a volunteer \"adversary characterization\" analyst for Project Vigilant, a Florida-based government contractor, which encouraged him to inform the government about the alleged WikiLeaks source.",
"The head of Project Vigilant, Chet Uber, claimed, \"I'm the one who called the U.S. government... All the people who say that Adrian is a narc, he did a patriotic thing.",
"He sees all kinds of hacks, and he was seriously worried about people dying.",
"\"The Taliban insurgency later announced its intention to execute Afghan nationals named in the leaks as having cooperated with the U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan.",
"By that time, the U.S. had received months of advance warning that their names were among the leaks.",
"Manning was arrested and incarcerated in the U.S. military justice system and later sentenced to 35 years in confinement.",
"President Barack Obama commuted the sentence to seven years, including time served.",
"Lamo responded to the commutation with a post on Medium and an interview with ''U.S.",
"News & World Report''.Lamo characterized his decision to work with the government as morally ambiguous, but objectively necessary, writing that \"there were no right choices that day, only less wrong ones.",
"It was cold, it was needful, and it was no one's to make except mine.\"",
"Lamo was criticized by fellow hackers, such as those at the Hackers on Planet Earth conference in 2010, who labeled him a \"snitch.\"",
"Another told Lamo, following his speech during a panel discussion: \"from my perspective, I see what you have done as treason.",
"\"===Greenwald, Lamo, and ''Wired'' magazine===Lamo's role in Manning's case drew criticism from Glenn Greenwald, who suggested that Lamo lied to Manning by turning her in, and then lied after the fact to cover up the circumstances of her confessions.",
"In an article about the case, Greenwald mentioned ''Wired'' reporter Kevin Poulsen's 1994 felony conviction for computer hacking and wrote that \"over the years, Poulsen has served more or less as Lamo's personal media voice.\"",
"In an article titled \"The Worsening Journalistic Disgrace at Wired\", Greenwald wrote that ''Wired'' was \"actively concealing from the public, for months on end, the key evidence the full Lamo–Manning chat logs in a political story that has generated headlines around the world.",
"\"This drew a response from ''Wired'': \"At his most reasonable, Greenwald impugns our motives, attacks the character of our staff and carefully selects his facts and sources to misrepresent the truth and generate outrage in his readership.",
"\"On July 13, 2011, ''Wired'' published the Lamo–Manning chat logs in full, stating: \"The most significant of the unpublished details have now been publicly established with sufficient authority that we no longer believe any purpose is served by withholding the logs.\"",
"Greenwald wrote that the logs validated his claim that ''Wired'' had concealed important evidence."
],
[
"Film and television",
"On August 22, 2002, Lamo was removed from a segment of ''NBC Nightly News'' when, after being asked to demonstrate his skills for the camera, he gained access to NBC's internal network.",
"NBC was concerned that it broke the law by taping Lamo while he possibly broke the law.",
"Lamo was a guest on ''The Screen Savers'' five times beginning in 2002.",
"''Hackers Wanted'', a documentary film focusing on Lamo's life as a hacker, was produced by Trigger Street Productions and narrated by Kevin Spacey.",
"Focusing on the 2003 hacking scene, the film features interviews with Kevin Rose and Steve Wozniak.",
"The film has not been conventionally released.",
"In May 2009, a video purporting to be a trailer for ''Hackers Wanted'' was allegedly leaked onto the Internet film site Eye Crave Network.",
"In May 2010, an early cut of the film was leaked via BitTorrent.",
"According to an insider, what was leaked on the Internet was very different from the newer version, which includes additional footage.",
"On June 12, 2010, a director's cut version of the film was leaked onto torrent sites.Lamo also appeared on ''Good Morning America'', Fox News, ''Democracy Now!",
"'', ''Frontline'', and repeatedly on KCRA-TV News as an expert on netcentric crime and incidents.",
"He was interviewed for the documentaries ''We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks'' and ''True Stories: WikiLeaks – Secrets and Lies''.",
"Lamo reconnected with Leo Laporte in 2015 as a result of a Quora article on the \"dark web\" for an episode of ''The New Screen Savers''.Lamo wrote the book ''Ask Adrian'', a collection of his best Q&A drawn from over 500 pages of Quora answers."
],
[
"Personal life and death",
"Lamo was known as the \"Homeless Hacker\" for his reportedly transient lifestyle, claiming that he spent much of his travels couch-surfing, squatting in abandoned buildings, and traveling to Internet cafés, libraries, and universities to investigate networks, sometimes exploiting security holes.",
"He usually preferred sleeping on couches, and when he did sleep on beds, he did not sleep under covers.",
"He also often wandered through homes and offices in the middle of the night, by the light of a flashlight.Lamo was bisexual and volunteered for the gay and lesbian media firm PlanetOut Inc. in the mid-1990s.",
"In 1998, he was appointed to the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer and Questioning Youth Task Force by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors.Lamo used a wide variety of supplements and drugs.",
"His wife, Lauren Fisher, called his drug use \"body hacking\".",
"One of Lamo's preferred supplements was 'kratom' (Mitragyna speciosa), which he used as a less-dangerous alternative to opioids.",
"In 2001, he overdosed on prescription amphetamines.",
"After he turned in Manning, his drug use escalated, but he later claimed that he was in recovery.In a 2004 interview with ''Wired'', an ex-girlfriend of Lamo's called him \"very controlling\", alleging \"he carried a stun gun, which he used on me\".",
"The same article claimed a court had issued a restraining order against Lamo; he disputed the claim, writing: \"I have never been subject to a restraining order in my life\".Lamo said in a ''Wired'' article that, in May 2010, after he reported the theft of his backpack, an investigating officer noted unusual behavior and placed him under a 72-hour involuntary psychiatric hold, which was extended to a nine-day hold.",
"Lamo said he was diagnosed with Asperger syndrome at the psychiatric ward.For a period of time in March 2011, Lamo was allegedly \"in hiding\", claiming that his \"life was under threat\" after turning in Manning.Lamo died on March 14, 2018, in Wichita, Kansas, at age 37.Nearly three months later, the Sedgwick County Regional Forensic Science Center reported that \"Despite a complete autopsy and supplemental testing, no definitive cause of death was identified.\"",
"But many bottles of pills were found in his home, some of which were known to cause severe health problems when combined with kratom.",
"As a result, evidence points to an accidental death due to drug abuse."
],
[
"See also",
"*List of unsolved deaths"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* *"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States"
],
[
"Introduction",
"An '''associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States''' is a justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, other than the chief justice of the United States.",
"The number of associate justices is eight, as set by the Judiciary Act of 1869.Article II, Section 2, Clause 2 of the Constitution of the United States grants plenary power to the president to nominate, and with the advice and consent (confirmation) of the Senate, appoint justices to the Supreme Court.",
"Article III, Section 1 of the Constitution effectively grants life tenure to associate justices, and all other federal judges, which ends only when a justice dies, retires, resigns, or is impeached and convicted.Each Supreme Court justice has a single vote in deciding the cases argued before it, and the chief justice's vote counts no more than that of any other justice; however, the chief justice leads the discussion of the case among the justices.",
"Furthermore, the chief justice—when in the majority—decides who writes the court's opinion; otherwise, the senior justice in the majority assigns the writing of a decision.",
"The chief justice also has certain administrative responsibilities that the other justices do not and is paid slightly more ($298,500 per year as of 2023, compared to $285,400 per year for an associate justice).Associate justices have seniority in order of the date their respective commissions bear, although the chief justice is always considered to be the most senior justice.",
"If two justices are commissioned on the same day, the elder is designated the senior justice of the two.",
"Currently, the senior associate justice is Clarence Thomas.",
"By tradition, when the justices are in conference deliberating the outcome of cases before the Supreme Court, the justices state their views in order of seniority.",
"The senior associate justice is also tasked with carrying out the chief justice's duties when he is unable to, or if that office is vacant."
],
[
"Current associate justices",
"There are currently eight associate justices on the Supreme Court.",
"The justices, ordered by seniority, are:File:Clarence Thomas official SCOTUS portrait.jpg|Clarence Thomas,since October 23, 1991File:010 alito.jpg|Samuel Alito,since January 31, 2006File:Sonia Sotomayor in SCOTUS robe.jpg|Sonia Sotomayor,since August 8, 2009File:Elena Kagan Official SCOTUS Portrait (2013).jpg|Elena Kagan,since August 7, 2010File:Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch Official Portrait.jpg|Neil Gorsuch,since April 10, 2017File:Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh Official Portrait (full length).jpg|Brett Kavanaugh,since October 6, 2018File:Amy Coney Barrett official portrait.jpg|Amy Coney Barrett,since October 27, 2020File:KBJackson.jpg|alt=|Ketanji Brown Jackson,since June 30, 2022"
],
[
"Retired associate justices",
"An associate justice who leaves the Supreme Court after attaining the age and meeting the service requirements prescribed by federal statute () may retire rather than resign.",
"After retirement, they keep their title, and by custom may also keep a set of chambers in the Supreme Court building, and employ law clerks.",
"The names of retired associate justices continue to appear alongside those of the active justices in the bound volumes of Supreme Court decisions.",
"Federal statute () provides that retired Supreme Court justices may serve—if designated and assigned by the chief justice—on panels of the U.S. courts of appeals, or on the U.S. district courts.",
"Retired justices are not, however, authorized to take part in the consideration or decision of any cases before the Supreme Court (unlike other retired federal judges who may be permitted to do so in their former courts); neither are they known or designated as a \"senior judge\".",
"When, after his retirement, William O. Douglas attempted to take a more active role than was customary, maintaining that it was his prerogative to do so because of his senior status, he was rebuffed by Chief Justice Warren Burger and admonished by the whole Court.There are currently three living retired associate justices: David Souter, retired June 29, 2009; Anthony Kennedy, retired July 31, 2018; and Stephen Breyer, retired June 30, 2022.Souter has served on panels of the First Circuit Courts of Appeals following his retirement; Kennedy and Breyer have not performed any judicial duties since retiring."
],
[
"List of associate justices",
"Since the Supreme Court was established in 1789, the following 104 persons have served as an associate justice: Associate justice Seat Replacing Date confirmed(Vote) Tenure Appointed by Prior position 1 100px John Rutledge 1st ''(new seat)'' (Acclamation) –March 4, 1791(Resigned)George Washington 31stgovernor of South Carolina(1779–1782) 2 100px William Cushing 2nd ''(new seat)'' (Acclamation) –September 13, 1810 Chief Justice of theMassachusetts Superior Court(1777–1789) 3 100px James Wilson 3rd ''(new seat)'' (Acclamation) –August 21, 1798 Delegate to theConstitutional Convention(1787) 4 100px John Blair 4th ''(new seat)'' (Acclamation) –October 25, 1795 Member of theVirginia House of Burgesses(1766–1770) 5 100px James Iredell 5th ''(new seat)'' (Acclamation) –October 20, 1799 2ndattorney general of North Carolina(1779–1782) 6 100px Thomas Johnson 1st J. Rutledge (Acclamation) –January 16, 1793 1stgovernor of Maryland(1777–1779) 7 100px William Paterson T. Johnson (Acclamation) –September 8, 1806 2ndgovernor of New Jersey(1790–1793) 8 100px Samuel Chase 4th Blair (Acclamation) –June 19, 1811 Chief Justice of theMaryland General Court(1791–1796) 9 100px Bushrod Washington 3rd Wilson (Acclamation) –November 26, 1829 John Adams Delegate to theVirginia Ratifying Convention(1788) 10 100px Alfred Moore 5th Iredell (Acclamation) –January 26, 1804 3rdattorney general of North Carolina(1782–1791) 11 100px William Johnson 5th Moore (Acclamation) –August 4, 1834 Thomas Jefferson Speaker of the South Carolina House of Representatives(1798–1800) 12 100px Henry Brockholst Livingston 1st Paterson (Acclamation) –March 18, 1823 Justice of theNew York Supreme Court(1802–1807) 13 100px Thomas Todd 6th ''(new seat)'' (Acclamation) –February 7, 1826 Chief Justice of theKentucky Court of Appeals(1806–1807) 14 100px Gabriel Duvall 4th Chase (Acclamation) –January 12, 1835 James Madison U.S. representative forMaryland's 2nd district(1794–1796) 15 100px Joseph Story 2nd Cushing (Acclamation) –September 10, 1845 U.S. representative forMassachusetts's 2nd district(1808–1809) 16 100px Smith Thompson 1st Livingston (Acclamation) –December 18, 1843 James Monroe 6thUnited States secretary of the Navy(1819–1823) 17 100px Robert Trimble 6th Todd (25–5) –August 25, 1828 John Quincy Adams Judge of theUnited States District Courtfor the District of Kentucky(1817–1826) 18 100px John McLean Trimble (Acclamation) –April 4, 1861 Andrew Jackson 6thUnited States postmaster general(1823–1829) 19 100px Henry Baldwin 3rd Washington (41–2) –April 21, 1844 U.S. representative forPennsylvania's 14th district(1817–1822) 20 100px James Moore Wayne 5th W. Johnson (Acclamation) –July 5, 1867 U.S. representative forGeorgia's at-large district(1829–1835) 21 100px Philip P. Barbour 4th Duvall (30–11) –February 25, 1841 Judge of theUnited States District Courtfor the Eastern District of Virginia(1830–1836) 22 100px John Catron 7th ''(new seat)'' (28–15) –May 30, 1865 Judge of theTennessee Supreme Courtof Errors and Appeals(1824–1834) 23 100px John McKinley 8th ''(new seat)'' (Acclamation) –July 19, 1852 Martin Van Buren United States senatorfrom Alabama(1826–1831, 1837) 24 100px Peter Vivian Daniel 4th Barbour (25–5) –May 31, 1860 Judge of theUnited States District Courtfor the Eastern District of Virginia(1836–1841) 25 100px Samuel Nelson 1st Thompson (Acclamation) –November 28, 1872 John Tyler Chief Justice of the New York Supreme Court(1831–1845) 26 100px Levi Woodbury 2nd Story (Acclamation) –September 4, 1851 James K. Polk 13thUnited States secretary of the treasury(1834–1841) 27 100px Robert Cooper Grier 3rd Baldwin (Acclamation) –January 31, 1870 Judge for thePennsylvania state District Courtfor Allegheny County(1833–1846) 28 100px Benjamin Robbins Curtis 2nd Woodbury (Acclamation) –September 30, 1857 Millard Fillmore Massachusetts state representative 29 100px John Archibald Campbell 8th McKinley (Acclamation) –April 30, 1861 Franklin Pierce Alabama state representative 30 100px Nathan Clifford 2nd Curtis (26–23) –July 25, 1881 James Buchanan 19thUnited States attorney general(1846–1848) 31 100px Noah Haynes Swayne 6th McLean (38–1) –January 24, 1881 Abraham Lincoln U.S. attorney for theDistrict of Ohio(1830–1834) 32 100px Samuel Freeman Miller 4th Daniel (Acclamation) –October 13, 1890 Lawyer,Private practice 33 100px David Davis 8th Campbell (Acclamation) –March 3, 1877 Judge of theIllinois 3rd Circuit Court(1848–1862) 34 100px Stephen Johnson Field 9th ''(new seat)'' (Acclamation) –December 1, 1897 5thchief justice of California(1859–1863) 35 100px William Strong 3rd Grier (Acclamation) –December 14, 1880 Ulysses S. Grant U.S. representative forPennsylvania's 9th district(1847–1851) 36 100px Joseph P. Bradley 10th ''(new seat)'' (46–9) –January 22, 1892 Lawyer,Private practice 37 100px Ward Hunt 1st Nelson (Acclamation) –January 27, 1882 Chief Judge of theNew York Court of Appeals(1868–1872) 38 100px John Marshall Harlan 8th Davis (Acclamation) –October 14, 1911 Rutherford B. Hayes 14thattorney general of Kentucky(1863–1867) 39 100px William Burnham Woods 3rd Strong (39–8) –May 14, 1887 Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Fifth Circuit(1869–1880) 40 100px Stanley Matthews 6th Swayne (24–23) –March 22, 1889 James A. Garfield United States senatorfrom Ohio(1877–1879) 41 100px Horace Gray 2nd Clifford (51–5) –September 15, 1902 Chester A. Arthur Chief Justice of theMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court(1873–1881) 42 100px Samuel Blatchford 1st Hunt (Acclamation) –July 7, 1893 Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Second Circuit(1878–1882) 43100px Lucius QuintusCincinnatus Lamar II 3rd Woods (32–28) –January 23, 1893 Grover Cleveland 16thUnited States secretary of the interior(1885–1888) 44 100px David Josiah Brewer 6th Matthews (53–11) –March 28, 1910 Benjamin Harrison Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Eighth Circuit(1884–1889) 45 100px Henry Billings Brown 4th Miller (Acclamation) –May 28, 1906 Judge of theUnited States District Courtfor the Eastern District of Michigan(1875–1890) 46 100px George Shiras Jr. 10th Bradley (Acclamation) –February 23, 1903 Lawyer,Private practice 47 100px Howell Edmunds Jackson 3rd L. Lamar (Acclamation) –August 8, 1895 Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Sixth Circuit(1891–1893) 48 100px Edward Douglass White 1st Blatchford (Acclamation) –December 18, 1910(Continued as chief justice) Grover Cleveland United States senatorfrom Louisiana(1891–1894) 49 100px Rufus W. Peckham 3rd H. Jackson (Acclamation) –October 24, 1909 Associate Judge of theNew York Court of Appeals 50 100px Joseph McKenna 9th Field (Acclamation) –January 5, 1925 William McKinley 42ndUnited States attorney general(1897–1898) 51 100px Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. 2nd Gray (Acclamation) –January 12, 1932 Theodore Roosevelt Chief Justice of theMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court(1899–1902) 52 100px William R. Day 10th Shiras (Acclamation) –November 13, 1922 Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Sixth Circuit(1899–1903) 53 100px William Henry Moody 4th Brown (Acclamation) –November 20, 1910 45thUnited States attorney general(1904–1906) 54 100px Horace Harmon Lurton 3rd Peckham (Acclamation) –July 12, 1914 William Howard Taft Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Sixth Circuit(1893–1909) 55 100px Charles Evans Hughes 6th Brewer (Acclamation) –June 10, 1916(Resigned) 36thgovernor of New York(1907–1910) 56 100px Willis Van Devanter 1st E. White (Acclamation) –June 2, 1937 Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Eighth Circuit(1903–1910) 57 100px Joseph Rucker Lamar 4th Moody (Acclamation) –January 2, 1916 Associate Justice of theSupreme Court of Georgia(1901–1905) 58 100px Mahlon Pitney 8th J. Harlan I (50–26) –December 31, 1922 U.S. representative forNew Jersey's 4th district(1895–1899) 59 100px James Clark McReynolds 3rd Lurton (44–6) –January 31, 1941 Woodrow Wilson 48thUnited States attorney general(1913–1914) 60 100px Louis Brandeis 4th J. Lamar (47–22) –February 13, 1939 Lawyer,Private practice:Brandeis Dunbar & Nutter 61 100px John Hessin Clarke 6th Hughes (Acclamation) –September 5, 1922 Judge of theUnited States District Courtfor the Northern District of Ohio(1914–1916) 62 100px George Sutherland Clarke (Acclamation) –January 17, 1938 Warren G. Harding United States senatorfrom Utah(1905–1917) 63 100px Pierce Butler 10th Day (61–8) –November 16, 1939 President of theMinnesota State Bar Association 64 100px Edward Terry Sanford 8th Pitney (Acclamation) –March 8, 1930 Judge of theUnited States District Courtfor the Middle District of Tennessee(1908–1923) 65 100px Harlan F. Stone 9th McKenna (71–6) –July 3, 1941(Continued as chief justice) Calvin Coolidge 52ndUnited States attorney general(1924–1925) 66 100px Owen Roberts 8th Sanford (Acclamation) –July 31, 1945 Herbert Hoover Assistant District Attorney for Philadelphia 67 100px Benjamin N. Cardozo 2nd Holmes (Acclamation) –July 9, 1938 Chief Judge of theNew York Court of Appeals(1927–1932) 68 100px Hugo Black 1st Van Devanter (63–16) –September 17, 1971 Franklin D. Roosevelt United States senatorfrom Alabama(1927–1937) 69 100px Stanley Forman Reed 6th Sutherland (Acclamation) –February 25, 1957 22ndUnited States solicitor general(1935–1938) 70 100px Felix Frankfurter 2nd Cardozo (Acclamation) –August 28, 1962 Chairman of Harvard Law School 71 100px William O. Douglas 4th Brandeis (62–4) –November 12, 1975 3rdchairman of theSecurities and Exchange Commission(1937–1939) 72 100px Frank Murphy 10th Butler (Acclamation) –July 19, 1949 56thUnited States attorney general(1939–1940) 73 100px James F. Byrnes 3rd McReynolds (Acclamation) –October 3, 1942 United States senatorfrom South Carolina(1931–1941) 74 100px Robert H. Jackson 9th Stone (Acclamation) –October 9, 1954 57thUnited States attorney general(1940–1941) 75 100px Wiley Blount Rutledge 3rd Byrnes (Acclamation) –September 10, 1949 Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the District of Columbia Circuit(1939–1943) 76 100px Harold Hitz Burton 8th Roberts (Acclamation) –October 13, 1958 Harry S. Truman United States senatorfrom Ohio(1941–1945) 77 100px Tom C. Clark 10th Murphy (73–8) –June 12, 1967 59thUnited States attorney general(1945–1949) 78 100px Sherman Minton 3rd W. Rutledge (48–16) –October 15, 1956 Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Seventh Circuit(1941–1949) 79 100px John Marshall Harlan 9th R. Jackson (71–11) –September 23, 1971 Dwight D. Eisenhower Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Second Circuit(1954–1955) 80 100px William J. Brennan Jr. 3rd Minton (Acclamation) –July 20, 1990 Associate Justice of theSupreme Court of New Jersey(1951–1956) 81 100px Charles Evans Whittaker 6th Reed (Acclamation) –March 31, 1962 Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Eighth Circuit(1956–1957) 82 100px Potter Stewart 8th Burton (70–17) –July 3, 1981 Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Sixth Circuit(1954–1958) 83 100px Byron White 6th Whittaker (Acclamation) –June 28, 1993 John F. Kennedy 4thUnited States deputy attorney general(1961–1962) 84 100px Arthur Goldberg 2nd Frankfurter (Acclamation) –July 26, 1965 9thUnited States secretary of labor(1961–1962) 85 100px Abe Fortas Goldberg (Acclamation) –May 14, 1969 Lyndon B. Johnson United States under secretary of the interior 86 100px Thurgood Marshall 10th Clark (69–11) –October 1, 1991 32ndsolicitor general of the United States(1965–1967) 87 100px Harry Blackmun 2nd Fortas (94–0) –August 3, 1994 Richard Nixon Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Eighth Circuit(1959–1970) 88 100px Lewis F. Powell Jr. 1st Black (89–1) –June 26, 1987 President of theAmerican Bar Association(1964–1965) 89 100px William Rehnquist 9th J. Harlan II (68–26) –September 26, 1986(Continued as chief justice) United States assistant attorney generalfor the Office of Legal Counsel(1969–1971) 90 100px John Paul Stevens 4th Douglas (98–0) –June 29, 2010 Gerald Ford Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Seventh Circuit(1970–1975) 91 100px Sandra Day O'Connor 8th Stewart (99–0) –January 31, 2006 Ronald Reagan Judge of theArizona Court of Appeals(1979–1981) 92 100px Antonin Scalia 9th Rehnquist (98–0) –February 13, 2016 Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the District of Columbia Circuit(1982–1986) 93 100px Anthony Kennedy 1st Powell (97–0) –July 31, 2018 Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Ninth Circuit(1975–1988) 94 100px David Souter 3rd Brennan (90–9) –June 29, 2009 George H. W. Bush Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the First Circuit(1990) '''95''' 100px '''Clarence Thomas''' '''10th''' '''Marshall''' '''(52–48)''' '''–Incumbent''' Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the District of Columbia Circuit(1990–1991) 96 100px Ruth Bader Ginsburg 6th B.",
"White (96–3) – Bill Clinton Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the District of Columbia Circuit(1980–1993) 97 100px Stephen Breyer 2nd Blackmun (87–9) –June 30, 2022 Chief Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the First Circuit(1990–1994) '''98''' 100px '''Samuel Alito''' '''8th''' '''O'Connor''' '''(58–42)''' '''–Incumbent''' George W. Bush Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Third Circuit(1990–2006) '''99''' 100px '''Sonia Sotomayor''' '''3rd''' '''Souter''' '''(68–31)''' '''–Incumbent''' Barack Obama Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Second Circuit(1998–2009) '''100''' 100px '''Elena Kagan''' '''4th''' '''Stevens''' '''(63–37)''' '''–Incumbent''' 45thsolicitor general of the United States(2009–2010) '''101''' 100px '''Neil Gorsuch''' '''9th''' '''Scalia''' '''(54–45)''' '''–Incumbent''' Donald Trump Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Tenth Circuit(2006–2017) '''102''' 100px '''Brett Kavanaugh''' '''1st''' '''Kennedy''' '''(50–48)''' '''–Incumbent''' Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the District of Columbia Circuit(2006–2018) '''103''' 100px '''Amy Coney Barrett''' '''6th''' '''Ginsburg''' '''(52–48)''' '''– Incumbent''' Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the Seventh Circuit(2017–2020) '''104''' 100px '''Ketanji Brown Jackson''' '''2nd''' '''Breyer''' '''(53–47)''' '''– Incumbent''' Joe Biden Judge of theUnited States Court of Appealsfor the District of Columbia Circuit(2021–2022)===Notes==="
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* * * * * * * * *"
],
[
"External links",
"* Historic Supreme Court Decisionsby Justice, Legal Information Institute, Cornell University Law School* Supreme Court of the United States (website home page)"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Alan Jay Lerner"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Alan Jay Lerner''' (August 31, 1918 – June 14, 1986) was an American lyricist and librettist.",
"In collaboration with Frederick Loewe, and later Burton Lane, he created some of the world's most popular and enduring works of musical theatre both for the stage and on film.",
"Lerner won three Tony Awards and three Academy Awards, among other honors."
],
[
"Early life and education",
"Born in New York City, he was the son of Edith Adelson Lerner and Joseph Jay Lerner, whose brother, Samuel Alexander Lerner, was founder and owner of the Lerner Stores, a chain of dress shops.",
"One of Lerner's cousins was the radio comedian and television game show panelist Henry Morgan.",
"Lerner was educated at Bedales School in England, The Choate School (now Choate Rosemary Hall) in Wallingford, Connecticut, (where he wrote \"The Choate Marching Song\") and Harvard.",
"He attended both Camp Androscoggin and Camp Greylock.",
"At both Choate and Harvard, Lerner was a classmate of John F. Kennedy; at Choate they had worked together on the yearbook staff.",
"Like Cole Porter at Yale and Richard Rodgers at Columbia, his career in musical theater began with his collegiate contributions, in Lerner's case to the annual Harvard Hasty Pudding musicals.",
"During the summers of 1936 and 1937, Lerner studied music composition at Juilliard.",
"While attending Harvard, he lost his sight in his left eye due to an accident in the boxing ring.",
"In 1957, Lerner and Leonard Bernstein, another of Lerner's college classmates, collaborated on \"Lonely Men of Harvard\", a tongue-in-cheek salute to their alma mater."
],
[
"Career",
"Owing to his eye injury, Lerner could not serve in World War II.",
"Instead he wrote radio scripts, including ''Your Hit Parade'', until he was introduced to German-Austrian composer Frederick Loewe, who needed a partner, in 1942 at the Lamb's Club.",
"While at the Lamb's, he also met Lorenz Hart, with whom he would also collaborate.Lerner and Loewe's first collaboration was a musical adaptation of Barry Conners's farce ''The Patsy'' called ''Life of the Party'' for a Detroit stock company.",
"The lyrics were mostly written by Earle Crooker, but he had left the project, with the score needing vast improvement.",
"It enjoyed a nine-week run and encouraged the duo to join forces with Arthur Pierson for ''What's Up?",
"'', which opened on Broadway in 1943.It ran for 63 performances and was followed two years later by ''The Day Before Spring''.Their first hit was ''Brigadoon'' (1947), a romantic fantasy set in a mystical Scottish village, directed by Robert Lewis.",
"It was followed in 1951 by the Gold Rush story ''Paint Your Wagon''.",
"While the show ran for nearly a year and included songs that later became pop standards, such as \"They Call the Wind Maria\", it was less successful than Lerner's previous work.",
"He later said of ''Paint Your Wagon'', it was \"a success but not a hit.",
"\"Lerner worked with Kurt Weill on the stage musical ''Love Life'' (1948) and Burton Lane on the movie musical ''Royal Wedding'' (1951).",
"In that same year Lerner also wrote the Oscar-winning original screenplay for ''An American in Paris'', produced by Arthur Freed and directed by Vincente Minnelli.",
"This was the same team who would later join with Lerner and Loewe to create ''Gigi''.In 1956, Lerner and Loewe unveiled ''My Fair Lady''.",
"By this time, too, Lerner and Burton Lane were already working on a musical about Li'l Abner.",
"Gabriel Pascal owned the rights to ''Pygmalion'', which had been unsuccessful with other composers who tried to adapt it into a musical.",
"Arthur Schwartz and Howard Dietz first tried, and then Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II attempted, but gave up and Hammerstein told Lerner, \"''Pygmalion'' had no subplot\".",
"Lerner and Loewe's adaptation of George Bernard Shaw's ''Pygmalion'' retained his social commentary and added appropriate songs for the characters of Henry Higgins and Eliza Doolittle, played originally by Rex Harrison and Julie Andrews.",
"It set box-office records in New York and London.",
"When brought to the screen in 1964, the movie version won eight Oscars, including Best Picture and Best Actor for Rex Harrison.Lerner and Loewe's run of success continued with their next project, a film adaptation of stories from Colette, the Academy Award-winning film musical ''Gigi'', starring Leslie Caron, Louis Jourdan and Maurice Chevalier.",
"The film won all of its nine Oscar nominations, a record at that time, and a special Oscar for co-star Maurice Chevalier.The Lerner-Loewe partnership cracked under the stress of producing the Arthurian ''Camelot'' in 1960, with Loewe resisting Lerner's desire to direct as well as write when original director Moss Hart experienced a heart attack in the last few months of rehearsals and died about a year after the show's Broadway premiere.",
"Lerner was hospitalized with bleeding ulcers while Loewe continued to have heart troubles.",
"''Camelot'' was a hit nonetheless, and immediately following the assassination of John F. Kennedy, his widow told reporter Theodore H. White that JFK's administration reminded her of the \"one brief shining moment\" of Lerner and Loewe's ''Camelot''.",
"As of the early 21st century, ''Camelot'' was still invoked to describe the idealism, romance, and tragedy of the Kennedy years.Loewe retired to Palm Springs, California, while Lerner went through a series of musicals—some successful, some not—with such composers as André Previn (''Coco''), John Barry (''Lolita, My Love''), Leonard Bernstein (''1600 Pennsylvania Avenue''), Burton Lane (''Carmelina'') and Charles Strouse (''Dance a Little Closer'', based on the film, ''Idiot's Delight'', nicknamed ''Close A Little Faster'' by Broadway humorists because it closed on opening night).",
"Most biographers blame Lerner's professional decline on the lack of a strong director with whom Lerner could collaborate, as Neil Simon did with Mike Nichols or Stephen Sondheim with Harold Prince.",
"(Moss Hart, who had directed ''My Fair Lady,'' died shortly after ''Camelot'' opened.)",
"In 1965 Lerner collaborated again with Burton Lane on the musical ''On a Clear Day You Can See Forever'', which was adapted for film in 1970.At this time, Lerner was hired by film producer Arthur P. Jacobs to write a treatment for an upcoming film project, ''Doctor Dolittle'', but Lerner abrogated his contract after several non-productive months of non-communicative procrastination and was replaced with Leslie Bricusse.",
"Lerner was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1971.In 1973, Lerner coaxed Loewe out of retirement to augment the ''Gigi'' score for a musical stage adaptation.",
"The following year they collaborated on a musical film version of ''The Little Prince'', based on the classic children's tale by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry.",
"This film was a critical and box office failure, but it has gained a modern following.Lerner's autobiography, ''The Street Where I Live'' (1978), was an account of three of his and Loewe's successful collaborations, ''My Fair Lady'', ''Gigi'', and ''Camelot'', along with personal information.",
"In the last year of his life, he published ''The Musical Theatre: A Celebration'', a well-reviewed history of the theatre, with personal anecdotes and humor.",
"The ''Los Angeles Times'' reviewer wrote: \"There are several reasons why this book makes a fine introduction to musical theater.",
"One is that Lerner knows exactly what was new, and when and why....In \"The Musical Theatre,\" one is privy to the judgment of a man... who expresses his opinions in a forthright, warm and personal manner.\"",
"A book of Lerner's lyrics entitled ''A Hymn To Him'', edited by a British writer Benny Green, was published in 1987.At the time of Lerner's death, he had been working with Gerard Kenny and Kristi Kane in London on a musical version of the film ''My Man Godfrey''.",
"He had also received an urgent call from Andrew Lloyd Webber, asking him to write the lyrics to ''The Phantom of the Opera''.",
"He wrote \"Masquerade\", but he then informed Webber that he wanted to leave the project because he was losing his memory (he had developed metastatic lung cancer) and Charles Hart replaced him.",
"He had turned down an invitation to write the English-language lyrics for the musical version of ''Les Misérables''.After Lerner's death, Paul Blake made a musical revue based on Lerner's lyrics and life entitled ''Almost Like Being In Love'', which featured music by Loewe, Lane, Previn, Strouse, and Weill.",
"The show ran for 10 days at the Herbst Theatre in San Francisco."
],
[
"Songwriting",
"Lerner often struggled with writing his lyrics.",
"He was uncharacteristically able to complete \"I Could Have Danced All Night\" from ''My Fair Lady'' in one 24-hour period.",
"He usually spent months on each song and was constantly rewriting them.",
"Lerner was said to have insecurity about his talent.",
"He would sometimes write songs with someone in mind, for instance, \"I've Grown Accustomed To Her Face\" from ''My Fair Lady'' was written with Rex Harrison in mind to complement his very limited vocal range.Lerner said of writing: In a 1979 interview on NPR's ''All Things Considered'', Lerner went into some depth about his lyrics for ''My Fair Lady''.",
"Professor Henry Higgins sings, \"Look at her, a prisoner of the gutters / Condemned by every syllable she utters / By right she should be taken out and hung / For the cold-blooded murder of the English tongue.\"",
"Lerner said he knew the lyric used incorrect grammar for the sake of a rhyme.",
"He was later approached about it by another lyricist:"
],
[
"Dramatists Guild",
"Alan Jay Lerner was an advocate for writers' rights in theatre.",
"He was a member of the Dramatists Guild of America.",
"In 1960, he was elected as the twelfth president of the non-profit organization.",
"He continued to serve as the Guild's president until 1964."
],
[
"Personal life",
"For nearly twenty years, Lerner was addicted to amphetamines; during the 1960s he was a patient of Max Jacobson, known as \"Dr. Feelgood\", who administered injections of \"vitamins with enzymes\" that were in fact laced with amphetamines.",
"Lerner's addiction is believed to have been the result of Jacobson's practice.===Marriages and children===Lerner married eight times: Ruth Boyd (1940–1947), singer Marion Bell (1947–1949), actress Nancy Olson (1950–1957), lawyer Micheline Muselli Pozzo di Borgo (1957–1965), editor Karen Gundersen (1966–1974), Sandra Payne (1974–1976), Nina Bushkin (1977–1981) and Liz Robertson (1981–1986 his death).",
"Four of his eight wives — Olson, Payne, Bushkin, and Robertson — were actresses.",
"His seventh wife, Nina Bushkin, whom he married on May 30, 1977, was the director of development at Mannes College of Music and the daughter of composer and musician Joey Bushkin.",
"After their divorce in 1981, Lerner was ordered to pay her a settlement of $50,000.Lerner wrote in his autobiography (as quoted by ''The New York Times''): \"All I can say is that if I had no flair for marriage, I also had no flair for bachelorhood.",
"\"Lerner had four children — three daughters, Susan (by Boyd), Liza and Jennifer (by Olson), and one son, screenwriter and journalist Michael Alan Lerner (by di Borgo).St Paul's Church in LondonLerner's multiple divorces cost him much of his wealth, but he was primarily responsible for his own financial ups and downs and was apparently less than truthful about his financial fecklessness.",
"It was claimed that his divorce settlement from Micheline Muselli Pozzo di Borgo (his fourth wife) cost him an estimated $1 million in 1965.This was untrue.",
"Lerner's pattern of financial mismanagement continued until his death from cancer in 1986, when he reportedly owed the U.S. Internal Revenue Service over US$1,000,000 in back taxes and was unable to pay for his final medical expenses."
],
[
"Death",
"On June 14, 1986, Lerner died of lung cancer in Manhattan at the age of 67.At the time of his death he was married to actress Liz Robertson, who was 36 years his junior.",
"He lived in Center Island, New York.",
"He has a memorial plaque in St Paul's Church, the Actors' Church in Covent Garden in London."
],
[
"Awards and honors",
"*American Theater Hall of Fame 1979*Kennedy Center Honors 1985;Academy Award*Best Original Screenplay, 1951 ''An American in Paris''*Best Adapted Screenplay, 1958 ''Gigi''*Best Original Song, 1958 ''Gigi'';Golden Globes*Best Original Song, 1968 ''Camelot''*Best Original Score, 1975 ''The Little Prince'';Tony Award*Best Book of a Musical, 1957 ''My Fair Lady''*Best Original Score, 1957 ''My Fair Lady'' and 1974 ''Gigi'';New York Drama Critics Circle*Best Musical, 1947 ''Brigadoon''*Best Musical, 1956 ''My Fair Lady'';Johnny Mercer Award*Lyric Writing, 1985, Lifetime"
],
[
"Works",
"===Stage===* ''Life of the Party'' (1942), with Frederick Loewe* ''What's Up?''",
"(1943), with Frederick Loewe* ''The Day Before Spring'' (1945), with Frederick Loewe* ''Brigadoon'' (1947), with Frederick Loewe* ''Love Life'' (1948), with Kurt Weill* ''Paint Your Wagon'' (1951), Frederick Loewe* ''My Fair Lady'' (1956), with Frederick Loewe* ''Camelot'' (1960), with Frederick Loewe* ''On a Clear Day You Can See Forever'' (1965), with Burton Lane* ''Coco'' (1969), with André Previn* ''Lolita, My Love'' (1971), with John Barry* ''Gigi'' (1973), based on the 1958 film of the same name, with Frederick Loewe* ''1600 Pennsylvania Avenue'' (1976), with Leonard Bernstein* ''Carmelina'' (1979), with Burton Lane and Joseph Stein* ''Dance a Little Closer'' (1983), with Charles Strouse* ''My Man Godfrey'' (1984), unfinished, with Gerard Kenny===Films===Source: TCM*''Royal Wedding'', 1951 (screenwriter/lyricist)*''An American in Paris'' (1951) (writer)*''Brigadoon'', 1954 (film) (screenwriter/lyricist)*''Gigi'', 1958 (screenwriter/lyricist)*''The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn'', 1960 (lyricist)*''My Fair Lady'', 1964 (screenwriter/lyricist)*''Camelot'', 1967 (screenwriter/lyricist)*''Paint Your Wagon'', 1969 (producer/screenwriter/lyricist)*''On a Clear Day You Can See Forever'', 1970 (screenwriter/lyricist)*''The Little Prince'', 1974 (screenwriter/lyricist)*''Tribute'', 1980 (\"It's All for the Best\", lyricist)*''Secret Places'', 1984 (title song lyricist)"
],
[
"See also",
"*Lerner and Loewe"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References",
"*Green, Stanley.",
"''The world of musical comedy'' (Edition 4, 1984), Da Capo Press,"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* Lerner, Alan Jay (1985).",
"''The Street Where I Live''.",
"Da Capo Press.",
"* Shapiro, Doris (1989).",
"''We Danced All Night: My Life Behind the Scenes With Alan Jay Lerner''.",
"Barricade Books.",
"* Jablonski, Edward (1996).",
"''Alan Jay Lerner: A Biography''.",
"Henry Holt & Co. * Citron, David (1995).",
"''The Wordsmiths: Oscar Hammerstein 2nd and Alan Jay Lerner''.",
"Oxford University Press.",
"* Green, Benny, Editor (1987).",
"''A Hymn to Him : The Lyrics of Alan Jay Lerner''.",
"Hal Leonard Corporation.",
"* Garebian, Keith (1998).",
"''The Making of My Fair Lady''.",
"Publisher: Mosaic Press."
],
[
"External links",
"* * * *"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Al Capp"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Alfred Gerald Caplin''' (September 28, 1909 – November 5, 1979), better known as '''Al Capp''', was an American cartoonist and humorist best known for the satirical comic strip ''Li'l Abner'', which he created in 1934 and continued writing and (with help from assistants) drawing until 1977.He also wrote the comic strips ''Abbie an' Slats'' (in the years 1937–45) and ''Long Sam'' (1954).",
"He won the National Cartoonists Society's Reuben Award in 1947 for Cartoonist of the Year, and their 1979 Elzie Segar Award, posthumously for his \"unique and outstanding contribution to the profession of cartooning\".",
"Capp's comic strips dealt with urban experiences in the Northern United States until the year he introduced \"Li'l Abner\".",
"Although Capp was from Connecticut, he spent 43 years writing about the fictional Southern town of Dogpatch, reaching an estimated 60 million readers in more than 900 American newspapers and 100 more papers in 28 countries internationally.",
"M. Thomas Inge says Capp made a large personal fortune through the strip and \"had a profound influence on the way the world viewed the American South\"."
],
[
"Early life and education",
"Capp was born in New Haven, Connecticut, of East European Jewish heritage.",
"He was the eldest child of Otto Philip Caplin (1885–1964) and Matilda (Davidson) Caplin (1884–1948).",
"His brothers, Elliot and Jerome, were cartoonists, and his sister, Madeline, was a publicist.",
"Capp's parents were both natives of Latvia whose families had migrated to New Haven in the 1880s.",
"\"My mother and father had been brought to this country from Russia when they were infants\", wrote Capp in 1978.",
"\"Their fathers had found that the great promise of America was true – it was no crime to be a Jew.\"",
"The Caplins were dirt-poor, and Capp later recalled stories of his mother going out in the night to sift through ash barrels for reusable bits of coal.In August 1919, at the age of nine, Capp was run down by a trolley car and had his left leg amputated above the knee.",
"According to his father Otto's unpublished autobiography, young Capp was not prepared for the amputation beforehand; having been in a coma for days, he suddenly awoke to discover that his leg had been removed.",
"He was eventually given a prosthetic leg, but only learned to use it by adopting a slow way of walking which became increasingly painful as he grew older.",
"The childhood tragedy of losing a leg likely helped shape Capp's cynical worldview, which was darker and more sardonic than that of the average newspaper cartoonist.",
"\"I was indignant as hell about that leg,\" he revealed in a November 1950 interview in ''Time'' magazine.",
"\"The secret of how to live without resentment or embarrassment in a world in which I was different from everyone else\", Capp philosophically wrote (in ''Life magazine'' on May 23, 1960), \"was to be indifferent to that difference.\"",
"The prevailing opinion among his friends was that Capp's Swiftian satire was, to some degree, a creatively channeled, compensatory response to his disability.",
"\"I do ''Li'l Abner'',\" a self-portrait by Al Capp, excerpted from theApril 16–17, 1951 ''Li'l Abner'' strips; note the reference to Milton CaniffCapp's father, a failed businessman and an amateur cartoonist, introduced him to drawing as a form of therapy.",
"He became quite proficient, advancing mostly on his own.",
"Among his earliest influences were ''Punch'' cartoonist–illustrator Phil May and American comic strip cartoonists Tad Dorgan, Cliff Sterrett, Rube Goldberg, Rudolph Dirks, Fred Opper, Billy DeBeck, George McManus, and Milt Gross.",
"At about this same time, Capp became a voracious reader.",
"According to Capp's brother Elliot, Alfred had finished all of Shakespeare and George Bernard Shaw by the time he turned 13.Among his childhood favorites were Dickens, Smollett, Mark Twain, Booth Tarkington, and later, Robert Benchley and S. J. Perelman.Capp spent five years at Bridgeport High School in Bridgeport, Connecticut, without receiving a diploma.",
"He liked to joke about how he failed geometry for nine straight terms.",
"His formal training came from a series of art schools in the New England area.",
"Attending three of them in rapid succession, the impoverished Capp was thrown out of each for nonpayment of tuition—the Boston Museum School of Fine Arts, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and Designers Art School in Boston—the last before launching his career.",
"Capp already had decided to become a cartoonist.",
"\"I heard that Bud Fisher (creator of ''Mutt and Jeff'') got $3,000 a week and was constantly marrying French countesses\", Capp said.",
"\"I decided that was for me.",
"\"In early 1932, Capp hitchhiked to New York City.",
"He lived in \"airless rat holes\" in Greenwich Village and turned out advertising strips at $2 each while scouring the city hunting for jobs.",
"He eventually found work at the Associated Press when he was 23 years old.",
"By March 1932, Capp was drawing ''Colonel Gilfeather'', a single-panel, AP-owned property created in 1930 by Dick Dorgan.",
"Capp changed the focus and title to ''Mister Gilfeather'' but soon grew to hate the feature.",
"He left the Associated Press in September 1932.Before leaving, he met Milton Caniff and the two became lifelong friends.",
"Capp moved to Boston and married Catherine Wingate Cameron, whom he had met earlier in art class.",
"She died in 2006 at the age of 96.Leaving his new wife with her parents in Amesbury, Massachusetts, he subsequently returned to New York in 1933, in the midst of the Great Depression.",
"\"I was 23, I carried a mass of drawings, and I had nearly five dollars in my pocket.",
"People were sleeping in alleys then, willing to work at anything.\"",
"There he met Ham Fisher, who hired him to ghost on ''Joe Palooka''.",
"During one of Fisher's extended vacations, Capp's ''Joe Palooka'' story arc introduced a stupid, coarse, oafish mountaineer named \"Big Leviticus,\" a crude prototype.",
"(Leviticus was much closer to Capp's later villains Lem and Luke Scragg than to the much more appealing and innocent Li'l Abner.",
")Also during this period, Capp was working at night on samples for the strip that eventually became ''Li'l Abner''.",
"He based his cast of characters on the authentic mountain-dwellers he met while hitchhiking through rural West Virginia and the Cumberland Valley as a teenager.",
"(This was years before the Tennessee Valley Authority Act brought basic utilities such as electricity and running water to the region.)",
"Leaving ''Joe Palooka'', Capp sold ''Li'l Abner'' to United Feature Syndicate (later known as United Media).",
"The feature was launched on Monday, August 13, 1934, in eight North American newspapers—including the ''New York Mirror''—and was an immediate success.",
"Alfred G. Caplin eventually became \"Al Capp\" because the syndicate felt the original would not fit in a cartoon frame.",
"Capp had his name changed legally in 1949.His younger brother, Elliot Caplin, also became a comic strip writer, best known for co-creating the soap opera strip ''The Heart of Juliet Jones'' with artist Stan Drake and conceiving the comic strip character ''Broom-Hilda'' with cartoonist Russell Myers.",
"Elliot also authored several off-Broadway plays, including ''A Nickel for Picasso'' (1981), which was based on and dedicated to his mother and his famous brother."
],
[
"''Li'l Abner''",
"What began as a hillbilly burlesque soon evolved into one of the most imaginative, popular, and well-drawn strips of the twentieth century.",
"Featuring vividly outlandish characters, bizarre situations, and equal parts suspense, slapstick, irony, satire, black humor, and biting social commentary, ''Li'l Abner'' is considered a classic of the genre.",
"The comic strip stars Li'l Abner Yokum—the simple-minded, loutish but good-natured, and eternally innocent hayseed who lives with his parents—scrawny but superhuman Mammy Yokum, and shiftless, childlike Pappy Yokum.",
"\"Yokum\" was a combination of ''yokel'' and ''hokum'', although Capp established a deeper meaning for the name during a series of visits around 1965–1970 with comics historians George E. Turner and Michael H. Price: The Yokums live in the backwater hamlet of Dogpatch, Kentucky.",
"Described by its creator as \"an average stone-age community\", Dogpatch mostly consists of hopelessly ramshackle log cabins, pine trees, \"tarnip\" fields, and \"hawg\" wallows.",
"Whatever energy Abner had went into evading the marital goals of Daisy Mae Scragg, his sexy, well-endowed, but virtuous girlfriend, until Capp finally gave in to reader pressure and allowed the couple to marry.",
"This newsworthy event made the cover of ''Life'' on March 31, 1952.Capp peopled his comic strip with an assortment of memorable characters, including Marryin' Sam, Hairless Joe, Lonesome Polecat, Evil-Eye Fleegle, General Bullmoose, Lena the Hyena, Senator Jack S. Phogbound (Capp's caricature of the anti-New Deal Dixiecrats), the ''(shudder!)''",
"Scraggs, Available Jones, Nightmare Alice, Earthquake McGoon, and a host of others.",
"Especially notable, certainly from a G.I.",
"point of view, are the beautiful, full-figured women such as Daisy Mae, Wolf Gal, Stupefyin' Jones, and Moonbeam McSwine (a caricature of his wife Catherine, aside from the dirt), all of whom found their way onto the painted noses of bomber planes during World War II and the Korean War.",
"Perhaps Capp's most popular creations were the Shmoos, creatures whose incredible usefulness and generous nature made them a threat to civilization as we know it.Another famous character was Joe Btfsplk, who wants to be a loving friend but is \"the world's worst jinx\", bringing bad luck to all those nearby.",
"Btfsplk (his name is \"pronounced\" by simply blowing a \"raspberry\" or Bronx cheer) always has an iconic dark cloud over his head.Dogpatch residents regularly combat the likes of city slickers, business tycoons, government officials, and intellectuals with their homespun simplicity.",
"Situations often take the characters to other destinations, including New York City, Washington, D.C., Hollywood, tropical islands, the moon, Mars, and some purely fanciful worlds of Capp's invention, including El Passionato, Kigmyland, The Republic of Crumbumbo, Skunk Hollow, The Valley of the Shmoon, Planets Pincus Number 2 and 7, and a miserable frozen wasteland known as Lower Slobbovia, a pointedly political satire of backward nations and foreign diplomacy that remains a contemporary reference.According to cultural historian Anthony Harkins: The strip's popularity grew from an original eight papers to eventually more than 900.At its peak, ''Li'l Abner'' was estimated to have been read daily in the United States by 60 to 70 million people (the U.S. population at the time was only 180 million), with adult readers far outnumbering children.",
"Many communities, high schools, and colleges staged Sadie Hawkins dances patterned after the similar annual event in the strip.Li'l Abner has one odd design quirk that has puzzled readers for decades: the part in his hair always faces the viewer, no matter which direction Abner is facing.",
"In response to the question \"Which side does Abner part his hair on?",
"\", Capp would answer: \"Both.\"",
"Capp said he finally found the right \"look\" for Li'l Abner with Henry Fonda's character Dave Tolliver in ''The Trail of the Lonesome Pine'' (1936).In later years, Capp always claimed to have effectively created the miniskirt, when he first put one on Daisy Mae in the 1930s."
],
[
"Parodies, toppers, and alternate strips",
"''Li'l Abner'' also features a comic strip-within-the-strip: ''Fearless Fosdick'' is a parody of Chester Gould's ''Dick Tracy''.",
"It first appeared in 1942, and it proved so popular that it ran intermittently during the next 35 years.",
"Gould was parodied personally in the series as cartoonist \"Lester Gooch\"—the diminutive, much-harassed and occasionally deranged \"creator\" of Fosdick.",
"The style of the ''Fosdick'' sequences closely mimicks ''Tracy'', including the urban setting, the outrageous villains, the galloping mortality rate, the crosshatched shadows, and even the lettering style.",
"In 1952, Fosdick was the star of his own short-lived puppet show on NBC, featuring the Mary Chase marionettes.Besides ''Dick Tracy'', Capp parodied many other comic strips in ''Li'l Abner''—including ''Steve Canyon'', ''Superman'' (at least twice; first as \"Jack Jawbreaker\" in 1947, and again in 1966 as \"Chickensouperman\"), ''Mary Worth'' as \"Mary Worm\", ''Peanuts'' (in 1968, with \"Peewee\", a parody of Charlie Brown, and \"Croopy\", a parody of Snoopy, drawn by \"Bedley Damp\", a parody of Charles Schulz), ''Rex Morgan, M.D.",
"'', ''Little Annie Rooney'', and ''Little Orphan Annie'' (in which Punjab became \"Punjbag,\" an oleaginous slob).",
"''Fearless Fosdick''—and Capp's other spoofs such as \"Little Fanny Gooney\" (1952) and \"Jack Jawbreaker\"—were almost certainly an early inspiration for Harvey Kurtzman's ''Mad Magazine'', which began in 1952 as a comic book that specifically parodied other comics in the same distinctive style and subversive manner.Capp also lampooned popular recording idols of the day, such as Elvis Presley (\"Hawg McCall\", 1957), Liberace (\"Loverboynik\", 1956), the Beatles (\"the Beasties\", 1964)—and in 1944, Frank Sinatra.",
"\"Sinatra was the first great public figure I ever wrote about,\" Capp once said.",
"\"I called him 'Hal Fascinatra.'",
"I remember my news syndicate was so worried about what his reaction might be, and we were all surprised when he telephoned and told me how thrilled he was with it.",
"He always made it a point to send me champagne whenever he happened to see me in a restaurant...\" (from ''Frank Sinatra, My Father'' by Nancy Sinatra, 1985).",
"On the other hand, Liberace was \"cut to the quick\" over Loverboynik, according to Capp, and even threatened legal action—as would Joan Baez later, over \"Joanie Phoanie\" in 1967.Capp was just as likely to parody himself; his self-caricature made frequent, tongue-in-cheek appearances in ''Li'l Abner''.",
"The gag was often at his own expense, as in the above 1951 sequence showing Capp's interaction with \"fans\" (see excerpt), or in his 1955 Disneyland parody, \"Hal Yappland\".",
"Just about anything could be a target for Capp's satire—in one storyline Li'l Abner is revealed to be the missing link between ape and man.",
"In another, the search is on in Dogpatch for a pair of missing socks knitted by the first president of the United States.",
"In addition to creating ''Li'l Abner'', Capp also co-created two other newspaper strips: ''Abbie an' Slats'' with magazine illustrator Raeburn van Buren in 1937, and ''Long Sam'' with cartoonist Bob Lubbers in 1954, as well as the Sunday \"topper\" strips ''Washable Jones'', ''Small Fry'' (a.k.a.",
"''Small Change''), and ''Advice fo' Chillun''."
],
[
"Critical recognition",
"According to comics historian Coulton Waugh, a 1947 poll of newspaper readers who claimed they ignored the comics page altogether revealed that many confessed to making a single exception: ''Li'l Abner''.",
"\"When ''Li'l Abner'' made its debut in 1934, the vast majority of comic strips were designed chiefly to amuse or thrill their readers.",
"Capp turned that world upside-down by routinely injecting politics and social commentary into ''Li'l Abner''.",
"The strip was the first to regularly introduce characters and story lines having nothing to do with the nominal stars of the strip.",
"The technique—as invigorating as it was unorthodox—was later adopted by cartoonists such as Walt Kelly ''Pogo'' and Garry Trudeau ''Doonesbury''\", wrote comic strip historian Rick Marschall.",
"According to Marschall, ''Li'l Abner'' gradually evolved into a broad satire of human nature.",
"In his book ''America's Great Comic Strip Artists'' (1989), Marschall's analysis revealed a decidedly misanthropic subtext.Over the years, ''Li'l Abner'' has been adapted to radio, animated cartoons, stage production, motion pictures, and television.",
"Capp has been compared, at various times, to Mark Twain, Dostoevski, Jonathan Swift, Lawrence Sterne, and Rabelais.",
"Fans of the strip ranged from novelist John Steinbeck—who called Capp \"possibly the best writer in the world today\" in 1953 and even earnestly recommended him for the Nobel Prize in literature—to media critic and theorist Marshall McLuhan, who considered Capp \"the only robust satirical force in American life\".",
"John Updike, comparing Abner to a \"hillbilly Candide\", added that the strip's \"richness of social and philosophical commentary approached the Voltairean\".",
"Charlie Chaplin, William F. Buckley, Al Hirschfeld, Harpo Marx, Russ Meyer, John Kenneth Galbraith, Ralph Bakshi, Shel Silverstein, Hugh Downs, Gene Shalit, Frank Cho, Daniel Clowes, and (reportedly) even Queen Elizabeth have confessed to being fans of ''Li'l Abner''.",
"''Li'l Abner'' was also the subject of the first book-length scholarly assessment of an American comic strip ever published.",
"''Li'l Abner: A Study in American Satire'' by Arthur Asa Berger (Twayne, 1969) contained serious analyses of Capp's narrative technique, his use of dialogue, self-caricature, and grotesquerie, the place of ''Li'l Abner'' in American satire, and the significance of social criticism and the graphic image.",
"\"One of the few strips ever taken seriously by students of American culture,\" wrote Professor Berger, \"''Li'l Abner'' is worth studying ... because of Capp's imagination and artistry, and because of the strip's very obvious social relevance.\"",
"It was reprinted by the University Press of Mississippi in 1994."
],
[
"The 1940s and 1950s",
"Al Capp drew his own autobiography, the 34-page ''Al Capp by Li'l Abner'' (1946), that was distributed to returning World War II amputee veterans.During World War II and for many years afterward, Capp worked tirelessly going to hospitals to entertain patients, especially to cheer recent amputees and explain to them that the loss of a limb did not mean an end to a happy and productive life.",
"Making no secret of his own disability, Capp openly joked about his prosthetic leg his whole life.",
"In 1946, Capp created a special full-color comic book, ''Al Capp by Li'l Abner'', to be distributed by the Red Cross to encourage the thousands of amputee veterans returning from the war.",
"Capp also was involved with the Sister Kenny Foundation, which pioneered new treatments for polio in the 1940s.",
"Serving in his capacity as honorary chairman, Capp made public appearances on its behalf for years, contributed free artwork for its annual fundraising appeals, and entertained disabled and paraplegic children in children's hospitals with inspirational pep talks, humorous stories, and sketches.In 1940, an RKO movie adaptation starred Granville Owen (later known as Jeff York) as Li'l Abner, with Buster Keaton taking the role of Lonesome Polecat, and featuring a title song with lyrics by Milton Berle.",
"A successful musical comedy adaptation of the strip opened on Broadway at the St. James Theater on November 15, 1956, and had a long run of 693 performances, followed by a nationwide tour.",
"The stage musical, with music and lyrics by Gene de Paul and Johnny Mercer, was adapted into a Technicolor motion picture at Paramount in 1959 by producer Norman Panama and director Melvin Frank, with a score by Nelson Riddle.",
"Several performers repeated their Broadway roles in the film, most memorably Julie Newmar as Stupefyin' Jones and Stubby Kaye as Marryin' Sam.Other highlights of that decade included the 1942 debut of Fearless Fosdick as Abner's \"ideel\" (hero); the 1946 Lena the Hyena Contest, in which a hideous Lower Slobbovian gal was ultimately revealed in the harrowing winning entry (as judged by Frank Sinatra, Boris Karloff, and Salvador Dalí) drawn by noted cartoonist Basil Wolverton; and an ill-fated Sunday parody of ''Gone With the Wind'' that aroused anger and legal threats from author Margaret Mitchell, and led to a printed apology within the strip.",
"In October 1947, Li'l Abner met Rockwell P. Squeezeblood, head of the abusive and corrupt Squeezeblood Comic Strip Syndicate.",
"The resulting sequence, \"Jack Jawbreaker Fights Crime!",
"\", was a devastating satire of Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster's notorious exploitation by DC Comics over ''Superman''.",
"It was later reprinted in ''The World of Li'l Abner'' (1953).",
"(Siegel and Shuster had earlier poked fun at Capp in a ''Superman'' story in ''Action Comics #55'', December 1942, in which a cartoonist named \"Al Hatt\" invents a comic strip featuring the hillbilly \"Tiny Rufe\".",
")In 1947, Capp earned a ''Newsweek'' cover story.",
"That same year the ''New Yorker's'' profile on him was so long that it ran in consecutive issues.",
"In 1948, Capp reached a creative peak with the introduction of the Shmoos, lovable and innocent fantasy creatures who reproduced at amazing speed and brought so many benefits that, ironically, the world economy was endangered.",
"The much-copied storyline was a parable that was metaphorically interpreted in many different ways at the outset of the Cold War.Following his close friend Milton Caniff's lead (with ''Steve Canyon''), Capp had recently fought a successful battle with the syndicate to gain complete ownership of his feature when the Shmoos debuted.",
"As a result, he reaped enormous financial rewards from the unexpected (and almost unprecedented) merchandising phenomenon that followed.",
"As in the strip, Shmoos suddenly appeared to be everywhere in 1949 and 1950—including a ''Time'' cover story.",
"A paperback collection of the original sequence, ''The Life and Times of the Shmoo'', became a bestseller for Simon & Schuster.",
"Shmoo dolls, clocks, watches, jewelry, earmuffs, wallpaper, fishing lures, air fresheners, soap, ice cream, balloons, ashtrays, comic books, records, sheet music, toys, games, Halloween masks, salt and pepper shakers, decals, pinbacks, tumblers, coin banks, greeting cards, planters, neckties, suspenders, belts, curtains, fountain pens, and other Shmoo paraphernalia were produced.",
"A garment factory in Baltimore turned out a whole line of Shmoo apparel, including \"Shmooveralls\".",
"The original sequence and its 1959 sequel ''The Return of the Shmoo'' have been collected in print many times since, most recently in 2011, always to high sales figures.",
"The Shmoos later had their own animated television series.Capp followed this success with other allegorical fantasy critters, including the aboriginal and masochistic \"Kigmies\", who craved abuse (a story that began as a veiled comment on racial and religious oppression), the dreaded \"Nogoodniks\" (or ''bad'' shmoos), and the irresistible \"Bald Iggle\", a guileless creature whose sad-eyed countenance compelled involuntary truthfulness—with predictably disastrous results.",
"''Li'l Abner'' was censored for the first time, but not the last, in September 1947 and was pulled from papers by Scripps-Howard.",
"The controversy, as reported in ''Time'', centered on Capp's portrayal of the United States Senate.",
"Edward Leech of Scripps said, \"We don't think it is good editing or sound citizenship to picture the Senate as an assemblage of freaks and crooks ... boobs and undesirables.\"",
"Capp criticized Senator Joseph McCarthy in 1954, calling him a \"poet\".",
"\"He uses poetic license to try to create the beautifully ordered world of good guys and bad guys that he wants,\" said Capp.",
"\"He seems at his best when terrifying the helpless and naïve.",
"\"Capp received the National Cartoonists Society's Billy DeBeck Memorial Award in 1947 for Cartoonist of the Year.",
"(When the award name was changed in 1954, Capp also retroactively received a Reuben statuette.)",
"He was an outspoken pioneer in favor of diversifying the NCS by admitting women cartoonists.",
"Originally, the Society had disallowed female members.",
"Capp briefly resigned his membership in 1949 to protest their refusal of admission to Hilda Terry, creator of the comic strip ''Teena''.",
"According to Tom Roberts, author of ''Alex Raymond: His Life and Art'' (2007), Capp delivered a stirring speech that was instrumental in changing those rules.",
"The NCS finally accepted female members the following year.",
"In December 1952, Capp published an article in ''Real'' magazine entitled \"The REAL Powers in America\" that further challenged the conventional attitudes of the day: \"The real powers in America are ''women''—the wives and sweethearts behind the masculine dummies....\"Highlights of the 1950s included the much-heralded marriage of Abner and Daisy Mae in 1952, the birth of their son \"Honest Abe\" Yokum in 1953, and in 1954 the introduction of Abner's enormous, long-lost kid brother Tiny Yokum, who filled Abner's place as a bachelor in the annual Sadie Hawkins Day race.",
"In 1952, Capp and his characters graced the covers of both ''Life'' and ''TV Guide''.",
"The year 1956 saw the debut of Bald Iggle, considered by some ''Abner'' enthusiasts to be the creative high point of the strip, as well as Mammy's revelatory encounter with the \"Square Eyes\" Family—Capp's thinly-veiled appeal for racial tolerance.",
"(This fable-like story was collected into an educational comic book called ''Mammy Yokum and the Great Dogpatch Mystery!''",
"and distributed by the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith later that year.)",
"Two years later, Capp's studio issued ''Martin Luther King and the Montgomery Story'', a biographical comic book distributed by the Fellowship of Reconciliation.Often, Capp had parodied corporate greed—pork tycoon J. Roaringham Fatback had figured prominently in wiping out the Shmoos.",
"But in 1952, when General Motors president Charles E. Wilson, nominated for a cabinet post, told Congress \"...what was good for the country was good for General Motors and vice versa\", he inspired one of Capp's greatest satires—the introduction of General Bullmoose, the robust, ruthless, and ageless business tycoon.",
"The blustering Bullmoose, who seemed to own and control nearly everything, justified his far-reaching and mercenary excesses by saying \"What's good for General Bullmoose is good for ''the USA!''\"",
"Bullmoose's corrupt interests were often pitted against those of the pathetic Lower Slobbovians in a classic mismatch of \"haves\" versus \"have-nots\".",
"This character, along with the Shmoos, helped cement Capp's favor with the Left, and increased their outrage a decade later when Capp, a former Franklin D. Roosevelt liberal, switched targets.",
"Nonetheless, General Bullmoose continued to appear, undaunted and unredeemed, during the strip's final right-wing phase and into the 1970s."
],
[
"Feud with Ham Fisher",
"After Capp quit his ghosting job on Ham Fisher's ''Joe Palooka'' in 1934 to launch his own strip, Fisher badmouthed him to colleagues and editors, claiming that Capp had \"stolen\" his idea.",
"For years, Fisher brought the characters back to his strip, billing them as \"The ORIGINAL Hillbilly Characters\" and advising readers not to be \"fooled by imitations\".",
"(In fact, Fisher's brutish hillbilly character—Big Leviticus, created by Capp in Fisher's absence—bore little resemblance to Li'l Abner.)",
"According to a November 1950 ''Time'' article, \"Capp parted from Fisher with a definite impression, (to put it mildly) that he had been underpaid and unappreciated.",
"Fisher, a man of Roman self esteem, considered Capp an ingrate and a whippersnapper, and watched his rise to fame with unfeigned horror.",
"\"\"Fisher repeatedly brought Leviticus and his clan back, claiming their primacy as comics' first hillbilly family – but he was missing the point.",
"It wasn't the setting that made Capp's strip such a huge success.",
"It was Capp's finely tuned sense of the absurd, his ability to milk an outrageous situation for every laugh in it and then, impossibly, to squeeze even more laughs from it, that found such favor with the public,\" (from Don Markstein's ''Toonopedia'').The Capp-Fisher feud was well known in cartooning circles, and it grew more personal as Capp's strip eclipsed ''Joe Palooka'' in popularity.",
"Fisher hired away Capp's top assistant, Moe Leff.",
"After Fisher underwent plastic surgery, Capp included a racehorse in ''Li'l Abner'' named \"Ham's Nose-Bob\".",
"In 1950, Capp introduced a cartoonist character named \"Happy Vermin\"—a caricature of Fisher—who hired Abner to draw his comic strip in a dimly lit closet (after sacking his previous \"temporary\" assistant of 20 years, who had been cut off from all his friends in the process).",
"Instead of using Vermin's tired characters, Abner inventively peopled the strip with hillbillies.",
"A bighearted Vermin told his slaving assistant: \"I'm proud of having created these characters They'll make millions for me And if they do – I'll get ''you'' a new light bulb\"Traveling in the same social circles, the two men engaged in a 20-year mutual vendetta, as described by the ''New York Daily News'' in 1998: \"They crossed paths often, in the midtown watering holes and at National Cartoonists Society banquets, and the city's gossip columns were full of their snarling public donnybrooks.\"",
"In 1950, Capp wrote a nasty article for ''The Atlantic'', entitled \"I Remember Monster\".",
"The article recounted Capp's days working for an unnamed \"benefactor\" with a miserly, swinish personality, who Capp claimed was a never-ending source of inspiration when it came time to create a new unregenerate villain for his comic strip.",
"The thinly-veiled boss was understood to be Ham Fisher.Fisher retaliated, doctoring photostats of ''Li'l Abner'' and falsely accusing Capp of sneaking obscenities into his comic strip.",
"Fisher submitted examples of ''Li'l Abner'' to Capp's syndicate and to the New York courts, in which Fisher had identified pornographic images that were hidden in the background art.",
"However, the X-rated material had been drawn there by Fisher.",
"Capp was able to refute the accusation by simply showing the original artwork.In 1954, when Capp was applying for a Boston television license, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) received an anonymous packet of pornographic ''Li'l Abner'' drawings.",
"The National Cartoonists Society (NCS) convened an ethics hearing, and Fisher was expelled for the forgery from the same organization that he had helped found; Fisher's scheme had backfired in spectacular fashion.",
"Around the same time, his mansion in Wisconsin was destroyed by a storm.",
"On December 27, 1955, Fisher committed suicide in his studio.",
"The feud and Fisher's suicide were used as the basis for a lurid, highly fictionalized murder mystery, ''Strip for Murder'' by Max Allan Collins.Another \"feud\" seemed to be looming when, in one run of Sunday strips in 1957, Capp lampooned the comic strip ''Mary Worth'' as \"Mary Worm\".",
"The title character was depicted as a nosy, interfering busybody.",
"Allen Saunders, the creator of the ''Mary Worth'' strip, returned Capp's fire with the introduction of the character \"Hal Rapp\", a foul-tempered, ill-mannered, and (ironically) inebriated cartoonist, (Capp was a teetotaler).",
"Later, the \"feud\" was revealed to be a collaborative hoax that Capp and his longtime pal Saunders had cooked up together.",
"The Capp-Saunders \"feud\" fooled both editors and readers, generated plenty of free publicity for both strips—and Capp and Saunders had a good laugh when all was revealed."
],
[
"Personality",
"Capp, Milton Caniff (''Terry and the Pirates'', ''Steve Canyon'') and Walt Kelly (''Pogo'') were close personal friends and professional associates throughout their adult lives, and occasionally, referenced each other in their strips.",
"According to one anecdote (from ''Al Capp Remembered'', 1994), Capp and his brother Elliot ducked out of a dull party at Capp's home—leaving Walt Kelly alone to fend for himself entertaining a group of Argentine envoys who didn't speak English.",
"Kelly retaliated by giving away Capp's baby grand piano.",
"According to Capp, who loved to relate the story, Kelly's two perfectly logical reasons for doing so were: a. to cement diplomatic relations between Argentina and the United States, and b.",
"\"Because you can't play the piano, anyway!\"",
"(''Beetle Bailey'' creator Mort Walker confirmed the story, relating a slightly expanded version in his autobiography, ''Mort Walker's Private Scrapbook'', 2001.",
")Milton Caniff offered another anecdote (from ''Phi Beta Pogo'', 1989) involving Capp and Walt Kelly, \"two boys from Bridgeport, Connecticut, nose to nose,\" onstage at a meeting of the Newspaper Comics Council in the sixties.",
"\"Walt would say to Al, 'Of course, Al, this is really how you should draw Daisy Mae, I'm only showing you this for your own good.'",
"Then Walt would do a sketch.",
"Capp, of course, got ticked off by this, as you can imagine!",
"So he retaliated by doing ''his'' version of Pogo.",
"Unfortunately, the drawings are long gone; no recording was made.",
"What a shame!",
"Nobody anticipated there'd be this dueling back and forth between the two of them ...\"Although he was often considered a difficult person, some acquaintances of Capp have stressed that the cartoonist also had a sensitive side.",
"In 1973, upon learning that 12-year-old Ted Kennedy Jr., the son of his political rival Ted Kennedy Sr., had his right leg amputated, Capp wrote the boy an encouraging letter that gave candid advice about dealing with the loss of a limb, which Capp himself had experienced as a boy.",
"One of Capp's grandchildren recalls that at one point, tears were streaming down the cartoonist's cheeks while he was watching a documentary about the Jonestown massacre.",
"Capp gave money anonymously to charities and \"people in need\" at various points in his life."
],
[
"Sexual harassment and assault claims",
"In her autobiography, American actress Goldie Hawn stated that Capp sexually propositioned her on a casting couch and exposed himself to her when she was 19 years old.",
"When she refused his advances, Capp became angry and told her that she was \"never gonna make anything in your life\" and that she should \"go and marry a Jewish dentist.",
"You'll never get anywhere in this business.",
"\"Two biographies, one about Goldie Hawn and the other about Grace Kelly, describe Capp as trying to force Kelly to have sex with him, and he later tried to do the same with Hawn.In 1971, investigative journalist Jack Anderson wrote that Capp had exposed his genitals to four female students at the University of Alabama.In 1972, after an incident at the University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire, Capp was arrested.",
"He pleaded guilty to a charge of attempted adultery, while charges of indecent exposure and sodomy were dropped.",
"He was fined US$500 ().In 2019, Jean Kilbourne was inspired by the MeToo movement to publish in ''Hogan's Alley'' her own experience of being groped and sexually solicited by Al Capp while doing freelance writing and research work for him in contemplation of a permanent job in 1967."
],
[
"Production methods",
"Like many cartoonists, Capp made extensive use of assistants (notably Andy Amato, Harvey Curtis, Walter Johnson, and Frank Frazetta).",
"During the extended peak of the strip, the workload grew to include advertising, merchandising, promotional work, public service comics, and other specialty work—in addition to the regular six dailies and one Sunday strip per week.",
"From the early 1940s to the late 1950s, there were scores of Sunday strip-style magazine ads for Cream of Wheat using the ''Abner'' characters, and in the 1950s, Fearless Fosdick became a spokesman for Wildroot Cream-Oil hair tonic in a series of daily strip-style print ads.",
"The characters also sold chainsaws, underwear, ties, detergent, candy, soft drinks—including a licensed version of Capp's moonshine creation, Kickapoo Joy Juice—and General Electric and Procter & Gamble products, all requiring special artwork.No matter how much help he had, Capp insisted on his drawing and inking the characters' faces and hands—especially of Abner and Daisy Mae—and his distinctive touch is often discernible.",
"\"He had ''the touch,''\" Frazetta said of Capp in 2008.",
"\"He knew how to take an otherwise ordinary drawing and really make it ''pop''.",
"I'll never knock his talent.",
"\"As is usual with collaborative efforts in comic strips, his name was the only one credited— although, sensitive to his own experience working on ''Joe Palooka'', Capp frequently drew attention to his assistants in interviews and publicity pieces.",
"A 1950 cover story in ''Time'' even included photographs of two of his employees, whose roles in the production were detailed by Capp.",
"Ironically, this highly irregular policy (along with the subsequent fame of Frank Frazetta) has led to the misconception that his strip was \"ghosted\" by other hands.",
"The production of ''Li'l Abner'' has been well documented, however.",
"In point of fact, Capp maintained creative control over every stage of production for virtually the entire run of the strip.",
"Capp originated the stories, wrote the dialogue, designed the major characters, rough penciled the preliminary staging and action of each panel, oversaw the finished pencils, and drew and inked the hands and faces of the characters.",
"Frazetta authority David Winiewicz described the everyday working mode of operation in ''Li'l Abner Dailies: 1954 Volume 20'' (Kitchen Sink, 1994):There was also a separate line of comic book titles published by the Caplin family-owned Toby Press, including ''Shmoo Comics'' featuring Washable Jones.",
"Cartoonist Mell Lazarus, creator of ''Miss Peach'' and ''Momma'', wrote a comic novel in 1963 entitled ''The Boss Is Crazy, Too'' which was partly inspired by his apprenticeship days working with Capp and his brother Elliot at Toby.",
"In a seminar at the Charles Schulz Museum on November 8, 2008, Lazarus called his experience at Toby \"the five funniest years of my life\".",
"Lazarus went on to cite Capp as one of the \"four essentials\" in the field of newspaper cartoonists, along with Walt Kelly, Charles Schulz, and Milton Caniff.Capp detailed his approach to writing and drawing the stories in an instructional course book for the Famous Artists School, beginning in 1956.In 1959, Capp recorded and released an album for Folkways Records (now owned by the Smithsonian) on which he identified and described \"The Mechanics of the Comic Strip\".Frazetta, later famous as a fantasy artist, assisted on the strip from 1954 to December 1961.Fascinated by Frazetta's abilities, Capp initially gave him a free hand in an extended daily sequence (about a biker named \"Frankie,\" a caricature of Frazetta) to experiment with the basic look of the strip by adding a bit more realism and detail (particularly to the inking).",
"After editors complained about the stylistic changes, the strip's previous look was restored.",
"During most of his tenure with Capp, Frazetta's primary responsibility—along with various specialty art, such as a series of ''Li'l Abner'' greeting cards—was tight-penciling the Sunday pages from studio roughs.",
"This work was collected by Dark Horse Comics in a four-volume hardcover series entitled ''Al Capp's Li'l Abner: The Frazetta Years''.",
"In 1961, Capp, complaining of declining revenue, wanted to have Frazetta continue with a 50% pay cut.",
"\"Capp said he would cut the salary in half.",
"Goodbye.",
"That was that.",
"''I'' said goodbye,\" (from ''Frazetta: Painting with Fire'').",
"However, Frazetta returned briefly a few years later to draw a public service comic book called ''Li'l Abner and the Creatures from Drop-Outer Space'', distributed by the Job Corps in 1965."
],
[
"Public service works",
"Capp provided specialty artwork for civic groups, government agencies, and charitable or nonprofit organizations, spanning several decades.",
"The following titles are all single-issue, educational comic books and pamphlets produced for various public services:*''Al Capp by Li'l Abner''— Public service giveaway issued by the Red Cross (1946)*''Yo' Bets Yo' Life!",
"''— Public service giveaway issued by the U.S. Army ()*''Li'l Abner Joins the Navy''— Public service giveaway issued by the Dept.",
"of the Navy (1950)*''Fearless Fosdick and the Case of the Red Feather''— Public service giveaway issued by Red Feather Services, a forerunner of United Way (1951)*''The Youth You Supervise''— Public service giveaway issued by the U.S. Department of Labor (1956)*''Mammy Yokum and the Great Dogpatch Mystery!",
"''— Public service giveaway issued by the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith (1956)*''Operation: Survival!",
"''— Public service giveaway issued by the Dept.",
"of Civil Defense (1957)*''Natural Disasters!",
"''— Public service giveaway issued by the Department of Civil Defense (1957)*''Martin Luther King and the Montgomery Story''— Public service giveaway issued by The Fellowship of Reconciliation (1958)*''Li'l Abner and the Creatures from Drop-Outer Space''— Public service giveaway issued by the Job Corps (1965)In addition, Dogpatch characters were used in national campaigns for the U.S. Treasury, the Cancer Foundation, the March of Dimes, the National Heart Fund, the Sister Kenny Foundation, the Boy Scouts of America, Community Chest, the National Reading Council, Minnesota Tuberculosis and Health Association, Christmas Seals, the National Amputation Foundation, and Disabled American Veterans, among others."
],
[
"Public figure",
"In the Golden Age of the American comic strip, successful cartoonists received a great deal of attention; their professional and private lives were reported in the press, and their celebrity was often nearly sufficient to rival their creations.",
"As ''Li'l Abner'' reached its peak years, and following the success of the Shmoos and other high moments in his work, Al Capp achieved a public profile that is still unparalleled in his profession, and arguably exceeded the fame of his strip.",
"\"Capp was the best known, most influential and most controversial cartoonist of his era,\" writes publisher (and leading Shmoo collector) Denis Kitchen.",
"\"His personal celebrity transcended comics, reaching the public and influencing the culture in a variety of media.",
"For many years he simultaneously produced the daily strip, a weekly syndicated newspaper column, and a 500-station radio program...\" He ran the Boston Summer Theatre with ''The Phantom'' cartoonist Lee Falk, bringing in Hollywood actors such as Mae West, Melvyn Douglas, and Claude Rains to star in their live productions.",
"He even briefly considered running for a Massachusetts Senate seat.",
"Vice President Spiro Agnew urged Capp to run in the Democratic Party Massachusetts primary in 1970 against Ted Kennedy, but Capp ultimately declined.",
"(He did, however, donate his services as a speaker at a $100-a-plate fundraiser for Republican Congressman Jack Kemp.",
")Al Capp at 1966 Art Festival in Fort Walton Beach, FloridaBesides his use of the comic strip to voice his opinions and display his humor, Capp was a popular guest speaker at universities, and on radio and television.",
"He remains the only cartoonist to be embraced by television; no other comic artist to date has come close to Capp's televised exposure.",
"Capp appeared as a regular on ''The Author Meets the Critics'' (1948–'54) and made regular, weekly appearances on ''Today'' in 1953.He was also a periodic panelist on ABC and NBC's ''Who Said That?''",
"(1948–'55), and co-hosted DuMont's ''What's the Story?''",
"(1953).",
"Between 1952 and 1972, he hosted at least ''five'' television shows–three different talk shows called ''The Al Capp Show'' (1952 and 1968) and ''Al Capp'' (1971–'72), ''Al Capp's America'' (a live \"chalk talk,\" with Capp providing a barbed commentary while sketching cartoons, 1954), and a CBS game show called ''Anyone Can Win'' (1953).",
"He also hosted similar vehicles on the radio—and was a familiar celebrity guest on various other broadcast programs, including NBC Radio's long-running ''Monitor'' with its famous ''Monitor'' Beacon audio signature, as a commentator dubbed \"An expert of nothing with opinions on everything.",
"\"His frequent appearances on NBC's ''The Tonight Show'' spanned three emcees (Steve Allen, Jack Paar, and Johnny Carson), from the 1950s to the 1970s.",
"One memorable story, as recounted to Johnny Carson, was about his meeting with then-President Dwight D. Eisenhower.",
"As Capp was ushered into the Oval Office, his prosthetic leg suddenly collapsed into a pile of disengaged parts and hinges on the floor.",
"The President immediately turned to an aide and said, \"Call Walter Reed (Hospital), or maybe Bethesda,\" to which Capp replied, \"Hell no, just call a good local mechanic!\"",
"(Capp also spoofed Carson in his strip, in a 1970 episode called \"The Tommy Wholesome Show\".",
")Capp portrayed himself in a cameo role in the Bob Hope film ''That Certain Feeling'', for which he also provided promotional art.",
"He was interviewed live on ''Person to Person'' on November 27, 1959, by host Charles Collingwood.",
"He also appeared as himself on ''The Ed Sullivan Show'', Sid Caesar's ''Your Show of Shows'', ''The Red Skelton Show'', ''The Merv Griffin Show'', ''The Mike Douglas Show'', and guested on Ralph Edwards' ''This Is Your Life'' on February 12, 1961, with honoree Peter Palmer (the actor who played Li'l Abner in the Paramount film).",
"Capp also freelanced very successfully as a magazine writer and newspaper columnist, in a wide variety of publications including ''Life'', ''Show'', ''Pageant'', ''The Atlantic'', ''Esquire'', ''Coronet'', and ''The Saturday Evening Post''.",
"Capp was impersonated by comedians Rich Little and David Frye.",
"Although Capp's endorsement activities never rivaled Li'l Abner's or Fearless Fosdick's, he was a celebrity spokesman in print ads for Sheaffer Snorkel fountain pens (along with colleagues and close friends Milton Caniff and Walt Kelly), and—with an irony that became apparent later—a brand of cigarettes (Chesterfield).Capp resumed visiting war amputees during the Korean War and Vietnam War.",
"He toured Vietnam with the USO, entertaining troops along with Art Buchwald and George Plimpton.",
"He served as chairman of the Cartoonists' Committee in President Dwight D. Eisenhower's People-to-People program in 1954 (although Capp had supported Adlai Stevenson for president in 1952 and 1956), which was organized to promote Savings bonds for the U.S. Treasury.",
"Capp had earlier provided the Shmoo for a special Children's Savings Bond in 1949, accompanying President Harry S. Truman at the bond's unveiling ceremony.",
"During the Soviet Union's blockade of West Berlin in 1948, the commanders of the Berlin airlift had cabled Capp, requesting inflatable shmoos as part of \"Operation: Little Vittles\".",
"Candy-filled shmoos were air-dropped to hungry West Berliners by America's 17th Military Airport Squadron during the humanitarian effort.",
"\"When the candy-chocked shmoos were dropped, a near-riot resulted,\" (reported in ''Newsweek''—October 11, 1948).In addition to his public service work for charitable organizations for disabled people, Capp also served on the National Reading Council, which was organized to combat illiteracy.",
"He published a column (\"Wrong Turn Onto Sesame Street\") challenging federally funded public television endowments in favor of educational comics—which, according to Capp, \"didn't cost a dime in taxes and never had.",
"I pointed out that a kid could enjoy ''Sesame Street'' ''without'' learning how to read, but he couldn't enjoy comic strips ''unless'' he could read; and that a smaller investment in getting kids to read by supplying them with educational matter in such ''reading'' form might make better sense.",
"\"Capp's academic interests included being one of nineteen original \"Trustees and Advisors\" for \"Endicott, Junior College for Young Woman\", located in Pride's Crossing (Beverly), Massachusetts, which was founded in 1939.Al Capp is listed in the 1942 Mingotide Yearbook, representing the first graduating class from what is now the 4-year school known as Endicott College.",
"The yearbook entry includes his credential as a \"Cartoonist for United Feature Syndicate\" and a resident of New York City.",
"\"Comics,\" wrote Capp in 1970, \"can be a combination of the highest quality of art and text, and many of them are.\"",
"Capp produced many giveaway educational comic books and public services pamphlets, spanning several decades, for the Red Cross, the Department of Civil Defense, the Department of the Navy, the U.S. Army, the Anti-Defamation League, the Department of Labor, Community Chest (a forerunner of United Way), and the Job Corps.",
"Capp's studio provided special artwork for various civic groups and nonprofit organizations as well.",
"Dogpatch characters were used in national campaigns for the Cancer Foundation, the March of Dimes, the National Heart Fund, the Boy Scouts of America, Minnesota Tuberculosis and Health Association, the National Amputation Foundation, and Disabled American Veterans, among others.",
"They were also used to help sell Christmas Seals.In the early 1960s, Capp regularly wrote a column entitled ''Al Capp's Column'' for the newspaper ''The Schenectady Gazette'' (currently ''The Daily Gazette'').",
"He was the ''Playboy'' interview subject in December 1965, in a conversation conducted by Alvin Toffler.",
"In August 1967, Capp was the narrator and host of an ABC network special called ''Do Blondes Have More Fun?''",
"In 1970, he was the subject of a provocative NBC documentary called ''This Is Al Capp''."
],
[
"The 1960s and 1970s",
"Capp and his family lived in Cambridge, Massachusetts, near Harvard during the entire Vietnam War protest era.",
"The turmoil that Americans were watching on their television sets was happening live—right in his own neighborhood.",
"Campus radicals and \"hippies\" inevitably became one of Capp's favorite targets in the sixties.",
"Alongside his long-established caricatures of right-wing, big business types such as General Bullmoose and J. Roaringham Fatback, Capp began spoofing counterculture icons such as Joan Baez (in the character of Joanie Phoanie, a wealthy folksinger who offers an impoverished orphanage ten thousand dollars' worth of \"protest songs\").",
"The sequence implicitly labeled Baez a limousine liberal, a charge she took to heart, as detailed years later in her 1987 autobiography, ''And A Voice To Sing With: A Memoir''.",
"Another target was Senator Ted Kennedy, parodied as \"Senator O. Noble McGesture\", resident of \"Hyideelsport\".",
"The town name is a play on Hyannisport, Massachusetts, where a number of the Kennedy clan have lived.Capp became a popular public speaker on college campuses, where he reportedly relished hecklers.",
"He attacked militant antiwar demonstrators, both in his personal appearances and in his strip.",
"He also satirized student political groups.",
"The Youth International Party (YIP) and Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) emerged in ''Li'l Abner'' as \"Students Wildly Indignant about Nearly Everything!\"",
"(SWINE).",
"In an April 1969 letter to ''Time'', Capp insisted, \"The students I blast are not the dissenters, but the destroyers—the less than 4% who lock up deans in washrooms, who burn manuscripts of unpublished books, who make combination pigpens and playpens of their universities.",
"The remaining 96% detest them as heartily as I do.",
"\"Capp's increasingly controversial remarks at his campus speeches and during television appearances cost him his semi-regular spot on the ''Tonight Show''.",
"His contentious public persona during this period was captured on a late sixties comedy LP called ''Al Capp On Campus''.",
"The album features his interaction with students at Fresno State College (now California State University, Fresno) on such topics as \"sensitivity training,\" \"humanitarianism,\" \"abstract art\" (Capp hated it), and \"student protest\".",
"The cover features a cartoon drawing by Capp of wildly dressed, angry hippies carrying protest signs with slogans like \"End Capp Brutality\", \"Abner and Daisy Mae Smoke Pot\", \"Capp Is Over 30, 40, 50—all crossed out the Hill\", and \"If You Like Crap, You'll Like Capp!",
"\"Highlights of the strip's final decades include \"Boomchik\" (1961), in which America's international prestige is saved by Mammy Yokum, \"Daisy Mae Steps Out\" (1966), a female-empowering tale of Daisy's brazenly audacious \"homewrecker gland\", \"The Lips of Marcia Perkins\" (1967), a satirical, thinly-veiled commentary on venereal disease and public health warnings, \"Ignoble Savages\" (1968), in which the Mob takes over Harvard, and \"Corporal Crock\" (1973), in which Bullmoose reveals his reactionary cartoon role model, in a tale of obsession and the fanatical world of comic book collecting.The cartoonist visited John Lennon and Yoko Ono at their 1969 Bed-In for Peace in Montreal, and their testy exchange later appeared in the documentary film ''Imagine: John Lennon'' (1988).",
"Introducing himself with the words \"I'm a dreadful Neanderthal fascist.",
"How do you do?",
"\", Capp sardonically congratulated Lennon and Ono on their ''Two Virgins'' nude album cover: \"I think that everybody owes it to the world to prove they have pubic hair.",
"You've done it, and I tell you that I applaud you for it.\"",
"Following this exchange, Capp insulted Ono (\"Good God, you've gotta live with that?",
"\"), and was asked to \"get out\" by Lennon publicist Derek Taylor.",
"Lennon allowed him to stay, however, but the conversation had soured considerably.",
"On Capp's exit, Lennon sang an impromptu version of his song \"The Ballad of John and Yoko\" with a slightly revised, but nonetheless prophetic lyric: \"Christ, you know it ain't easy / You know how hard it can be / The way things are goin' / They're gonna crucify ''Capp!''",
"\"Despite his political conservatism in the last decade of his life, Capp is reported to have been liberal in some particular causes; he supported gay rights, and did not tolerate any attempts at homophobic jokes.",
"He is also said to have supported Martin Luther King Jr. and the fight for racial equality in American society, although he was very sceptical of the tactics of the Black Panthers and Malcolm X.In 1968, a theme park called Dogpatch USA opened at Marble Falls, Arkansas, based on Capp's work and with his support.",
"The park was a popular attraction during the 1970s, but was abandoned in 1993 due to financial difficulties.",
"By 2005, the area once devoted to a live-action facsimile of Dogpatch (including a lifesize statue in the town square of Dogpatch \"founder\" General Jubilation T. Cornpone) had been heavily stripped by vandals and souvenir hunters, and was slowly being reclaimed by the surrounding Arkansas wilderness.On April 22, 1971, syndicated columnist Jack Anderson reported allegations that in February 1968 Capp had made indecent advances to four female students when he was invited to speak at the University of Alabama.",
"Anderson and an associate confirmed that Capp was shown out of town by university police, but that the incident had been hushed up by the university to avoid negative publicity.The following month, Capp was charged in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, in connection with another alleged incident following his April 1 lecture at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire.",
"Capp was accused of propositioning a married woman in his hotel room.",
"Although no sexual act was alleged to have resulted, the original charge included \"sodomy\".",
"As part of a plea agreement, Capp pleaded guilty to the charge of \"attempted adultery\" (adultery was a felony in Wisconsin) and the other charges were dropped.",
"Capp was fined $500 and court costs.",
"In a December 1992 article for ''The New Yorker,'' Seymour Hersh reported that President Richard Nixon and Charles Colson had repeatedly discussed the Capp case in Oval Office recordings that had recently been made available by the National Archives.",
"Nixon and Capp were on friendly terms, Hersh wrote, and Nixon and Colson had worked to find a way for Capp to run against Ted Kennedy for the U.S. Senate.",
"\"Nixon was worried about the allegations, fearing that Capp's very close links to the White House would become embarrassingly public\", Hersh wrote.",
"\"The White House tapes and documents show that he and Colson discussed the issue repeatedly, and that Colson eventually reassured the president by saying that he had, in essence, fixed the case.",
"Specifically, the president was told that one of Colson's people had gone to Wisconsin and tried to talk to the prosecutors.\"",
"Colson's efforts failed, however.",
"The Eau Claire district attorney, a Republican, refused to dismiss the attempted adultery charge.",
"In passing sentence in February 1972, the judge rejected the D.A.",
"'s motion that Capp agree to undergo psychiatric treatment.The resulting publicity led to hundreds of papers dropping his comic strip, and Capp, already in failing health, withdrew from public speaking.",
"Celebrity biographer James Spada has claimed that similar allegations were made by actress Grace Kelly.",
"However, no firsthand allegation has ever surfaced.",
"\"From beginning to end, Capp was acid-tongued toward the targets of his wit, intolerant of hypocrisy, and always wickedly funny.",
"After about 40 years, however, Capp's interest in ''Abner'' waned, and this showed in the strip itself,\" according to Don Markstein's ''Toonopedia''.",
"On November 13, 1977, Capp retired with an apology to his fans for the recently declining quality of the strip, which he said had been the best he could manage due to declining health.",
"\"If you have any sense of humor about your strip—and I had a sense of humor about mine—you knew that for three or four years ''Abner'' was wrong.",
"Oh hell, it's like a fighter retiring.",
"I stayed on longer than I should have,\" he admitted, adding that he couldn't breathe anymore.",
"\"When he retired ''Li'l Abner'', newspapers ran expansive articles and television commentators talked about the passing of an era.",
"''People magazine'' ran a substantial feature, and even the comics-free ''New York Times'' devoted nearly a full page to the event\", wrote publisher Denis Kitchen.Capp's final years were marked by advancing illness and by family tragedy.",
"In October 1977, one of his two daughters died; a few weeks later, a beloved granddaughter was killed in a car accident.",
"A lifelong chain smoker, Capp died in 1979 from emphysema at his home in South Hampton, New Hampshire.",
"Capp is buried in Mount Prospect Cemetery in Amesbury, Massachusetts.",
"Engraved on his headstone is a stanza from Thomas Gray: ''The plowman homeward plods his weary way / And leaves the world to darkness and to me'' (from ''Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard'', 1751)."
],
[
"Legacy",
"\"Neither the strip's shifting political leanings nor the slide of its final few years had any bearing on its status as a classic; and in 1995, it was recognized as such by the U.S.",
"Postal Service\", according to ''Toonopedia''.",
"''Li'l Abner'' was one of 20 American comic strips included in the Comic Strip Classics series of USPS commemorative stamps.",
"Al Capp, an inductee into the National Cartoon Museum (formerly the International Museum of Cartoon Art), is one of only 31 artists selected to their Hall of Fame.",
"Capp was also inducted into the Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame in 2004.Sadie Hawkins Day and double whammy are two terms attributed to Al Capp that have entered the English language.",
"Other, less ubiquitous Cappisms include skunk works and Lower Slobbovia.",
"The term shmoo also has entered the lexicon, defining highly technical concepts in no fewer than ''four'' separate fields of science, including the variations shmooing (a microbiological term for the \"budding\" process in yeast reproduction), and shmoo plot (a technical term in the field of electrical engineering).",
"In socioeconomics, a \"shmoo\" refers to any generic kind of good that reproduces itself, (as opposed to \"widgets\" which require resources and active production).",
"In the field of particle physics, \"shmoo\" refers to a high energy survey instrument, as used at the Los Alamos National Laboratory to capture subatomic cosmic ray particles emitted from the Cygnus X-3 constellation.",
"Capp also had a knack for popularizing certain uncommon terms, such as druthers, schmooze, and nogoodnik, neatnik, etc.",
"In his book ''The American Language'', H.L.",
"Mencken credits the postwar mania for adding \"-nik\" to the ends of adjectives to create nouns as beginning—not with beatnik or Sputnik—but earlier, in the pages of ''Li'l Abner''.Al Capp's life and career are the subjects of a new life-sized mural commemorating the 100th anniversary of his birth.",
"Created by resident artist Jon P. Mooers, the mural was unveiled in downtown Amesbury on May 15, 2010.According to the ''Boston Globe'' (as reported on May 18, 2010), the town has renamed its amphitheater in the artist's honor, and is looking to develop an Al Capp Museum.",
"Capp is also the subject of an upcoming WNET-TV ''American Masters'' documentary, ''The Life and Times of Al Capp'', produced by his granddaughter, independent filmmaker Caitlin Manning.Since his death in 1979, Al Capp and his work have been the subject of more than 40 books, including three biographies.",
"Underground cartoonist and ''Li'l Abner'' expert Denis Kitchen has published, co-published, edited, or otherwise served as consultant on nearly all of them.",
"Kitchen is currently compiling a biographical monograph on Al Capp.At the San Diego Comic Con in July 2009, IDW announced the upcoming publication of ''Al Capp's Li'l Abner: The Complete Dailies and Color Sundays'' as part of their ongoing The Library of American Comics series.",
"The comprehensive series, a reprinting of the entire 43-year history of ''Li'l Abner'', spanning a projected 20 volumes, began on April 7, 2010."
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"Further reading",
"*Capp, Al, ''Li'l Abner in New York'' (1936) Whitman Publishing*Capp, Al, ''Li'l Abner Among the Millionaires'' (1939) Whitman Publishing*Capp, Al, ''Li'l Abner and Sadie Hawkins Day'' (1940) Saalfield Publishing*Capp, Al, ''Li'l Abner and the Ratfields'' (1940) Saalfield Publishing*Sheridan, Martin, ''Comics and Their Creators'' (1942) R.T. Hale & Co, (1977) Hyperion Press*Waugh, Coulton, ''The Comics'' (1947) Macmillan Publishers*Capp, Al, ''Newsweek Magazine'' (November 24, 1947) \"Li'l Abner's Mad Capp\"*Capp, Al, ''Saturday Review of Literature'' (March 20, 1948) \"The Case for the Comics\"*Capp, Al, ''The Life and Times of the Shmoo'' (1948) Simon & Schuster*Capp, Al, ''The Nation'' (March 21, 1949) \"There Is a Real Shmoo\"*Capp, Al, ''Cosmopolitan Magazine'' (June 1949) \"I Don't Like Shmoos\"*Capp, Al, ''Atlantic Monthly'' (April 1950) \"I Remember Monster\"*Capp, Al, ''Time Magazine'' (November 6, 1950) \"Die Monstersinger\"*Capp, Al, ''Life Magazine'' (March 31, 1952) \"It's Hideously True...\"*Capp, Al, ''Real Magazine'' (December 1952) \"The REAL Powers in America\"*Capp, Al, ''The World of Li'l Abner'' (1953) Farrar, Straus & Young*Leifer, Fred, ''The Li'l Abner Official Square Dance Handbook'' (1953) A.S. Barnes*Mikes, George, ''Eight Humorists'' (1954) Allen Wingate, (1977) Arden Library*Lehrer, Tom, ''The Tom Lehrer Song Book'', introduction by Al Capp (1954) Crown Publishers*Capp, Al, ''Al Capp's Fearless Fosdick: His Life and Deaths'' (1956) Simon & Schuster*Capp, Al, ''Al Capp's Bald Iggle: The Life it Ruins May Be Your Own'' (1956) Simon & Schuster*Capp, Al, et al.",
"''Famous Artists Cartoon Course'' – 3 volumes (1956) Famous Artists School*Capp, Al, ''Life Magazine'' (January 14, 1957) \"The Dogpatch Saga: Al Capp's Own Story\"*Brodbeck, Arthur J, et al.",
"\"How to Read Li'l Abner Intelligently\" from ''Mass Culture: Popular Arts in America,'' pp.",
"218–224 (1957) Free Press*Capp, Al, ''The Return of the Shmoo'' (1959) Simon & Schuster*Hart, Johnny, ''Back to B.C.",
"'', introduction by Al Capp (1961) Fawcett Publications*Lazarus, Mell, ''Miss Peach'', introduction by Al Capp (1962) Pyramid Books*Gross, Milt, ''He Done Her Wrong'', introduction by Al Capp (1963 Ed.)",
"Dell Books*White, David Manning, and Robert H. Abel, eds.",
"''The Funnies: An American Idiom'' (1963) Free Press*White, David Manning, ed.",
"''From Dogpatch to Slobbovia: The (Gasp!)",
"World of Li'l Abner'' (1964) Beacon Press*Capp, Al, ''Life International Magazine'' (June 14, 1965) \"My Life as an Immortal Myth\"*Toffler, Alvin, ''Playboy Magazine'' (December 1965) interview with Al Capp, pp.",
"89–100*Moger, Art, et al.",
"''Chutzpah Is'', introduction by Al Capp (1966) Colony Publishers*Berger, Arthur Asa, ''Li'l Abner: A Study in American Satire'' (1969) Twayne Publishers, (1994) Univ.",
"Press of Mississippi *Sugar, Andy, ''Saga Magazine'' (December 1969) \"On the Campus Firing Line with Al Capp\"*Gray, Harold, ''Arf!",
"The Life and Hard Times of Little Orphan Annie'', introduction by Al Capp (1970) Arlington House*Moger, Art, ''Some of My Best Friends are People'', introduction by Al Capp (1970) Directors Press*Capp, Al, ''The Hardhat's Bedtime Story Book'' (1971) Harper & Row *Robinson, Jerry, ''The Comics: An Illustrated History of Comic Strip Art'' (1974) G.P.",
"Putnam's Sons*Horn, Maurice, ''The World Encyclopedia of Comics'' (1976) Chelsea House, (1982) Avon*Blackbeard, Bill, ed.",
"''The Smithsonian Collection of Newspaper Comics'' (1977) Smithsonian Inst.",
"Press/Harry Abrams*Marschall, Rick, ''Cartoonist PROfiles'' No.",
"37 (March 1978) interview with Al Capp*Capp, Al, ''The Best of Li'l Abner'' (1978) Holt, Rinehart & Winston *Lardner, Ring, ''You Know Me Al: The Comic Strip Adventures of Jack Keefe'', introduction by Al Capp (1979) Harcourt Brace Jovanovich*Van Buren, Raeburn, ''Abbie an' Slats'' – 2 volumes (1983) Ken Pierce Books*Capp, Al, ''Li'l Abner: Reuben Award Winner Series Book 1'' (1985) Blackthorne*Marschall, Rick, ''Nemo, the Classic Comics Library'' No.",
"18, pp.",
"3–32 (April 1986)*Capp, Al, ''Li'l Abner Dailies'' – 27 volumes (1988–1999) Kitchen Sink Press*Marschall, Rick, ''America's Great Comic Strip Artists'' (1989) Abbeville Press*Capp, Al, ''Fearless Fosdick'' (1990) Kitchen Sink *Capp, Al, ''My Well-Balanced Life on a Wooden Leg'' (1991) John Daniel & Co. *Capp, Al, ''Fearless Fosdick: The Hole Story'' (1992) Kitchen Sink *Goldstein, Kalman, \"Al Capp and Walt Kelly: Pioneers of Political and Social Satire in the Comics\" from ''Journal of Popular Culture;'' Vol.",
"25, Issue 4 (Spring 1992)*Caplin, Elliot, ''Al Capp Remembered'' (1994) Bowling Green State University *Theroux, Alexander, ''The Enigma of Al Capp'' (1999) Fantagraphics Books *Lubbers, Bob, ''Glamour International #26: The Good Girl Art of Bob Lubbers'' (May 2001)*Capp, Al, ''The Short Life and Happy Times of the Shmoo'' (2002) Overlook Press *Capp, Al, ''Al Capp's Li'l Abner: The Frazetta Years'' – 4 volumes (2003–2004) Dark Horse Comics*Al Capp Studios, ''Al Capp's Complete Shmoo: The Comic Books'' (2008) Dark Horse *Capp, Al, ''Li'l Abner: The Complete Dailies and Color Sundays Vol.",
"1 – Vol.",
"x(ongoing)'' (2010–present) The Library of American Comics*Capp, Al, ''Al Capp's Complete Shmoo Vol.",
"2: The Newspaper Strips'' (2011) Dark Horse *Inge, M. Thomas, \"Li'l Abner, Snuffy and Friends\" from ''Comics and the U.S. South'', pp.",
"3–27 (2012) Univ.",
"Press of Mississippi *Kitchen, Denis, and Michael Schumacher, ''Al Capp: A Life to the Contrary'' (2013) Bloomsbury Publishing"
],
[
"External links",
"* ''Li'l Abner'' official site* * * Denis Kitchen biography: Al Capp* Animation Resources: Al Capp part I* Animation Resources: Al Capp part II* Animation Resources: Al Capp part III* Animation Resources: Al Capp part IV* Animation Resources: Al Capp part V* Al Capp Deserves a Tribute (''Newburyport News'', 28 Sept. 2009)* Dogpatch USA amusement park.",
"* The Dogpatch Family Band Mechanical Toy* Dogpatch and ''Li'l Abner'' on Broadway in ''Life'', January 14, 1957, pp.",
"71–83* Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum Art Database"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Ann Druyan"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Ann Druyan''' ( ; born June 13, 1949) is an American documentary producer and director specializing in the communication of science.",
"She co-wrote the 1980 PBS documentary series ''Cosmos'', hosted by Carl Sagan, whom she married in 1981.She is the creator, producer, and writer of the 2014 sequel, ''Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey'' and its sequel series, ''Cosmos: Possible Worlds'', as well as the book of the same name.",
"She directed episodes of both series.In the late 1970s, she became the creative director of NASA's Voyager Interstellar Message Project, which produced the golden discs affixed to both the ''Voyager 1'' and ''Voyager 2'' spacecraft.",
"She also published a novel, ''A Famous Broken Heart'', in 1977, and later co-wrote several best selling non-fiction books with Sagan."
],
[
"Early life",
"Druyan was born in Queens, New York, the daughter of Pearl A.",
"() and Harry Druyan, who co-owned a knitwear firm.",
"Her family was Jewish.",
"Druyan's early interest in math and science was, in her word, \"derailed\" when a junior high-school teacher ridiculed a question she asked about the universality of .",
"\"I raised my hand and said, 'You mean this applies to every circle in the universe?",
"', and the teacher told me not to ask stupid questions.",
"And there I was having this religious experience, and she made me feel like such a fool.",
"I was completely flummoxed from then on until after college.\"",
"Druyan characterized her three years at New York University as \"disastrous\", and it was only after she left school without graduating that she discovered the pre-Socratic philosophers and began educating herself, thus leading to a renewed interest in science."
],
[
"Career",
"In the late 1970s, Druyan became the creative director of NASA's Voyager Interstellar Message Project.",
"As creative director, Druyan worked with a team to design a complex message, including music and images, for possible alien civilizations.",
"These golden phonograph records affixed to the ''Voyager 1'' and ''Voyager 2'' spacecraft are now beyond the outermost planets of the solar system, and ''Voyager 1'' has entered interstellar space.",
"Both records have a projected shelf life of one billion years.Druyan's role on the project was discussed on the July 8, 2018, 60 Minutes segment \"The Little Spacecraft That Could\".",
"In the segment, Druyan explained her insistence that Chuck Berry's \"Johnny B. Goode\" be included on the Golden Record, saying: \"...''Johnny B. Goode'', rock and roll, was the music of motion, of moving, getting to someplace you've never been before, and the odds are against you, but you want to go.",
"That was Voyager.\"",
"The segment also discussed Sagan's suggestion, in 1990, that Voyager 1 turn its cameras back towards Earth to take a series of photographs showing the planets of our solar system.",
"The shots, showing Earth from a distance of 3.7 billion miles as a small point of bluish light, became the basis for Sagan's famous \"Pale Blue Dot\" passage, first published in ''Pale Blue Dot: A Vision of the Human Future in Space'' (1994).During that time, Druyan also co-wrote (with Carl Sagan and Steven Soter) the 1980 PBS documentary series ''Cosmos'', hosted by Carl Sagan.",
"The thirteen-part series covered a wide range of scientific subjects, including the origin of life and a perspective of our place in the universe.",
"It was highly acclaimed, and became the most widely watched series in the history of American public television at that time.",
"The series won two Emmys and a Peabody Award, and has since been broadcast in more than 60 countries and seen by over 500 million people.",
"A book was also published to accompany the series.",
", it is still the most widely watched PBS series in the world.",
"Several revised versions of the series were later broadcast; one version, telecast after Sagan's death, opens with Druyan paying tribute to her late husband and the impact of ''Cosmos'' over the years.",
"Neil deGrasse Tyson and Ann Druyan in SydneyDruyan wrote and produced the 1987 PBS ''NOVA'' episode \"Confessions of a Weaponeer\" on the life of President Eisenhower's Science Advisor George Kistiakowsky.In 2000, Druyan, together with Steve Soter, co-wrote ''Passport to the Universe'', the inaugural planetarium show for the Rose Center for Earth and Space at the American Natural History Museum's Hayden Planetarium.",
"The attraction is narrated by Tom Hanks.",
"Druyan and Soter also co-wrote ''The Search for Life: Are We Alone'', narrated by Harrison Ford, which also debuted at the Hayden's Rose Center.In 2000, Druyan co-founded Cosmos Studios, Inc, with Joseph Firmage.",
"As CEO of Cosmos Studios, Druyan produces science-based entertainment for all media.",
"In addition to ''Cosmos: A SpaceTime Odyssey'', Cosmos Studios has produced ''Cosmic Africa'', ''Lost Dinosaurs of Egypt'', and the Emmy-nominated documentary ''Cosmic Journey: The Voyager Interstellar Mission and Message''.",
"In 2009, she distributed a series of podcasts called ''At Home in the Cosmos with Annie Druyan'', in which she described her works, the life of her husband, Carl Sagan, and their marriage.Druyan is credited, with Carl Sagan, as the co-creator and co-producer of the 1997 feature film ''Contact''.In 2011, it was announced that Druyan would executive produce, co-write, and be one of the episodic directors for a sequel to ''Cosmos: A Personal Voyage'', to be called ''Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey'', which began airing in March 2014.Episodes premiered on Fox and also aired on National Geographic Channel on the following night.",
"At the time of its release, Fox gave the series the largest global rollout of a television series ever, debuting it in 180 countries.",
"The premiere episode was shown across nine of Fox's cable properties in addition to the broadcast network in a \"roadblock\" style premiere.",
"The series went on to become the most-watched series ever for National Geographic Channel International, with at least some part of the 13-episode series watched by 135 million people, including 45 million in the U.S.In March 2020, a third season of ''Cosmos'', named ''Cosmos: Possible Worlds'', for which Druyan was executive producer, writer, and director, premiered on National Geographic.",
"Druyan also said: \"I very much have season four in mind, and I know what it's going to be.",
"And I even know some of the stories that I want to tell in it.",
"\"===Writing===Druyan's first novel, ''A Famous Broken Heart'', was published in 1977.Druyan co-wrote six ''New York Times'' bestsellers with Carl Sagan, including: ''Comet'', ''Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors'', and ''The Demon-Haunted World''.",
"She is co-author, along with Carl Sagan, F. D. Drake, Timothy Ferris, Jon Lomberg and Linda Salzman Sagan, of ''Murmurs Of Earth: The Voyager Interstellar Record''.",
"She also wrote the updated introduction to Sagan's book ''The Cosmic Connection'' and the epilogue of ''Billions and Billions''.",
"She wrote the introduction to, and edited ''The Varieties of Scientific Experience'', published from Sagan's 1985 Gifford lectures.In February 2020, Druyan published ''Cosmos: Possible Worlds'', a companion volume to the television series of the same name, which premiered in March 2020.===Work in science===Druyan is a fellow of the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP).Druyan served as program director of the first solar-sail deep-space mission, Cosmos 1, launched on a Russian ICBM in 2005.Druyan is involved in multiple Breakthrough Initiatives.",
"With Frank Drake, Druyan is the co-chair of Breakthrough Message and also a member of Breakthrough Starshot.She is a member of the advisory board of The Carl Sagan Institute."
],
[
"Activism",
"Druyan has for many years been a vocal advocate for nuclear disarmament.",
"She was arrested three times at the Mercury, Nevada nuclear test site during Mikhail Gorbachev's unilateral moratorium on underground nuclear testing, with which President Ronald Reagan did not cooperate.",
"This included an arrest in June 1986, when she crossed a white painted line indicating the test site's boundary.",
"Sagan, who attended the same protest with Druyan, was not arrested.In the early 1990s, Druyan worked with Sagan and then-Senator Al Gore, Jr. and a host of religious and scientific leaders to bring the scientific and religious worlds together in a unified effort to preserve the environment, resulting in the ''Declaration of the 'Mission to Washington''.She was a founding director of the Children's Health Fund until the spring of 2004, a project that provides mobile pediatric care to homeless and disadvantaged children in more than half a dozen cities.",
"She is currently a member of their advisory board.She has been on the board of directors of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) for over 10 years and was its president from 2006 to 2010."
],
[
"Honors",
"An asteroid discovered in 1988 was named in Druyan's honor by its discoverer Eleanor F. Helin.",
"In a 2020 interview with ''Skeptical Inquirer'', Druyan discussed 4970 Druyan and the asteroid named after her late husband, saying that 4970 Druyan is in a \"wedding ring orbit\" around the Sun with 2709 Sagan.",
"Druyan was presented with a plaque on Sagan's sixtieth birthday, which is inscribed: \"Asteroid 2709 Sagan in eternal companion orbit with asteroid 4970 Druyan, symbolic of their love and admiration for each other.",
"\"In November 2006, Druyan was a speaker at \"Beyond Belief: Science, Religion, Reason and Survival\".In January 2007, she was a juror at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival, responsible for selecting the winner of the Alfred P. Sloan Prize for films about science and technology.In November 2007, Druyan was awarded the title of \"Humanist Laureate\" by the International Academy of Humanism.In October 2019, the Center for Inquiry West opened the Carl Sagan–Ann Druyan Theater in Los Angeles."
],
[
"Religious and philosophical views",
"In an interview with Joel Achenbach of ''The Washington Post'', Druyan said that her early interest in science stemmed from a fascination with Karl Marx.",
"Achenbach commented that \"She had, at the time, rather vaporous standards of evidence\", a reference to her belief in the ancient astronauts of Erich von Däniken and the theories of Immanuel Velikovsky pertaining to the solar system.Concerning the death of her husband she stated:When my husband died, because he was so famous and known for not being a believer, many people would come up to me—it still sometimes happens—and ask me if Carl changed at the end and converted to a belief in an afterlife.",
"They also frequently ask me if I think I will see him again.",
"Carl faced his death with unflagging courage and never sought refuge in illusions.",
"The tragedy was that we knew we would never see each other again.",
"I don't ever expect to be reunited with Carl."
],
[
"Personal life",
"Druyan and Sagan's working and resulting romantic relationship has been the subject of numerous treatments in popular culture, including the Radiolab episode \"Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan's Ultimate Mix Tape\" and a segment of the Comedy Central program ''Drunk History''s episode \"Space\".",
"The asteroid 4970 Druyan, which is in a companion orbit with asteroid 2709 Sagan named after Druyan's late husband, is named after Druyan.",
"In 2015, it was announced that Warner Brothers was in development on a drama about Sagan and Druyan's relationship, to be produced by producer Lynda Obst and Druyan.In 2020, Sagan and Druyan's daughter Sasha Sagan released a book ''For Small Creatures Such As We: Rituals for Finding Meaning in our Unlikely World'', which discusses life with her parents and her father's death when she was fourteen years old.Druyan also gave Sasha a recurring role in ''Cosmos: Possible Worlds'', where she played her own grandmother, including in the episode ''Man of a Trillion Worlds'', which featured the life of Carl Sagan."
],
[
"Awards",
"* 2004 Richard Dawkins Award* 2014 Outstanding Writing for Nonfiction Programming Primetime Emmy Award* 2015 The Award for Outstanding Producer of Non-Fiction Television from Producers Guild of America* 2015 Writers Guild Award for \"Documentary Script – Other than Current Events\"* 2017 Harvard Humanist of the Year Award* 2020 National Geographic Further Award"
],
[
"See also",
"* Women in science* List of peace activists"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* Ann Druyan: The Observatory*"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Analcime"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Analcime''' (; ) or '''analcite''' is a white, gray, or colorless tectosilicate mineral.",
"Analcime consists of hydrated sodium aluminium silicate in cubic crystalline form.",
"Its chemical formula is NaAlSi2O6 · H2O.",
"Minor amounts of potassium and calcium substitute for sodium.",
"A silver-bearing synthetic variety also exists (Ag-analcite).",
"Analcime is usually classified as a zeolite mineral, but structurally and chemically it is more similar to the feldspathoids.",
"Analcime is not classified as an isometric crystal, as although the crystal structure appears to be isometric, it is usually off only by a fraction of an angle.",
"However, there are truly isometric samples of the mineral, which makes its classification even more difficult.",
"Due to the differences between the samples being too slight, there's no merit from having multiple species names, so as a result analcime is a common example for minerals occurring in multiple crystal systems and space groups.",
"It was first described by French geologist Déodat de Dolomieu, who called it zéolithe dure, meaning hard zeolite.",
"It was found in lava in Cyclops, Italy.",
"The mineral is IMA approved, and had been grandfathered, meaning the name analcime is believed to refer to a valid species til this day."
],
[
"Properties",
"Analcime crystals always look pseudocubic.",
"Its common crystal forms include trapezohedron, truncated trapezohedron with cubic faces, and more rarely either as a truncated trapezohedron, or the crystals can take the shape of a truncated cube that is typical to bixbyites.",
"The crystals can occur either individually, as interconnected, form groups on plates or even in druzy form.",
"Crystal masses can also form veins sometimes.",
"Individual crystals are euhedral, meaning they have well defined faces.",
"When on a matrix, the mineral takes a granular habit, meaning the crystals become anhedral.",
"The color of the mineral varies due to trace impurities.",
"The mineral is weakly piezoelectric and pyroelectric, meaning it produces a weak electric charge when it's rubbed or heated, hence the name analcime.",
"Other characteristics include the fact that the mineral can have a blueish white fluorescence when inspected under short UV light, and a creamy white-yellow one inspected under long UV light.",
"It does not show any pleochroic or radioactive properties.",
"Analyses regarding the mineral's symmetry vary in results, however the most prevalent one being tetragonal.",
"The mineral usually has polysynthetic twins, which are only visible in thin sections when the specimen is inspected under polarized analyzed light.",
"Analcime mainly consists of oxygen (50.87%), silicon (25.51%), aluminum (12.26%), sodium (10.44%) but otherwise has a negligible amount of hydrogen (0.92%) as well.",
"The highest quality specimens take the form of a trapezohedron, and can reach up to 25 cm.",
"These specimens are associated with serandite, aegyrine and natrolite, and can be found at Mont Saint-Hilaire, Quebec.",
"Of the pinkish-white specimens, the mineral takes the shape of well-formed cubes which can exceed 10 cm, originating from several sites in Val di Fassa, Trentino, Italy."
],
[
"Formation and associated minerals",
"Analcime occurs as a primary mineral in analcime basalt and other alkaline igneous rocks.",
"It also occurs as cavity and vesicle fillings associated with prehnite, calcite, and zeolites.",
"Analcime forms in sedimentary rocks at temperatures below about , and so its presence indicates that the rock has experienced shallow diagenesis.",
"Although it is common in igneous rocks (namely basalts and trachy-basalts), it is more rarely found in phonolites.",
"Associations include zeolites, calcite and prehnite; however, it is also found in nepheline syenites and their pegmatites.",
"It forms a series with pollucite."
],
[
"Locations",
"Well known locations for sourcing analcime include Croft Quarry in Leicestershire, UK; the Cyclopean Islands east off Sicily and near Trentino in northern Italy; Victoria in Australia; Kerguelen Island in the Indian Ocean; in the Lake Superior copper district of Michigan, Bergen Hill, New Jersey, Golden, Colorado, and at Searles Lake, California in the United States; and at Cape Blomidon, Nova Scotia and Mont Saint-Hilaire, Quebec in Canada; and in Iceland, and now in Namibia.",
"Siberian samples from Nidym and Toura provide us with white crystals of 18 cm.",
"Samples of the Cyclopean Islands are known for their beautiful and clear crystals, just like the crystals of Kings Valley and Springfield in Oregon, which can reach up to 6 cm.",
"Coleman, Alberta in Canada is known for producing beautiful red crystals."
],
[
"Usage",
"Other than its aesthetic values, analcime currently presents no use.",
"Crystallized specimens are sought after by collectors, and the mineral is hardly ever made into jewelry.",
"The crystals made into jewelries are uncut and handcrafted.",
"It has lacking use as a microporous material.",
"This is due to the fact that analcime has a compact structure and thus it has a strong resistance to diffusion of both molecules and cations.",
"Analcime-bearing tuffs are sometimes used as building materials."
],
[
"See also",
"*"
],
[
"References",
"* Hurlbut, Cornelius S.; Klein, Cornelis, 1985, Manual of Mineralogy, 20th ed., * Mineral Galleries* Mindat.org* Webmineral.com"
],
[
"External links",
"* structure type ANA"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Alexey Pajitnov"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Alexey Leonidovich Pajitnov''' (born April 16, 1955) is a Russian-American computer engineer and video game designer who is best known for creating, designing, and developing ''Tetris'' in 1985 while working at the Dorodnitsyn Computing Centre under the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union (now the Russian Academy of Sciences).In 1991, he moved to the United States and later became a U.S. citizen.",
"In 1996, Pajitnov founded The Tetris Company alongside Dutch video game designer Henk Rogers.",
"Pajitnov did not receive royalties from ''Tetris'' prior to this time, despite the game's high popularity."
],
[
"Early life",
"Pajitnov was born to Russian parents, who were both writers, his father was an art critic, his mother was a journalist who wrote for both newspapers and a film magazine.",
"It was through his parents that Pajitnov gained exposure to the arts, eventually developing a passion for cinema.",
"He accompanied his mother to many film screenings, including the Moscow Film Festival.",
"Pajitnov was also mathematically inclined, enjoying puzzles and problem solving.In 1967, when he was 11 years old, Pajitnov's parents divorced.",
"For several years, he lived with his mother in a one-bedroom apartment owned by the state.",
"The two were eventually able to move into a private apartment at 49 Gertsen Street, when Pajitnov was 17.He later went on to study applied mathematics at the Moscow Aviation Institute."
],
[
"Career",
"In 1977, Pajitnov worked as a summer intern at the Soviet Academy of Sciences.",
"Once he graduated in 1979, he accepted a job there working on speech recognition at the Academy's Dorodnitsyn Computing Centre.",
"When the Computing Centre received new equipment, its researchers would write a small program for it in order to test its computing capabilities.",
"According to Pajitnov, this \"became his excuse for making games\".",
"Computer games were fascinating to him because they offered a way to bridge the gap between logic and emotion, and Pajitnov held interests in both mathematics and puzzles, as well as the psychology of computing.Searching for inspiration, Pajitnov recalled his childhood memories of playing pentominoes, a game in which the user creates pictures using its shapes.",
"Remembering the difficulty he had in putting the pieces back into their box, Pajitnov felt inspired to create a game based on that concept.",
"Using an Electronika 60 in the Computing Centre, he began working on what would become the first version of ''Tetris''.",
"Building the first prototype in two weeks, Pajitnov spent longer playtesting and adding to the game, completing it on June 6, 1985.This primitive version did not have levels or a scoring system, but Pajitnov knew he had a potentially great game, since he could not stop playing it at work.The game attracted the interest of coworkers like fellow programmer Dmitri Pevlovsky, who helped Pajitnov connect with Vadim Gerasimov, a 16-year-old intern at the Soviet Academy.",
"Pajitnov wanted to make a color version of ''Tetris'' for the IBM Personal Computer, and enlisted the intern to help.",
"Gerasimov created the PC version in less than three weeks, and with contributions from Pevlovsky, spent an additional month adding new features like scorekeeping and sound effects.",
"The game, first available in the Soviet Union, received international releases through Mirrorsoft and Spectrum Holobyte in 1988.Pajitnov created a sequel to ''Tetris'', entitled ''Welltris'', which has the same principle, but in a three-dimensional environment where the player sees the playing area from above.",
"''Tetris'' was licensed and managed by Soviet company ELORG, which had a monopoly on the import and export of computer hardware and software in the Soviet Union, and advertised with the slogan ''\"From Russia with Love\"'' (on NES: ''\"From Russia with Fun!\"'').",
"Because he was employed by the Soviet government, Pajitnov did not receive royalties.Pajitnov, together with Vladimir Pokhilko, moved to the United States following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, and in 1996 founded The Tetris Company with Henk Rogers, which finally allowed him to collect royalties from his game.",
"He helped design the puzzles in the Super NES versions of ''Yoshi's Cookie'' and designed the game ''Pandora's Box'', which incorporates more traditional jigsaw-style puzzles.",
"Pajitnov and Pokhilko founded the 3D software technology company AnimaTek, which developed the game / screensaver El-Fish.He was employed by Microsoft from October 1996 until 2005.While there, he worked on the ''Microsoft Entertainment Pack: The Puzzle Collection'', MSN Mind Aerobics and MSN Games groups.",
"Pajitnov's new, enhanced version of ''Hexic'', ''Hexic HD'', was included with every new Xbox 360 Premium package.In August 2005, WildSnake Software announced that Pajitnov would be collaborating with them to release a new line of puzzle games."
],
[
"Personal life",
"Pajitnov moved to the United States in 1991, was naturalized as a U.S. citizen and now lives in Clyde Hill, Washington.",
"He has a wife, Nina, with whom he had two sons named Peter and Dmitri."
],
[
"Political views",
"After the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Pajitnov issued a statement condemning the war and stating that he was \"sure that Putin and his hateful regime will fall down and the normal peaceful way of living will be restored in Ukraine and, hopefully, in Russia.\""
],
[
"Games",
" Title Year Platform(s) Role(s) ''Tetris'' 1985 Electronika 60, IBM-PC Original concept (with Vadim Gerasimov & Dmitry Pavlovsky)''Muddle''1989Electronika 60, IBM-PCDesigner (Published by JV Dialogue) ''Welltris'' 1989 Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, DOS, Macintosh & ZX Spectrum Designer (with Andrei Sgenov) ''Faces'' 1990 Amiga, DOS, Macintosh Original concept (with Vladimir Pokhilko) ''Hatris'' 1990 TurboGrafx-16, Arcade, Game Boy & NES Original concept ''Knight Move'' 1990 Famicom Disk System (Japan) Idealist ''Wordtris'' 1991 DOS, Game Boy, Classic Mac OS, SNES Designer ''Yoshi's Cookie'' 1992 NES, Game Boy, SNES Puzzle Designer ''El-Fish'' 1993 DOS Original concept (with Vladimir Pokhilko) ''Knight Moves'' 1995 Windows Idealist ''Ice & Fire'' 1995 Windows, Macintosh Original concept (with Vladimir Pokhilko) ''Tetrisphere'' 1997 Nintendo 64 Contributor ''Microsoft Entertainment Pack: The Puzzle Collection'' 1997 Windows & Game Boy Color Designer ''Microsoft Pandora's Box'' 1999 Windows Designer ''Microsoft A.I.",
"Puzzler'' 2001 Windows Designer ''Hexic'' 2003 Windows Original concept and design ''Hexic HD'' 2005 Xbox 360 Original concept and design ''Dwice '' 2006 Windows Designer ''Hexic 2'' 2007 Xbox 360 Designer ''Marbly'' 2013 iOS Original concept and design"
],
[
"Awards and recognition",
"In 1996, GameSpot named him as the fourth most influential computer game developer of all time.In March 2007, he received the Game Developers Choice Awards First Penguin Award.",
"The award was given for pioneering the casual games market.In June 2009, he received the honorary award at the LARA - Der Deutsche Games Award in Cologne, Germany.In 2012, IGN included Pajitnov on their list of 5 Memorable Video Game Industry One-Hit Wonders, calling him \"the ultimate video game one-hit wonder.",
"\"In 2015, Pajitnov won the Bizkaia Award at the Fun & Serious Game Festival.Pajitnov was portrayed by Russian actor Nikita Yefremov in the 2023 movie ''Tetris'', a dramatised retelling of the licensing bidding war for Tetris in the late 1980s."
],
[
"See also",
"*''BreakThru!",
"'', video game endorsed by Pajitnov*''ClockWerx'', video game endorsed by Pajitnov"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* ''Alexey L. Pajitnov'' profile at MobyGames* Tetris Creator Claims ''Free and Open Source Software'' Destroys the Market.",
"* ''Tetris — From Russia with Love'', BBC documentary"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''ʻAbdu'l-Bahá''' (; Persian: , 23 May 1844 – 28 November 1921), born '''ʻAbbás''' (), was the eldest son of Baháʼu'lláh and served as head of the Baháʼí Faith from 1892 until 1921.ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was later canonized as the last of three \"central figures\" of the religion, along with Baháʼu'lláh and the Báb, and his writings and authenticated talks are regarded as sources of Baháʼí sacred literature.He was born in Tehran to an aristocratic family.",
"At the age of eight his father was imprisoned during a government crackdown on the Bábí Faith and the family's possessions were looted, leaving them in virtual poverty.",
"His father was exiled from their native Iran, and the family went to live in Baghdad, where they stayed for nine years.",
"They were later called by the Ottoman state to Istanbul before going into another period of confinement in Edirne and finally the prison-city of ʻAkká (Acre).",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá remained a political prisoner there until the Young Turk Revolution freed him in 1908 at the age of 64.He then made several journeys to the West to spread the Baháʼí message beyond its middle-eastern roots, but the onset of World War I left him largely confined to Haifa from 1914 to 1918.The war replaced the openly hostile Ottoman authorities with the British Mandate, who appointed him a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire for his help in averting famine following the war.In 1892, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was appointed in his father's will to be his successor and head of the Baháʼí Faith.",
"He faced opposition from virtually all his family members, but held the loyalty of the great majority of Baháʼís around the world.",
"His ''Tablets of the Divine Plan'' helped galvanize Baháʼís in North America into spreading the Baháʼí teachings to new territories, and his Will and Testament laid the foundation for the current Baháʼí administrative order.",
"Many of his writings, prayers and letters are extant, and his discourses with the Western Baháʼís emphasize the growth of the religion by the late 1890s.ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's given name was ʻAbbás.",
"Depending on context, he would have gone by either Mírzá ʻAbbás (Persian) or ʻAbbás Effendi (Turkish), both of which are equivalent to the English Sir ʻAbbás.",
"He preferred the title of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá (\"servant of Bahá\", a reference to his father).",
"He is commonly referred to in Baháʼí texts as \"The Master\"."
],
[
"Early life",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was born in Tehran, Persia (now Iran) on 23 May 1844 (5th of Jamadiyu'l-Avval, 1260 AH), the eldest son of Baháʼu'lláh and Navváb.",
"He was born on the very same night on which the Báb declared his mission.",
"Born with the given name of ʻAbbás, he was named after his grandfather Mírzá ʻAbbás Núrí, a prominent and powerful nobleman.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's early years were shaped by his father's prominent role within the Bábí community.",
"As a child, he fondly recalled interactions with the Bábí Táhirih, describing how she would take him on her knee, caress him, and engage in heartfelt conversations, leaving a lasting impression on him.",
"His childhood was characterized by happiness and carefree moments.",
"The family's residences in Tehran and the countryside were not only comfortable but also beautifully adorned.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá loved playing in the gardens with his close younger sister, fostering a strong bond between them.",
"Alongside his younger siblings – a sister, Bahíyyih, and a brother, Mihdí – he experienced a life of privilege, joy, and comfort.",
"During his formative years, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá observed his parents' commitment to various charitable endeavors, including the conversion of part of their home into a hospital ward for women and children.Due to a life largely marked by exile and imprisonment, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá had limited opportunities for formal schooling.",
"In his youth, it was customary for children of nobility, including ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, not to attend conventional schools.",
"Instead, noblemen typically received brief education at home, focusing on subjects such as scripture, rhetoric, calligraphy, and basic mathematics, with an emphasis on preparing for life within royal courts.While he did spend a short period at a traditional preparatory school at the age of seven for a single year, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá did not undergo formal education.",
"His mother and uncle took on the responsibility of his early education, but the primary source of his learning was his father.",
"In 1890 Edward Granville Browne described how ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was \"one more eloquent of speech, more ready of argument, more apt of illustration, more intimately acquainted with the sacred books of the Jews, the Christians, and the Muhammadans...scarcely be found even amongst the eloquent.",
"\"According to contemporary accounts ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was an eloquent and charming child.",
"At the age of seven, he faced a severe health challenge when he contracted tuberculosis, and his prognosis suggested death.",
"Though the illness abated, this marked the beginning of a lifelong struggle with recurrent bouts of various illnesses that would persist throughout his life.One event that affected ʻAbdu'l-Bahá greatly during his childhood was the imprisonment of his father when ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was eight years old; this circumstance led to a considerable decline in the family's economic standing, subjecting him to poverty and exposing them to hostility from other children in the streets.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá accompanied his mother to visit Baháʼu'lláh who was then imprisoned in the infamous subterranean dungeon the Síyáh-Chál.",
"He described how \"I saw a dark, steep place.",
"We entered a small, narrow doorway, and went down two steps, but beyond those one could see nothing.",
"In the middle of the stairway, all of a sudden we heard His Baháʼu'lláh's…voice: 'Do not bring him in here', and so they took me back\"."
],
[
"Baghdad",
"Baháʼu'lláh was eventually released from prison, but ordered into exile, and ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, then eight years old, joined his father on the journey to Baghdad in the winter (January to April) of 1853.During the journey ʻAbdu'l-Bahá suffered from frost-bite.",
"After a year of difficulties Baháʼu'lláh absented himself rather than continue to face the conflict with Mirza Yahya and secretly secluded himself in the mountains of Sulaymaniyah in April 1854 a month before ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's tenth birthday.",
"Mutual sorrow resulted in him, his mother and sister becoming constant companions.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was particularly close to both, and his mother took active participation in his education and upbringing.",
"During the two-year absence of his father ʻAbdu'l-Bahá took up the duty of managing the affairs of the family, before his age of maturity (14 in middle-eastern society) and was known to be occupied with reading and, at a time of hand-copied scriptures being the primary means of publishing, was also engaged in copying the writings of the Báb.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá also took an interest in the art of horse riding and, as he grew, became a renowned rider.In 1856, news of an ascetic carrying on discourses with local Súfí leaders that seemed to possibly be Baháʼu'lláh reached the family and friends.",
"Immediately, family members and friends went to search for the elusive dervish – and in March brought Baháʼu'lláh back to Baghdad.",
"On seeing his father, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá fell to his knees and wept loudly \"Why did you leave us?",
"\", and this followed with his mother and sister doing the same.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá soon became his father's secretary and shield.",
"During the sojourn in the city ʻAbdu'l-Bahá grew from a boy into a young man.",
"He was noted as a \"remarkably fine looking youth\", and remembered for his charity.",
"Having passed the age of maturity ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was regularly seen in the mosques of Baghdad discussing religious topics and the scripture as a young man.",
"Whilst in Baghdad, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá composed a commentary at the request of his father on the Muslim tradition of \"I was a Hidden Treasure\" for a Súfí leader named ʻAlí Shawkat Páshá.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was fifteen or sixteen at the time and ʻAlí Shawkat Páshá regarded the more than 11,000-word essay as a remarkable feat for somebody of his age.",
"In 1863, in what became known as the Garden of Ridván, his father Baháʼu'lláh announced to a few that he was the manifestation of God and He whom God shall make manifest whose coming had been foretold by the Báb.",
"On day eight of the twelve days, it is believed ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was the first person Baháʼu'lláh revealed his claim to."
],
[
"Istanbul/Adrianople",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá (right) with his brother Mírzá MihdíIn 1863, Baháʼu'lláh was summoned to Istanbul, and thus his family, including ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, then eighteen, accompanied him on his 110-day journey.",
"The journey to Constantinople was another wearisome journey, and ʻAbdu'l-Bahá helped feed the exiles.",
"It was here that his position became more prominent amongst the Baháʼís.",
"This was further solidified by Baháʼu'lláh's tablet of the Branch in which he constantly exalts his son's virtues and station.",
"The family were soon exiled to Adrianople and ʻAbdu'l-Bahá went with the family.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá again suffered from frostbite.In Adrianople ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was regarded as the sole comforter of his family – in particular to his mother.",
"At this point ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was known by the Baháʼís as \"the Master\", and by non-Baháʼís as ʻAbbás Effendi (\"Effendi\" signifies \"Sir\").",
"It was in Adrianople that Baháʼu'lláh referred to his son as \"the Mystery of God\".",
"The title of \"Mystery of God\" symbolises, according to Baháʼís, that ʻAbdu'l-Bahá is not a manifestation of God but how a \"person of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá the incompatible characteristics of a human nature and superhuman knowledge and perfection have been blended and are completely harmonized\".",
"Baháʼu'lláh gave his son many other titles such as ''G͟husn-i-Aʻzam'' (meaning \"Mightiest Branch\" or \"Mightier Branch\"), the \"Branch of Holiness\", \"the Center of the Covenant\" and the apple of his eye.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá (\"the Master\") was devastated when hearing the news that he and his family were to be exiled separately from Baháʼu'lláh.",
"It was, according to Baháʼís, through his intercession that the idea was reverted and the family were allowed to be exiled together."
],
[
"ʻAkká",
"Prison in ʻAkká where Baháʼu'lláh and his family were housedAt the age of 24, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was clearly chief-steward to his father and an outstanding member of the Baháʼí community.",
"Baháʼu'lláh and his family were – in 1868 – exiled to the penal colony of Acre, Palestine where it was expected that the family would perish.",
"Arrival in ʻAkká was distressing for the family and exiles.",
"They were greeted in a hostile manner by the surrounding population and his sister and father fell dangerously ill.",
"When told that the women were to sit on the shoulders of the men to reach the shore, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá took a chair and carried the women to the bay of ʻAkká.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was able to procure some anesthetic and nursed the sick.",
"The Baháʼís were imprisoned under horrendous conditions in a cluster of cells covered in excrement and dirt.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá himself fell dangerously ill with dysentery, however a sympathetic soldier permitted a physician to help cure him.",
"The population shunned them, the soldiers treated them the same, and the behaviour of Siyyid Muhammad-i-Isfahani (an Azali) did not help matters.",
"Morale was further destroyed with the accidental death of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's youngest brother Mírzá Mihdí at the age of 22.The grieving ʻAbdu'l-Bahá kept a night-long vigil beside his brother's body.=== Later in ʻAkká ===Over time, he gradually took over responsibility for the relationships between the small Baháʼí exile community and the outside world.",
"It was through his interaction with the people of ʻAkká (Acre) that, according to the Baháʼís, they recognized the innocence of the Baháʼís, and thus the conditions of imprisonment were eased.",
"Four months after the death of Mihdí the family moved from the prison to the House of ʻAbbúd.",
"The people of ʻAkká started to respect the Baháʼís and in particular, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was able to arrange for houses to be rented for the family, and the family later moved to the Mansion of Bahjí around 1879 when an epidemic caused the inhabitants to flee.ʻAbdu'l-Bahá soon became very popular in the penal colony and Myron Henry Phelps a wealthy New York lawyer described how \"a crowd of human beings...Syrians, Arabs, Ethiopians, and many others\", all waited to talk and receive ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.",
"He undertook a history of the Bábí religion through publication of A Traveller's Narrative (Makála-i-Shakhsí Sayyáh) in 1886, later translated and published in translation in 1891 through Cambridge University by the agency of Edward Granville Browne.===Marriage and family life===When ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was a young man, speculation was rife amongst the Baháʼís as to whom he would marry.",
"Several young girls were seen as marriage prospects but ʻAbdu'l-Bahá seemed disinclined to marriage.",
"On 8 March 1873, at the urging of his father, the twenty-eight-year-old ʻAbdu'l-Bahá married Fátimih Nahrí of Isfahán (1847–1938) a twenty-five-year-old from an upper-class family of the city.",
"Her father was Mírzá Muḥammad ʻAlí Nahrí of Isfahan, an eminent Baháʼí with prominent connections.",
"Fátimih was brought from Persia to ʻAkká after both Baháʼu'lláh and his wife Navváb expressed an interest in her to marry ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.",
"After a wearisome journey from Isfahán to Akka she finally arrived accompanied by her brother in 1872.The young couple were betrothed for about five months before the marriage itself commenced.",
"In the meantime, Fátimih lived in the home of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's uncle Mírzá Músá.",
"According to her later memoirs, Fátimih fell in love with ʻAbdu'l-Bahá on seeing him.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá himself had showed little inkling to marriage until meeting Fátimih; who was entitled Munírih by Baháʼu'lláh.",
"Munírih is a title meaning \"Luminous\".The marriage resulted in nine children.",
"The first born was a son Mihdí Effendi who died aged about 3.He was followed by Ḍíyáʼíyyih K͟hánum, Fuʼádíyyih K͟hánum (d. few years old), Rúhangíz Khánum (d. 1893), Túbá Khánum, Husayn Effendi (d.1887 aged 5), Túbá K͟hánum, Rúhá K͟hánum (mother of Munib Shahid), and Munnavar K͟hánum.",
"The death of his children caused ʻAbdu'l-Bahá immense grief – in particular the death of his son Husayn Effendi came at a difficult time following the death of his mother and uncle.",
"The surviving children (all daughters) were; Ḍíyáʼíyyih K͟hánum (mother of Shoghi Effendi) (d. 1951) Túbá K͟hánum (1880–1959) Rúḥá K͟hánum and Munavvar K͟hánum (d. 1971).",
"Baháʼu'lláh wished that the Baháʼís follow the example of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá and gradually move away from polygamy.",
"The marriage of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá to one woman and his choice to remain monogamous, from advice of his father and his own wish, legitimised the practice of monogamy to a people who hitherto had regarded polygamy as a righteous way of life."
],
[
"Early years of his ministry",
"After Baháʼu'lláh died on 29 May 1892, the Will and Testament of Baháʼu'lláh named ʻAbdu'l-Bahá as Centre of the Covenant, successor and interpreter of Baháʼu'lláh's writings.Baháʼu'lláh designates his successor with the following verses:This translation of the ''Kitáb-i-ʻAhd'' is based on a solecism, however, as the terms ''Akbar'' and ''Aʻzam'' do not mean, respectively, 'Greater' and 'Most Great'.",
"Not only do the two words derive from entirely separate triconsonantal roots (''Akbar'' from ''k-b-r'' and ''Aʻzam'' from ''ʻ-z-m''), but the Arabic language possesses the elative, a stage of gradation, with no clear distinction between the comparative and superlative.",
"In the Will and Testament ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's half-brother, Muhammad ʻAlí, was mentioned by name as being subordinate to ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.",
"Muhammad ʻAlí became jealous of his half-brother and set out to establish authority for himself as an alternative leader with the support of his brothers Badiʻu'llah and Ḍíyáʼu'llah.",
"He began correspondence with Baháʼís in Iran, initially in secret, casting doubts in others' minds about ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.",
"While most Baháʼís followed ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, a handful followed Muhammad ʻAlí including such leaders as Mirza Javad and Ibrahim George Kheiralla, an early Baháʼí missionary to America.Muhammad ʻAlí and Mirza Javad began to openly accuse ʻAbdu'l-Bahá of taking on too much authority, suggesting that he believed himself to be a Manifestation of God, equal in status to Baháʼu'lláh.",
"It was at this time that ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, to provide proof of the falsity of the accusations leveled against him, in tablets to the West, stated that he was to be known as \"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá\" an Arabic phrase meaning the Servant of Bahá to make it clear that he was not a Manifestation of God, and that his station was only servitude.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá left a Will and Testament that set up the framework of administration.",
"The two highest institutions were the Universal House of Justice, and the Guardianship, for which he appointed Shoghi Effendi as the Guardian.",
"With the exception of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá and Shoghi Effendi, Muhammad ʻAlí was supported by all of the remaining male relatives of Baháʼu'lláh, including Shoghi Effendi's father, Mírzá Hádí Shírází.",
"However Muhammad ʻAlí's and his families statements had very little effect on the Baháʼís in general – in the ʻAkká area, the followers of Muhammad ʻAlí represented six families at most, they had no common religious activities, and were almost wholly assimilated into Muslim society.=== First Western pilgrims ===Early Western Baháʼí pilgrims.",
"Standing left to right: Charles Mason Remey, Sigurd Russell, Edward Getsinger and Laura Clifford Barney; Seated left to right: Ethel Jenner Rosenberg, Madam Jackson, Shoghi Effendi, Helen Ellis Cole, Lua Getsinger, Emogene HoaggBy the end of 1898, Western pilgrims started coming to Akka on pilgrimage to visit ʻAbdu'l-Bahá; this group of pilgrims, including Phoebe Hearst, was the first time that Baháʼís raised up in the West had met ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.",
"The first group arrived in 1898 and throughout late 1898 to early 1899 Western Baháʼís sporadically visited ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.",
"The group was relatively young containing mainly women from high American society in their 20s.",
"The group of Westerners aroused suspicion for the authorities, and consequently ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's confinement was tightened.",
"During the next decade ʻAbdu'l-Bahá would be in constant communication with Baháʼís around the world, helping them to teach the religion; the group included May Ellis Bolles in Paris, Englishman Thomas Breakwell, American Herbert Hopper, French , Susan Moody, Lua Getsinger, and American Laura Clifford Barney.",
"It was Laura Clifford Barney who, by asking questions of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá over many years and many visits to Haifa, compiled what later became the book Some Answered Questions.===Ministry, 1901–1912===During the final years of the 19th century, while ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was still officially a prisoner and confined to ʻAkka, he organized the transfer of the remains of the Báb from Iran to Palestine.",
"He then organized the purchase of land on Mount Carmel that Baháʼu'lláh had instructed should be used to lay the remains of the Báb, and organized for the construction of the Shrine of the Báb.",
"This process took another 10 years.",
"With the increase of pilgrims visiting ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, Muhammad ʻAlí worked with the Ottoman authorities to re-introduce stricter terms on ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's imprisonment in August 1901.By 1902, however, due to the Governor of ʻAkka being supportive of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, the situation was greatly eased; while pilgrims were able to once again visit ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, he was confined to the city.",
"In February 1903, two followers of Muhammad ʻAlí, including Badiʻu'llah and Siyyid ʻAliy-i-Afnan, broke with Muhammad ʻAli and wrote books and letters giving details of Muhammad ʻAli's plots and noting that what was circulating about ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was fabrication.From 1902 to 1904, in addition to the building of the Shrine of the Báb that ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was directing, he started to put into execution two different projects; the restoration of the House of the Báb in Shiraz, Iran and the construction of the first Baháʼí House of Worship in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá asked Aqa Mirza Aqa to coordinate the work so that the house of the Báb would be restored to the state that it was at the time of the Báb's declaration to Mulla Husayn in 1844; he also entrusted the work on the House of Worship to Vakil-u'd-Dawlih.During this period, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá communicated with a number of Young Turks, opposed to the reign of Sultan Abdul Hamid II, including Namık Kemal, Ziya Pasha and Midhat Pasha, in an attempt to disseminate Baháʼí thought into their political ideology.",
"He emphasized Baháʼís \"seek freedom and love liberty, hope for equality, are well-wishers of humanity and ready to sacrifice their lives to unite humanity\" but on a more broad approach than the Young Turks.",
"Abdullah Cevdet, one of the founders of the Committee of Union and Progress who considered the Baháʼí Faith an intermediary step between Islam and the ultimate abandonment of religious belief, would go on trial for defense of Baháʼís in a periodical he founded.‛Abdu'l-Bahá also had contact with military leaders as well, including such individuals as Bursalı Mehmet Tahir Bey and Hasan Bedreddin.",
"The latter, who was involved in the overthrow of Sultan Abdülaziz, is commonly known as Bedri Paşa or Bedri Pasha and is referred to in Persian Baháʼí sources as Bedri Bey (Badri Beg).",
"He was a Baháʼí who translated ‛Abdu'l-Baha's works into French.ʻAbdu'l-Bahá also met Muhammad Abduh, one of the key figures of Islamic Modernism and the Salafi movement, in Beirut, at a time when the two men were both opposed to the Ottoman ''ulama'' and shared similar goals of religious reform.",
"Rashid Rida asserts that during his visits to Beirut, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá would attend Abduh's study sessions.",
"Regarding the meetings of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá and Muhammad ʻAbduh, Shoghi Effendi asserts that \"His several interviews with the well-known Shaykh Muhammad ʻAbdu served to enhance immensely the growing prestige of the community and spread abroad the fame of its most distinguished member.",
"\"Due to ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's political activities and alleged accusation against him by Muhammad ʻAli, a Commission of Inquiry interviewed ʻAbdu'l-Bahá in 1905, with the result that he was almost exiled to Fezzan.",
"In response, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá wrote the sultan a letter protesting that his followers refrain from involvement in partisan politics and that his ''tariqa'' had guided many Americans to Islam.",
"The next few years in ʻAkka were relatively free of pressures and pilgrims were able to come and visit ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.",
"By 1909 the mausoleum of the Shrine of the Báb was completed."
],
[
"Journeys to the West",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, during his trip to the United StatesThe 1908 Young Turks revolution freed all political prisoners in the Ottoman Empire, and ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was freed from imprisonment.",
"His first action after his freedom was to visit the Shrine of Baháʼu'lláh in Bahji.",
"While ʻAbdu'l-Bahá continued to live in ʻAkka immediately following the revolution, he soon moved to live in Haifa near the Shrine of the Báb.",
"In 1910, with the freedom to leave the country, he embarked on a three-year journey to Egypt, Europe, and North America, spreading the Baháʼí message.From August to December 1911, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá visited cities in Europe, including London, Bristol, and Paris.",
"The purpose of these trips was to support the Baháʼí communities in the west and to further spread his father's teachings.In the following year, he undertook a much more extensive journey to the United States and Canada to once again spread his father's teachings.",
"He arrived in New York City on 11 April 1912, after declining an offer of passage on the RMS ''Titanic'', telling the Baháʼí believers, instead, to \"Donate this to charity.\"",
"He instead travelled on a slower craft, the RMS ''Cedric'', and cited preference of a longer sea journey as the reason.",
"After hearing of the Titanic's sinking on 16 April he was quoted as saying \"I was asked to sail upon the Titanic, but my heart did not prompt me to do so.\"",
"While he spent most of his time in New York, he visited Chicago, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Washington, D.C., Boston and Philadelphia.",
"In August of the same year he started a more extensive journey to places including New Hampshire, the Green Acre school in Maine, and Montreal (his only visit to Canada).",
"He then travelled west to Minneapolis, San Francisco, Stanford, and Los Angeles before starting to return east at the end of October.",
"On 5 December 1912 he set sail back to Europe.During his visit to North America he visited many missions, churches, and groups, as well as having scores of meetings in Baháʼís' homes, and offering innumerable personal meetings with hundreds of people.",
"During his talks he proclaimed Baháʼí principles such as the unity of God, unity of the religions, oneness of humanity, equality of women and men, world peace and economic justice.",
"He also insisted that all his meetings be open to all races.His visit and talks were the subject of hundreds of newspaper articles.",
"In Boston newspaper reporters asked ʻAbdu'l-Bahá why he had come to America, and he stated that he had come to participate in conferences on peace and that just giving warning messages is not enough.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's visit to Montreal provided notable newspaper coverage; on the night of his arrival the editor of the ''Montreal Daily Star'' met with him and that newspaper along with ''The Montreal Gazette'', ''Montreal Standard'', and among others reported on ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's activities.",
"The headlines in those papers included \"Persian Teacher to Preach Peace\", \"Racialism Wrong, Says Eastern Sage, Strife and War Caused by Religious and National Prejudices\", and \"Apostle of Peace Meets Socialists, Abdul Baha's Novel Scheme for Distribution of Surplus Wealth.\"",
"The ''Montreal Standard'', which was distributed across Canada, took so much interest that it republished the articles a week later; the Gazette published six articles and Montreal's largest French language newspaper published two articles about him.",
"His 1912 visit to Montreal also inspired humourist Stephen Leacock to parody him in his bestselling 1914 book ''Arcadian Adventures with the Idle Rich''.",
"In Chicago one newspaper headline included \"His Holiness Visits Us, Not Pius X but A. Baha,\" and ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's visit to California was reported in the ''Palo Altan''.Back in Europe, he visited London, Edinburgh, Paris (where he stayed for two months), Stuttgart, Budapest, and Vienna.",
"Finally, on 12 June 1913, he returned to Egypt, where he stayed for six months before returning to Haifa.On 23 February 1914, at the eve of World War I, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá hosted Baron Edmond James de Rothschild, a member of the Rothschild banking family who was a leading advocate and financier of the Zionist movement, during one of his early trips to Palestine."
],
[
"Final years (1914–1921)",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá on Mount Carmel with pilgrims in 1919During World War I (1914–1918) ʻAbdu'l-Bahá stayed in Palestine and was unable to travel.",
"He carried on a limited correspondence, which included the ''Tablets of the Divine Plan'', a collection of 14 letters addressed to the Baháʼís of North America, later described as one of three \"charters\" of the Baháʼí Faith.",
"The letters assign a leadership role for the North American Baháʼís in spreading the religion around the planet.Haifa was under real threat of Allied bombardment, enough that ʻAbdu'l-Bahá and other Baháʼís temporarily retreated to the hills east of ʻAkka.ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was also under threats from Cemal Paşa, the Ottoman military chief who at one point expressed his desire to crucify him and destroy Baháʼí properties in Palestine.",
"The swift Megiddo offensive of the British General Allenby swept away the Turkish forces in Palestine before harm was done to the Baháʼís, and the war was over less than two months later.===Post-war period===The elderly ʻAbdu'l-BaháThe conclusion of World War I led to the openly hostile Ottoman authorities being replaced by the more friendly British Mandate, allowing for a renewal of correspondence, pilgrims, and development of the Baháʼí World Centre properties.",
"It was during this revival of activity that the Baháʼí Faith saw an expansion and consolidation in places like Egypt, the Caucasus, Iran, Turkmenistan, North America and South Asia under the leadership of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.The end of the war brought about several political developments that ʻAbdu'l-Bahá commented on.",
"The League of Nations formed in January 1920, representing the first instance of collective security through a worldwide organization.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá had written in 1875 for the need to establish a \"Union of the nations of the world\", and he praised the attempt through the League of Nations as an important step towards the goal.",
"He also said that it was \"incapable of establishing Universal Peace\" because it did not represent all nations and had only trivial power over its member states.",
"Around the same time, the British Mandate supported the ongoing immigration of Jews to Palestine.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá mentioned the immigration as a fulfillment of prophecy, and encouraged the Zionists to develop the land and \"elevate the country for all its inhabitants...",
"They must not work to separate the Jews from the other Palestinians.",
"\"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá at his investiture ceremony as a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire, April 1920The war also left the region in famine.",
"In 1901, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá had purchased about 1704 acres of scrubland near the Jordan river and by 1907 many Baháʼís from Iran had begun sharecropping on the land.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá received between 20 and 33% of their harvest (or cash equivalent), which was shipped to Haifa.",
"With the war still raging in 1917, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá received a large amount of wheat from the crops, and also bought other available wheat and shipped it all back to Haifa.",
"The wheat arrived just after the British captured Palestine, and as such was allowed to be widely distributed to allay the famine.",
"For this service in averting a famine in Northern Palestine he received the honour of Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire at a ceremony held in his honor at the home of the British Governor on 27 April 1920.He was later visited by General Allenby, King Faisal (later King of Iraq), Herbert Samuel (High Commissioner for Palestine), and Ronald Storrs (Military Governor of Jerusalem).===Death and funeral===Funeral of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá in Haifa, British Mandate-PalestineʻAbdu'l-Bahá died on Monday, 28 November 1921, sometime after 1:15 a.m. (27th of Rabi' al-awwal, 1340 AH).Then Colonial Secretary Winston Churchill telegraphed the High Commissioner for Palestine, \"convey to the Baháʼí Community, on behalf of His Majesty's Government, their sympathy and condolescence.\"",
"Similar messages came from Viscount Allenby, the Council of Ministers of Iraq, and others.On his funeral, which was held the next day, Esslemont notes:Among the talks delivered at the funeral, Shoghi Effendi records Stewart Symes giving the following tribute:He was buried in the front room of the Shrine of the Báb on Mount Carmel.",
"His interment there is meant to be temporary, until his own mausoleum can be built in the vicinity of Riḍván Garden, known as the Shrine of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.===Legacy===ʻAbdu'l-Bahá left a ''Will and Testament'' that was originally written between 1901 and 1908 and addressed to Shoghi Effendi, who at that time was only 4–11 years old.",
"The will appoints Shoghi Effendi as the first in a line of Guardians of the religion, a hereditary executive role that may provide authoritative interpretations of scripture.",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá directed all Baháʼís to turn to him and obey him, and assured him of divine protection and guidance.",
"The will also provided a formal reiteration of his teachings, such as the instructions to teach, manifest spiritual qualities, associate with all people, and shun Covenant-breakers.",
"Many obligations of the Universal House of Justice and the Hands of the Cause were also elaborated.",
"Shoghi Effendi later described the document as one of three \"charters\" of the Baháʼí Faith.The authenticity and provisions of the will were almost universally accepted by Baháʼís around the world, with the exception of Ruth White and a few other Americans who tried to protest Shoghi Effendi's leadership.In volumes of ''The Baháʼí World'' published in 1930 and 1933, Shoghi Effendi named nineteen Baháʼís as disciples of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá and heralds of the Covenant, including Thornton Chase, , John Esslemont, Lua Getsinger, and Robert Turner.",
"No other statements about them have been found in Shoghi Effendi's writings.During his lifetime there was some ambiguity among Baháʼís as to his station relative to Baháʼu'lláh, and later to Shoghi Effendi.",
"Some American newspapers reported him to be a Baháʼí prophet or the return of Christ.",
"Shoghi Effendi later formalized his legacy as the last of three \"Central Figures\" of the Baháʼí Faith and the \"Perfect exemplar\" of the teachings, also claiming that holding him on an equal status to Baháʼu'lláh or Jesus was heretical.",
"Shoghi Effendi also wrote that during the anticipated Baháʼí dispensation of 1000 years there will be no equal to ʻAbdu'l-Bahá."
],
[
"Appearance and personality",
"ʻAbdu'l-Bahá in 1868ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was described as handsome, and bore striking resemblance to his mother.",
"As an adult he reached medium height but he gave the impression of being taller.",
"He had dark hair that flowed to his shoulders, grey coloured eyes, a fair complexion and an aquiline nose.",
"In 1890, Orientalist Edward Granville Browne met him and wrote:After the death of Bahá’u’lláh, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá began to visibly age.",
"By the late 1890s his hair had turned snow-white and deep lines set on his face.",
"As a young man he was athletic and enjoyed archery, horseback riding and swimming.",
"Even later in his life ʻAbdu'l-Bahá remained active going for long walks in Haifa and Acre.ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was a major presence for the Bahá’ís during his lifetime, and he continues to influence the Bahá’í community today.",
"Bahá’ís regard ‘Abdu’l-Bahá as the perfect example of the teachings of his father and therefore strive to emulate him.",
"Anecdotes about him are frequently used to illustrate particular points about morality and interpersonal relations.",
"He was remembered for his charisma, compassion, philanthropy and strength in the face of suffering.",
"John Esslemont reflected that \"‘Abdu’l-Bahá showed that it is still possible, amid the whirl and rush of modern life, amid the self-love and struggle for material prosperity that everywhere prevail, to live the life of entire devotion to God and to the service of one's fellows.",
"\"Even ardent enemies of the Bahá’í Faith were on occasion taken by meeting him.",
"Mírzá 'Abdu'l-Muḥammad Írání Mu'addibu's-Sulṭán, an Iranian, and Shaykh 'Alí Yúsuf, an Arab, were both newspaper editors in Egypt who had published harsh attacks on the Bahá’í Faith in their papers.",
"They called on ‘Abdu’l-Bahá when he was in Egypt and their attitude changed.",
"Similarly, a Christian clergyman, Rev.",
"J.T.",
"Bixby, who was the author of a hostile article on the Bahá’í Faith in the United States, felt compelled to witness Abdu'l-Bahá's personal qualities.",
"The effect of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá on those who were already committed Bahá’ís was greater still.ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was widely known for his encounters with the poor and dying.",
"His generosity resulted in his own family complaining that they were left with nothing.",
"He was sensitive to people’s feelings, and later expressed his wish to be a beloved figure of the Bahá’ís saying “I am your father...and you must be glad and rejoice, for I love you exceedingly.” According to historical accounts, he had a keen sense of humour and was relaxed and informal.",
"He was open about personal tragedies such as the loss of his children and the sufferings he'd endured as a prisoner, further enhancing his popularity.‘Abdu’l-Bahá directed the affairs of the Bahá’í community with care.",
"He was inclined to allow a large range of personal interpretations of the Bahá’í teachings as long as these did not obviously contradict fundamental principles.",
"He did, however, expel members of the religion he felt were challenging his leadership and deliberately causing disunity in the community.",
"Outbreaks of persecution of the Bahá’ís affected him deeply.",
"He wrote personally to the families of those who had been martyred."
],
[
"Works",
"The total estimated number of tablets that ʻAbdu'l-Bahá wrote are over 27,000 of which only a fraction have been translated into English.",
"His works fall into two groups including first his direct writings and second his lectures and speeches as noted by others.",
"The first group includes ''The Secret of Divine Civilization'' written before 1875, ''A Traveller's Narrative'' written around 1886, the Resāla-ye sīāsīya or ''Sermon on the Art of Governance'' written in 1893, the ''Memorials of the Faithful'', and a large number of tablets written to various people; including various Western intellectuals such as Auguste Forel which has been translated and published as the ''Tablet to Auguste-Henri Forel''.",
"The ''Secret of Divine Civilization'' and the ''Sermon on the Art of Governance'' were widely circulated anonymously.The second group includes ''Some Answered Questions'', which is an English translation of a series of table talks with Laura Barney, and ''Paris Talks'', ''ʻAbdu'l-Baha in London'' and ''Promulgation of Universal Peace'' which are respectively addresses given by ʻAbdu'l-Bahá in Paris, London and the United States.The following is a list of some of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's many books, tablets, and talks:*''Foundations of World Unity''* '' Light of the World: Selected Tablets of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá''.",
"*''Memorials of the Faithful''*''Paris Talks''*''Secret of Divine Civilization''*''Some Answered Questions''*''Tablets of the Divine Plan''*''Tablet to Auguste-Henri Forel''*''Tablet to The Hague''*''Will and Testament of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá''*''Promulgation of Universal Peace''*''Selections from the Writings of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá''*''Divine Philosophy''*Treatise on Politics / Sermon on the Art of Governance"
],
[
"See also",
"*Baháʼu'lláh's family*Mírzá Mihdí*Ásíyih Khánum*Bahíyyih Khánum*Munirih Khánum*Shoghi Effendi*House of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá"
],
[
"Further reading",
"*"
],
[
"Explanatory notes"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References",
"**************** ********"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* Lincoln, Joshua (2023).",
"''Abdu'l-Bahā 'Abbās - Head of The Bahā'ī Faith; A Life in Social and Regional Context.",
"Idra Publishing.",
"*"
],
[
"External links",
"* Writings and Talks of ‘Abdu’l‑Bahá at Bahai.org* * Bahai org: Exemplar, documentary film (2021)* The Extraordinary Life of 'Abdu'l-Bahá, by the Utterance Project"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Ambrose of Alexandria"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Ambrose of Alexandria''' (before 212 – c. 250) was a friend of the Christian theologian Origen.",
"Ambrose was attracted by Origen's fame as a teacher, and visited the Catechetical School of Alexandria in 212.At first a gnostic Valentinian and Marcionist, Ambrose, through Origen's teaching, eventually rejected this theology and became Origen's constant companion, and was ordained deacon.",
"He plied Origen with questions, and urged him to write his Commentaries (treating him as \"\" in ''Commentary on John'' V,1) on the books of the Bible, and, as a wealthy nobleman and courtier, he provided his teacher with books for his studies and secretaries to lighten the labor of composition.He suffered during the persecution under the Roman emperor Maximinus Thrax in 235.He was later released and died a confessor.",
"The last mention of Ambrose in the historical record is in Origen's ''Contra Celsum,'' which the latter wrote at the solicitation of Ambrose.Origen often speaks of Ambrose affectionately as a man of education with excellent literary and scholarly tastes.",
"All of Origen's works written after 218 are dedicated to Ambrose, including his ''On Martyrdom'', ''Contra Celsum'', ''Commentary on St. John's Gospel'', and ''On Prayer''.",
"Ambrose's letters to Origen (praised by Jerome) are lost, although part of one exists."
],
[
"Veneration",
"Ambrose is venerated as a saint by some branches of Christianity.",
"His feast day in the Catholic Church falls on 17 March."
],
[
"References"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Autonomous building"
],
[
"Introduction",
"An '''autonomous building''' is a building designed to be operated independently from infrastructural support services such as the electric power grid, gas grid, municipal water systems, sewage treatment systems, storm drains, communication services, and in some cases, public roads.Advocates of autonomous building describe advantages that include reduced environmental impacts, increased security, and lower costs of ownership.",
"Some cited advantages satisfy tenets of green building, not independence per se (see below).",
"Off-grid buildings often rely very little on civil services and are therefore safer and more comfortable during civil disaster or military attacks.",
"For example, Off-grid buildings would not lose power or water if public supplies were compromised.As of 2018, most research and published articles concerning autonomous building focus on residential homes.In 2002, British architects Brenda and Robert Vale said thatIt is quite possible in all parts of Australia to construct a 'house with no bills', which would be comfortable without heating and cooling, which would make its own electricity, collect its own water and deal with its own waste...These houses can be built now, using off-the-shelf techniques.",
"It is possible to build a \"house with no bills\" for the same price as a conventional house, but it would be (25%) smaller."
],
[
"History",
"In the 1970s, groups of activists and engineers were inspired by the warnings of imminent resource depletion and starvation.",
"In the United States a group calling themselves the New Alchemists were famous for the depth of research effort placed in their projects.",
"Using conventional construction techniques, they designed a series of \"bioshelter\" projects, the most famous of which was The Ark bioshelter community for Prince Edward Island.",
"They published the plans for all of these, with detailed design calculations and blueprints.",
"The Ark used wind-based water pumping and electricity and was self-contained in food production.",
"It had living quarters for people, fish tanks raising tilapia for protein, a greenhouse watered with fish water, and a closed-loop sewage reclamation system that recycled human waste into sanitized fertilizer for the fish tanks.",
"As of January 2010, the successor organization to the New Alchemists has a web page up as the \"New Alchemy Institute\".",
"The PEI Ark has been abandoned and partially renovated several times.The bathroom of an Earthship, featuring a recycled bottle wallThe 1990s saw the development of Earthships, similar in intent to the Ark project, but organized as a for-profit venture, with construction details published in a series of 3 books by Mike Reynolds.",
"The building material is tires filled with earth.",
"This makes a wall that has large amounts of thermal mass (see earth sheltering).",
"Berms are placed on exposed surfaces to further increase the house's temperature stability.",
"The water system starts with rain water, processed for drinking, then washing, then plant watering, then toilet flushing, and finally black water is recycled again for more plant watering.",
"The cisterns are placed and used as thermal masses.",
"Power, including electricity, heat and water heating, is from solar power.1990s architects such as William McDonough and Ken Yeang applied environmentally responsible building design to large commercial buildings, such as office buildings, making them largely self-sufficient in energy production.",
"One major bank building (ING's Amsterdam headquarters) in the Netherlands was constructed to be autonomous and artistic as well."
],
[
"Advantages",
"As an architect or engineer becomes more concerned with the disadvantages of transportation networks, and dependence on distant resources, their designs tend to include more autonomous elements.",
"The historic path to autonomy was a concern for secure sources of heat, power, water and food.",
"A nearly parallel path toward autonomy has been to start with a concern for environmental impacts, which cause disadvantages.Autonomous buildings can increase security and reduce environmental impacts by using on-site resources (such as sunlight and rain) that would otherwise be wasted.",
"Autonomy often dramatically reduces the costs and impacts of networks that serve the building, because autonomy short-circuits the multiplying inefficiencies of collecting and transporting resources.",
"Other impacted resources, such as oil reserves and the retention of the local watershed, can often be cheaply conserved by thoughtful designs.Autonomous buildings are usually energy-efficient in operation, and therefore cost-efficient, for the obvious reason that smaller energy needs are easier to satisfy off-grid.",
"But they may substitute energy production or other techniques to avoid diminishing returns in extreme conservation.An autonomous structure is not always environmentally friendly.",
"The goal of independence from support systems is associated with, but not identical to, other goals of environmentally responsible green building.",
"However, autonomous buildings also usually include some degree of sustainability through the use of renewable energy and other renewable resources, producing no more greenhouse gases than they consume, and other measures."
],
[
"Disadvantages",
"First and fundamentally, independence is a matter of degree.",
"For example, eliminating dependence on the electrical grid is relatively easy.",
"In contrast, running an efficient, reliable food source can be a chore.Living within an autonomous shelter may also require sacrifices in lifestyle or social opportunities.",
"Even the most comfortable and technologically advanced autonomous homes could require alterations of residents' behavior.",
"Some may not welcome the extra chores.",
"The Vails described some clients' experiences as inconvenient, irritating, isolating, or even as an unwanted full-time job.",
"A well-designed building can reduce this issue, but usually at the expense of reduced autonomy.An autonomous house must be custom-built (or extensively retrofitted) to suit the climate and location.",
"Passive solar techniques, alternative toilet and sewage systems, thermal massing designs, basement battery systems, efficient windowing, and the array of other design tactics require some degree of non-standard construction, added expense, ongoing experimentation and maintenance, and also have an effect on the psychology of the space."
],
[
"Systems",
"This section includes some minimal descriptions of methods, to give some feel for such a building's practicality, provide indexes to further information, and give a sense of modern trends.===Water===A domestic rainwater harvesting systemA concrete under-floor cistern being installed.There are many methods of collecting and conserving water.",
"Use reduction is cost-effective.Greywater systems reuse drained wash water to flush toilets or to water lawns and gardens.",
"Greywater systems can halve the water use of most residential buildings; however, they require the purchase of a sump, greywater pressurization pump, and secondary plumbing.",
"Some builders are installing waterless urinals and even composting toilets that eliminate water usage in sewage disposal.The classic solution with minimal life-style changes is using a well.",
"Once drilled, a well-foot requires substantial power.",
"However, advanced well-foots can reduce power usage by twofold or more from older models.",
"Well water can be contaminated in some areas.",
"The Sono arsenic filter eliminates unhealthy arsenic in well water.However drilling a well is an uncertain activity, with aquifers depleted in some areas.",
"It can also be expensive.In regions with sufficient rainfall, it is often more economical to design a building to use rainwater harvesting, with supplementary water deliveries in a drought.",
"Rain water makes excellent soft washwater, but needs antibacterial treatment.",
"If used for drinking, mineral supplements or mineralization is necessary.Most desert and temperate climates get at least of rain per year.",
"This means that a typical one-story house with a greywater system can supply its year-round water needs from its roof alone.",
"In the driest areas, it might require a cistern of .",
"Many areas average of rain per week, and these can use a cistern as small as .In many areas, it is difficult to keep a roof clean enough for drinking.",
"To reduce dirt and bad tastes, systems use a metal collecting-roof and a \"roof cleaner\" tank that diverts the first 40 liters.",
"Cistern water is usually chlorinated, though reverse osmosis systems provide even better quality drinking water.In the classic Roman house (\"Domus\"), household water was provided from a cistern (the \"impluvium\"), which was a decorative feature of the atrium, the house's main public space.",
"It was fed by downspout tiles from the inward-facing roof-opening (the \"compluvium\").",
"Often water lilies were grown in it to purify the water.",
"Wealthy households often supplemented the rain with a small fountain fed from a city's cistern.",
"The impluvium always had an overflow drain so it could not flood the house.Modern cisterns are usually large plastic tanks.",
"Gravity tanks on short towers are reliable, so pump repairs are less urgent.",
"The least expensive bulk cistern is a fenced pond or pool at ground level.Reducing autonomy reduces the size and expense of cisterns.",
"Many autonomous homes can reduce water use below per person per day, so that in a drought a month of water can be delivered inexpensively via truck.",
"Self-delivery is often possible by installing fabric water tanks that fit the bed of a pick-up truck.It can be convenient to use the cistern as a heat sink or trap for a heat pump or air conditioning system; however this can make cold drinking water warm, and in drier years may decrease the efficiency of the HVAC system.Solar stills can efficiently produce drinking water from ditch water or cistern water, especially high-efficiency multiple effect humidification designs, which separate the evaporator(s) and condenser(s).New technologies, like reverse osmosis can create unlimited amounts of pure water from polluted water, ocean water, and even from humid air.",
"Watermakers are available for yachts that convert seawater and electricity into potable water and brine.",
"Atmospheric water generators extract moisture from dry desert air and filter it to pure water.===Sewage=======Resource====A composting toiletComposting toilets use bacteria to decompose human feces into useful, odourless, sanitary compost.",
"The process is sanitary because soil bacteria eat the human pathogens as well as most of the mass of the waste.",
"Nevertheless, most health authorities forbid direct use of \"humanure\" for growing food.",
"The risk is microbial and viral contamination, as well as heavy metal toxicity.",
"In a dry composting toilet, the waste is evaporated or digested to gas (mostly carbon dioxide) and vented, so a toilet produces only a few pounds of compost every six months.",
"To control the odor, modern toilets use a small fan to keep the toilet under negative pressure, and exhaust the gasses to a vent pipe.Some home sewage treatment systems use biological treatment, usually beds of plants and aquaria, that absorb nutrients and bacteria and convert greywater and sewage to clear water.",
"This odor- and color-free reclaimed water can be used to flush toilets and water outside plants.",
"When tested, it approaches standards for potable water.",
"In climates that freeze, the plants and aquaria need to be kept in a small greenhouse space.",
"Good systems need about as much care as a large aquarium.Electric incinerating toilets turn excrement into a small amount of ash.",
"They are cool to the touch, have no water and no pipes, and require an air vent in a wall.",
"They are used in remote areas where use of septic tanks is limited, usually to reduce nutrient loads in lakes.NASA's bioreactor is an extremely advanced biological sewage system.",
"It can turn sewage into air and water through microbial action.",
"NASA plans to use it in the crewed Mars mission.",
"Another method is NASA's urine-to-water distillation system.A big disadvantage of complex biological sewage treatment systems is that if the house is empty, the sewage system biota may starve to death.====Waste====Sewage handling is essential for public health.",
"Many diseases are transmitted by poorly functioning sewage systems.The standard system is a tiled leach field combined with a septic tank.",
"The basic idea is to provide a small system with primary sewage treatment.",
"Sludge settles to the bottom of the septic tank, is partially reduced by anaerobic digestion, and fluid is dispersed in the leach field.",
"The leach field is usually under a yard growing grass.",
"Septic tanks can operate entirely by gravity, and if well managed, are reasonably safe.Septic tanks have to be pumped periodically by a vacuum truck to eliminate non reducing solids.",
"Failure to pump a septic tank can cause overflow that damages the leach field, and contaminates ground water.",
"Septic tanks may also require some lifestyle changes, such as not using garbage disposals, minimizing fluids flushed into the tank, and minimizing non-digestible solids flushed into the tank.",
"For example, septic safe toilet paper is recommended.However, septic tanks remain popular because they permit standard plumbing fixtures, and require few or no lifestyle sacrifices.Composting or packaging toilets make it economical and sanitary to throw away sewage as part of the normal garbage collection service.",
"They also reduce water use by half, and eliminate the difficulty and expense of septic tanks.",
"However, they require the local landfill to use sanitary practices.Incinerator systems are quite practical.",
"The ashes are biologically safe, and less than 1/10 the volume of the original waste, but like all incinerator waste, are usually classified as hazardous waste.Traditional methods of sewage handling include pit toilets, latrines, and outhouses.",
"These can be safe, inexpensive and practical.",
"They are still used in many regions.===Storm drains===Drainage systems are a crucial compromise between human habitability and a secure, sustainable watershed.",
"Paved areas and lawns or turf do not allow much precipitation to filter through the ground to recharge aquifers.",
"They can cause flooding and damage in neighbourhoods, as the water flows over the surface towards a low point.Typically, elaborate, capital-intensive storm sewer networks are engineered to deal with stormwater.",
"In some cities, such as the Victorian era London sewers or much of the old City of Toronto, the storm water system is combined with the sanitary sewer system.",
"In the event of heavy precipitation, the load on the sewage treatment plant at the end of the pipe becomes too great to handle and raw sewage is dumped into holding tanks, and sometimes into surface water.Autonomous buildings can address precipitation in a number of ways.",
"If a water-absorbing swale for each yard is combined with permeable concrete streets, storm drains can be omitted from the neighbourhood.",
"This can save more than $800 per house (1970s) by eliminating storm drains.",
"One way to use the savings is to purchase larger lots, which permits more amenities at the same cost.",
"Permeable concrete is an established product in warm climates, and in development for freezing climates.",
"In freezing climates, the elimination of storm drains can often still pay for enough land to construct swales (shallow water collecting ditches) or water impeding berms instead.",
"This plan provides more land for homeowners and can offer more interesting topography for landscaping.",
"Additionally, a green roof captures precipitation and uses the water to grow plants.",
"It can be built into a new building or used to replace an existing roof.===Electricity===Wind turbine on the roof in Manchester, UKA PV-solar systemSince electricity is an expensive utility, the first step towards autonomy is to design a house and lifestyle to reduce demand.",
"LED lights, laptop computers and gas-powered refrigerators save electricity, although gas-powered refrigerators are not very efficient.",
"There are also superefficient electric refrigerators, such as those produced by the Sun Frost company, some of which use only about half as much electricity as a mass-market energy star-rated refrigerator.Using a solar roof, solar cells can provide electric power.",
"Solar roofs can be more cost-effective than retrofitted solar power, because buildings need roofs anyway.",
"Modern solar cells last about 40 years, which makes them a reasonable investment in some areas.",
"At a sufficient angle, solar cells are cleaned by run-off rain water and therefore have almost no life-style impact.Many areas have long winter nights or dark cloudy days.",
"In these climates, a solar installation might not pay for itself or large battery storage systems are necessary to achieve electric self-sufficiency.",
"In stormy or windy climates, wind turbines can replace or significantly supplement solar power.",
"The average autonomous house needs only one small wind turbine, 5 metres or less in diameter.",
"On a 30-metre (100-foot) tower, this turbine can provide enough power to supplement solar power on cloudy days.",
"Commercially available wind turbines use sealed, one-moving-part AC generators and passive, self-feathering blades for years of operation without service.The main advantage of wind power is that larger wind turbines have a lower per-watt cost than solar cells, provided there is wind.",
"Turbine location is critical: just as some locations lack sun for solar cells, many areas lack enough wind to make a turbine pay for itself.",
"In the Great Plains of the United States, a 10-metre (33-foot) turbine can supply enough energy to heat and cool a well-built all-electric house.",
"Economic use in other areas requires research, and possibly a site survey.Some sites have access to a stream with a change in elevation.",
"These sites can use small hydropower systems to generate electricity.",
"If the difference in elevation is above 30 metres (100 feet), and the stream runs in all seasons, this can provide continuous power with a small, inexpensive installation.",
"Lower changes of elevation require larger installations or dams, and can be less efficient.",
"Clogging at the turbine intake can be a practical problem.",
"The usual solution is a small pool and waterfall (a penstock) to carry away floating debris.",
"Another solution is to utilize a turbine that resists debris, such as a Gorlov helical turbine or Ossberger turbine.During times of low demand, excess power can be stored in batteries for future use.",
"However, batteries need to be replaced every few years.",
"In many areas, battery expenses can be eliminated by attaching the building to the electric power grid and operating the power system with net metering.",
"Utility permission is required, but such cooperative generation is legally mandated in some areas (for example, California).A grid-based building is less autonomous, but more economical and sustainable with fewer lifestyle sacrifices.",
"In rural areas the grid's cost and impacts can be reduced by using single-wire earth return systems (for example, the MALT-system).In areas that lack access to the grid, battery size can be reduced with a generator to recharge the batteries during energy droughts such as extended fogs.",
"Auxiliary generators are usually run from propane, natural gas, or sometimes diesel.",
"An hour of charging usually provides a day of operation.",
"Modern residential chargers permit the user to set the charging times, so the generator is quiet at night.",
"Some generators automatically test themselves once per week.Recent advances in passively stable magnetic bearings may someday permit inexpensive storage of power in a flywheel in a vacuum.",
"Research groups like Canada's Ballard Power Systems are also working to develop a \"regenerative fuel cell\", a device that can generate hydrogen and oxygen when power is available, and combine these efficiently when power is needed.Earth batteries tap electric currents in the earth called telluric current.",
"They can be installed anywhere in the ground.",
"They provide only low voltages and current.",
"They were used to power telegraphs in the 19th century.",
"As appliance efficiencies increase, they may become practical.Microbial fuel cells and thermoelectric generators allow electricity to be generated from biomass.",
"The plant can be dried, chopped and converted or burned as a whole, or it can be left alive so that waste saps from the plant can be converted by bacteria.===Heating===Schematic of an active solar heating systemMost autonomous buildings are designed to use insulation, thermal mass and passive solar heating and cooling.",
"Examples of these are trombe walls and other technologies as skylights.Passive solar heating can heat most buildings in even the mild and chilly climates.",
"In colder climates, extra construction costs can be as little as 15% more than new, conventional buildings.",
"In warm climates, those having less than two weeks of frosty nights per year, there is no cost impact.The basic requirement for passive solar heating is that the solar collectors must face the prevailing sunlight (south in the Northern Hemisphere, north in the Southern Hemisphere), and the building must incorporate thermal mass to keep it warm in the night.A recent, somewhat experimental solar heating system \"Annualized geo solar heating\" is practical even in regions that get little or no sunlight in winter.",
"It uses the ground beneath a building for thermal mass.",
"Precipitation can carry away the heat, so the ground is shielded with skirts of plastic insulation.",
"The thermal mass of this system is sufficiently inexpensive and large that it can store enough summer heat to warm a building for the whole winter, and enough winter cold to cool the building in summer.In annualized geo solar systems, the solar collector is often separate from (and hotter or colder than) the living space.",
"The building may actually be constructed from insulation, for example, straw-bale construction.",
"Some buildings have been aerodynamically designed so that convection via ducts and interior spaces eliminates any need for electric fans.A more modest \"daily solar\" design is practical.",
"For example, for about a 15% premium in building costs, the Passivhaus building codes in Europe use high performance insulating windows, R-30 insulation, HRV ventilation, and a small thermal mass.",
"With modest changes in the building's position, modern krypton- or argon-insulated windows permit normal-looking windows to provide passive solar heat without compromising insulation or structural strength.",
"If a small heater is available for the coldest nights, a slab or basement cistern can inexpensively provide the required thermal mass.",
"Passivhaus building codes, in particular, bring unusually good interior air quality, because the buildings change the air several times per hour, passing it through a heat exchanger to keep heat inside.In all systems, a small supplementary heater increases personal security and reduces lifestyle impacts for a small reduction of autonomy.",
"The two most popular heaters for ultra-high-efficiency houses are a small heat pump, which also provides air conditioning, or a central hydronic (radiator) air heater with water recirculating from the water heater.",
"Passivhaus designs usually integrate the heater with the ventilation system.Earth sheltering and windbreaks can also reduce the absolute amount of heat needed by a building.",
"Several feet below the earth, temperature ranges from in North Dakota to , in Southern Florida.",
"Wind breaks reduce the amount of heat carried away from a building.Rounded, aerodynamic buildings also lose less heat.An increasing number of commercial buildings use a combined cycle with cogeneration to provide heating, often water heating, from the output of a natural gas reciprocating engine, gas turbine or stirling electric generator.Houses designed to cope with interruptions in civil services generally incorporate a wood stove, or heat and power from diesel fuel or bottled gas, regardless of their other heating mechanisms.Electric heaters and electric stoves may provide pollution-free heat (depending on the power source), but use large amounts of electricity.",
"If enough electricity is provided by solar panels, wind turbines, or other means, then electric heaters and stoves become a practical autonomous design.===Water heating===Hot water heat recycling units recover heat from water drain lines.",
"They increase a building's autonomy by decreasing the heat or fuel used to heat water.",
"They are attractive because they have no lifestyle changes.Current practical, comfortable domestic water-heating systems combine a solar preheating system with a thermostatic gas-powered flow-through heater, so that the temperature of the water is consistent, and the amount is unlimited.",
"This reduces life-style impacts at some cost in autonomy.Solar water heaters can save large amounts of fuel.",
"Also, small changes in lifestyle, such as doing laundry, dishes and bathing on sunny days, can greatly increase their efficiency.",
"Pure solar heaters are especially useful for laundries, swimming pools and external baths, because these can be scheduled for use on sunny days.The basic trick in a solar water heating system is to use a well-insulated holding tank.",
"Some systems are vacuum- insulated, acting something like large thermos bottles.",
"The tank is filled with hot water on sunny days, and made available at all times.",
"Unlike a conventional tank water heater, the tank is filled only when there is sunlight.",
"Good storage makes a smaller, higher-technology collector feasible.",
"Such collectors can use relatively exotic technologies, such as vacuum insulation, and reflective concentration of sunlight.Cogeneration systems produce hot water from waste heat.",
"They usually get the heat from the exhaust of a generator or fuel cell.Heat recycling, cogeneration and solar pre-heating can save 50–75% of the gas otherwise used.",
"Also, some combinations provide redundant reliability by having several sources of heat.Some authorities advocate replacing bottled gas or natural gas with biogas.",
"However, this is usually impractical unless live-stock are on-site.",
"The wastes of a single family are usually insufficient to produce enough methane for anything more than small amounts of cooking.===Cooling===Annualized geo solar buildings often have buried, sloped water-tight skirts of insulation that extend from the foundations, to prevent heat leakage between the earth used as thermal mass, and the surface.Less dramatic improvements are possible.",
"Windows can be shaded in summer.",
"Eaves can be overhung to provide the necessary shade.",
"These also shade the walls of the house, reducing cooling costs.Another trick is to cool the building's thermal mass at night, perhaps with a whole-house fan and then cool the building from the thermal mass during the day.",
"It helps to be able to route cold air from a sky-facing radiator (perhaps an air heating solar collector with an alternate purpose) or evaporative cooler directly through the thermal mass.",
"On clear nights, even in tropical areas, sky-facing radiators can cool below freezing.If a circular building is aerodynamically smooth, and cooler than the ground, it can be passively cooled by the \"dome effect.\"",
"Many installations have reported that a reflective or light-colored dome induces a local vertical heat-driven vortex that sucks cooler overhead air downward into a dome if the dome is vented properly (a single overhead vent, and peripheral vents).",
"Some people have reported a temperature differential as high as () between the inside of the dome and the outside.",
"Buckminster Fuller discovered this effect with a simple house design adapted from a grain silo, and adapted his Dymaxion house and geodesic domes to use it.Refrigerators and air conditioners operating from the waste heat of a diesel engine exhaust, heater flue or solar collector are entering use.",
"These use the same principles as a gas refrigerator.",
"Normally, the heat from a flue powers an \"absorptive chiller\".",
"The cold water or brine from the chiller is used to cool air or a refrigerated space.Cogeneration is popular in new commercial buildings.",
"In current cogeneration systems small gas turbines or stirling engines powered from natural gas produce electricity and their exhaust drives an absorptive chiller.A truck trailer refrigerator operating from the waste heat of a tractor's diesel exhaust was demonstrated by NRG Solutions, Inc. NRG developed a hydronic ammonia gas heat exchanger and vaporizer, the two essential new, not commercially available components of a waste heat driven refrigerator.A similar scheme (multiphase cooling) can be by a multistage evaporative cooler.",
"The air is passed through a spray of salt solution to dehumidify it, then through a spray of water solution to cool it, then another salt solution to dehumidify it again.",
"The brine has to be regenerated, and that can be done economically with a low-temperature solar still.",
"Multiphase evaporative coolers can lower the air's temperature by 50 °F (28 °C), and still control humidity.",
"If the brine regenerator uses high heat, it also partially sterilises to the air.If enough electric power is available, cooling can be provided by conventional air conditioning using a heat pump.===Food production===Food production has often been included in historic autonomous projects to provide security.Skilled, intensive gardening can support an adult from as little as 100 square meters of land per person,possibly requiring the use of organic farming and aeroponics.",
"Some proven intensive, low-effort food-production systems include urban gardening (indoors and outdoors).",
"Indoor cultivation may be set up using hydroponics, while outdoor cultivation may be done using permaculture, forest gardening, no-till farming, and do nothing farming.Greenhouses are also sometimes included.",
"Sometimes they are also outfitted with irrigation systems or heat sink systems which can respectively irrigate the plants or help to store energy from the sun and redistribute it at night (when the greenhouses starts to cool down)."
],
[
"See also"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"External links",
"* The Buckminster Fuller Institute is still in existence.",
"B. Fuller left thousands of pages of notes to the university where he last taught.",
"* There is a section on Autonomous Houses in the Reality Sculptors wiki, including links to a mailing list which frequently discusses autonomous design considerations.",
"* Designs for a geodesic dome version of an Autonomous House can be found at reality.sculptors.com.",
"* \"Wind Power for Home and Business\" by Paul Gipe* An opinion piece by Brenda and Robert Vale* The Cropthorne House - notes on design and comparison with the Vales' Southwell House* Bad End 2 - 21st Century Hobbit Hole - precast concrete in home construction* Off-grid.net* Self Sufficiency Guide* Self Sufficient Living * GreenSpec"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Anubis"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Anubis as a jackal perched atop a tomb, symbolizing his protection of the necropolis'''Anubis''' (; ), also known as '''Inpu''', '''Inpw''', '''Jnpw''', or '''Anpu''' in Ancient Egyptian (), is the god of funerary rites, protector of graves, and guide to the underworld, in ancient Egyptian religion, usually depicted as a canine or a man with a canine head.Like many ancient Egyptian deities, Anubis assumed different roles in various contexts.",
"Depicted as a protector of graves as early as the First Dynasty (), Anubis was also an embalmer.",
"By the Middle Kingdom (c. 2055–1650 BC) he was replaced by Osiris in his role as lord of the underworld.",
"One of his prominent roles was as a god who ushered souls into the afterlife.",
"He attended the weighing scale during the \"Weighing of the Heart\", in which it was determined whether a soul would be allowed to enter the realm of the dead.",
"Anubis is one of the most frequently depicted and mentioned gods in the Egyptian pantheon; however, no relevant myth involved him.Anubis was depicted in black, a color that symbolized regeneration, life, the soil of the Nile River, and the discoloration of the corpse after embalming.",
"Anubis is associated with his brother Wepwawet, another Egyptian god portrayed with a dog's head or in canine form, but with grey or white fur.",
"Historians assume that the two figures were eventually combined.",
"Anubis' female counterpart is Anput.",
"His daughter is the serpent goddess Kebechet."
],
[
"Name",
"\"Anubis\" is a Greek rendering of this god's Egyptian name.",
"Before the Greeks arrived in Egypt, around the 7th century BC, the god was known as ''Anpu'' or ''Inpu.''",
"The root of the name in ancient Egyptian language means \"a royal child.\"",
"''Inpu'' has a root to \"inp\", which means \"to decay.\"",
"The god was also known as \"First of the Westerners,\" \"Lord of the Sacred Land,\" \"He Who is Upon his Sacred Mountain,\" \"Ruler of the Nine Bows,\" \"The Dog who Swallows Millions,\" \"Master of Secrets,\" \"He Who is in the Place of Embalming,\" and \"Foremost of the Divine Booth.\"",
"The positions that he had were also reflected in the titles he held such as \"He Who Is upon His Mountain,\" \"Lord of the Sacred Land,\" \"Foremost of the Westerners,\" and \"He Who Is in the Place of Embalming.\"",
"In the Old Kingdom (), the standard way of writing his name in hieroglyphs was composed of the sound signs '''''inpw''''' followed by a jackal over a ''ḥtp'' sign: i-n:p-w-C6 A new form with the jackal on a tall stand appeared in the late Old Kingdom and became common thereafter: i-n:p-w-E16Anubis' name ''jnpw'' was possibly pronounced a.ˈna.pʰa(w), based on Coptic ''Anoup'' and the Akkadian transcription in the name \"Reanapa\" that appears in Amarna letter EA 315.However, this transcription may also be interpreted as ''rˁ-nfr'', a name similar to that of Prince Ranefer of the Fourth Dynasty."
],
[
"History",
"Anubis attending the upright=1Portable shrine of Anubis, exposition in Paris, from the Tomb of Tutankhamun (KV62)In Egypt's Early Dynastic period (), Anubis was portrayed in full animal form, with a \"jackal\" head and body.",
"A jackal god, probably Anubis, is depicted in stone inscriptions from the reigns of Hor-Aha, Djer, and other pharaohs of the First Dynasty.",
"Since Predynastic Egypt, when the dead were buried in shallow graves, jackals had been strongly associated with cemeteries because they were scavengers which uncovered human bodies and ate their flesh.",
"In the spirit of \"fighting like with like,\" a jackal was chosen to protect the dead, because \"a common problem (and cause of concern) must have been the digging up of bodies, shortly after burial, by jackals and other wild dogs which lived on the margins of the cultivation.",
"\"In the Old Kingdom, Anubis was the most important god of the dead.",
"He was replaced in that role by Osiris during the Middle Kingdom (2000–1700 BC).",
"In the Roman era, which started in 30 BC, tomb paintings depict him holding the hand of deceased persons to guide them to Osiris.The parentage of Anubis varied between myths, times and sources.",
"In early mythology, he was portrayed as a son of Ra.",
"In the Coffin Texts, which were written in the First Intermediate Period (c. 2181–2055 BC), Anubis is the son of either the cow goddess Hesat or the cat-headed Bastet.",
"Another tradition depicted him as the son of Ra and Nephthys.",
"The Greek Plutarch (c. 40–120 AD) reported a tradition that Anubis was the illegitimate son of Nephthys and Osiris, but that he was adopted by Osiris's wife Isis:George Hart sees this story as an \"attempt to incorporate the independent deity Anubis into the Osirian pantheon.\"",
"An Egyptian papyrus from the Roman period (30–380 AD) simply called Anubis the \"son of Isis.\"",
"In Nubia, Anubis was seen as the husband of his mother Nephthys.Hermanubis in the November panel of a Roman mosaic calendar from Sousse, Tunisia.In the Ptolemaic period (350–30 BC), when Egypt became a Hellenistic kingdom ruled by Greek pharaohs, Anubis was merged with the Greek god Hermes, becoming Hermanubis.",
"The two gods were considered similar because they both guided souls to the afterlife.",
"The center of this cult was in ''uten-ha''/''Sa-ka''/ Cynopolis, a place whose Greek name means \"city of dogs.\"",
"In Book XI of ''The Golden Ass'' by Apuleius, there is evidence that the worship of this god was continued in Rome through at least the 2nd century.",
"Indeed, Hermanubis also appears in the alchemical and hermetical literature of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.Although the Greeks and Romans typically scorned Egyptian animal-headed gods as bizarre and primitive (Anubis was mockingly called \"Barker\" by the Greeks), Anubis was sometimes associated with Sirius in the heavens and Cerberus and Hades in the underworld.",
"In his dialogues, Plato often has Socrates utter oaths \"by the dog\" (Greek: ''kai me ton kuna''), \"by the dog of Egypt\", and \"by the dog, the god of the Egyptians\", both for emphasis and to appeal to Anubis as an arbiter of truth in the underworld."
],
[
"Roles",
"===Embalmer===As ''jmy-wt'' (Imiut or the Imiut fetish) \"He who is in the place of embalming\", Anubis was associated with mummification.",
"He was also called ''ḫnty zḥ-nṯr'' \"He who presides over the god's booth\", in which \"booth\" could refer either to the place where embalming was carried out or the pharaoh's burial chamber.In the Osiris myth, Anubis helped Isis to embalm Osiris.",
"Indeed, when the Osiris myth emerged, it was said that after Osiris had been killed by Set, Osiris's organs were given to Anubis as a gift.",
"With this connection, Anubis became the patron god of embalmers; during the rites of mummification, illustrations from the ''Book of the Dead'' often show a wolf-mask-wearing priest supporting the upright mummy.===Protector of tombs===The Opening of the Mouth ceremony being performed on a mummy before the tomb.",
"Anubis attending the mummy of the deceased.",
"Extract from the Papyrus of Hunefer, a 19th-Dynasty Book of the Dead (c. 1300 BC) Anubis was a protector of graves and cemeteries.",
"Several epithets attached to his name in Egyptian texts and inscriptions referred to that role.",
"''Khenty-Amentiu'', which means \"foremost of the westerners\" and was also the name of a different canine funerary god, alluded to his protecting function because the dead were usually buried on the west bank of the Nile.",
"He took other names in connection with his funerary role, such as ''tpy-ḏw.f'' (Tepy-djuef) \"He who is upon his mountain\" (i.e.",
"keeping guard over tombs from above) and ''nb-t3-ḏsr'' (Neb-ta-djeser) \"Lord of the sacred land\", which designates him as a god of the desert necropolis.The Jumilhac papyrus recounts another tale where Anubis protected the body of Osiris from Set.",
"Set attempted to attack the body of Osiris by transforming himself into a leopard.",
"Anubis stopped and subdued Set, however, and he branded Set's skin with a hot iron rod.",
"Anubis then flayed Set and wore his skin as a warning against evil-doers who would desecrate the tombs of the dead.",
"Priests who attended to the dead wore leopard skin in order to commemorate Anubis' victory over Set.",
"The legend of Anubis branding the hide of Set in leopard form was used to explain how the leopard got its spots.Most ancient tombs had prayers to Anubis carved on them.===Guide of souls===The \"weighing of the heart,\" from the book of the dead of Hunefer.",
"Anubis is portrayed as guiding the deceased forward and manipulating the scales, under the scrutiny of the ibis-headed Thoth.|leftBy the late pharaonic era (664–332 BC), Anubis was often depicted as guiding individuals across the threshold from the world of the living to the afterlife.",
"Though a similar role was sometimes performed by the cow-headed Hathor, Anubis was more commonly chosen to fulfill that function.",
"Greek writers from the Roman period of Egyptian history designated that role as that of \"psychopomp\", a Greek term meaning \"guide of souls\" that they used to refer to their own god Hermes, who also played that role in Greek religion.",
"Funerary art from that period represents Anubis guiding either men or women dressed in Greek clothes into the presence of Osiris, who by then had long replaced Anubis as ruler of the underworld.===Weigher of hearts===A section of the Papyrus of Ani showing the \"weighing of the heart,\" depicting Anubis manipulating the scales, weighing the heart of the deceased against Maat's feather of truth.",
"One of the roles of Anubis was as the \"Guardian of the Scales.\"",
"The critical scene depicting the weighing of the heart, in the ''Book of the Dead'', shows Anubis performing a measurement that determined whether the person was worthy of entering the realm of the dead (the underworld, known as ''Duat'').",
"By weighing the heart of a deceased person against ''ma'at'', who was often represented as an ostrich feather, Anubis dictated the fate of souls.",
"Souls heavier than a feather would be devoured by Ammit, and souls lighter than a feather would ascend to a heavenly existence."
],
[
"Portrayal in art",
"This detailed scene, from the Papyrus of Hunefer (c. 1275 BC), shows the scribe Hunefer's heart being weighed on the scale of Maat against the feather of truth by Anubis|leftAnubis was one of the most frequently represented deities in ancient Egyptian art.",
"He is depicted in royal tombs as early as the First Dynasty.",
"The god is typically treating a king's corpse, providing sovereign to mummification rituals and funerals, or standing with fellow gods at the Weighing of the Heart of the Soul in the Hall of Two Truths.",
"One of his most popular representations is of him, with the body of a man and the head of a jackal with pointed ears, standing or kneeling, holding a gold scale while a heart of the soul is being weighed against Ma'at's white truth feather.Jackal head of Anubis in (KV35) the tomb of Amenophis II, Valley of the Kings.In the early dynastic period, he was depicted in animal form, as a black canine.",
"Anubis's distinctive black color did not represent the animal, rather it had several symbolic meanings.",
"It represented \"the discolouration of the corpse after its treatment with natron and the smearing of the wrappings with a resinous substance during mummification.\"",
"Being the color of the fertile silt of the River Nile, to Egyptians, black also symbolized fertility and the possibility of rebirth in the afterlife.",
"In the Middle Kingdom, Anubis was often portrayed as a man with the head of a jackal.",
"The African jackal was the species depicted and the template of numerous Ancient Egyptian deities, including Anubis.",
"An extremely rare depiction of him in fully human form was found in a chapel of Ramesses II in Abydos.Anubis is often depicted wearing a ribbon and holding a ''nḫ3ḫ3'' \"flail\" in the crook of his arm.",
"Another of Anubis's attributes was the ''jmy-wt'' or imiut fetish, named for his role in embalming.",
"In funerary contexts, Anubis is shown either attending to a deceased person's mummy or sitting atop a tomb protecting it.",
"New Kingdom tomb-seals also depict Anubis sitting atop the nine bows that symbolize his domination over the enemies of Egypt.File:Anubis, Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, Copenhagen, 20220618 1030 6992.jpg|Statue of AnubisFile:KV17, the tomb of Pharaoh Seti I of the Nineteenth Dynasty, Valley of the Kings, Egypt (49845804653).jpg|Wall relief of Anubis in (KV17) the tomb of Seti I, 19th Dynasty, Valley of the KingsFile:ThebanTomb335.png|alt=Fresco of a mummy lying on a bier.",
"Women stand at the head and foot of the bier, while a winged woman kneels in the register above|Isis, left, and Nephthys stand by as Anubis embalms the deceased, 13th century BCFile:Hermitage hall 100 - Egyptian hall 46.jpg|Anubis receiving offerings, hieroglyph name in third column from left, 14th century BC; painted limestone; from Saqqara (Egypt)File:Tutankhamun jackal.jpg|The ''Anubis Shrine''; 1336–1327 BC; painted wood and gold; 1.1 × 2.7 × 0.52 m; from the Valley of the Kings; Egyptian Museum (Cairo)File:Anubis, Anzio, Villa Pamphili, 1st-2nd century AD, Pario marble - Museo Gregoriano Egizio - Vatican Museums - DSC00818.jpg|Statue of Hermanubis, c. 100–138 AD, from RomeFile:Casa degli Amorini Dorati.",
"Fresco.",
"09.JPG|Anubis, Harpocrates, Isis and Serapis, antique fresco in Pompeii, ItalyFile:Stela of Siamun and Taruy worshipping Anubis MET 90.6.128 01.jpg|Stela of Siamun and Taruy worshipping AnubisFile:The King with Anubis, Tomb of Haremhab MET DP234736.jpg|The king with Anubis, from the tomb of Horemheb; 1323-1295 BC; tempera on paper; Metropolitan Museum of ArtFile:Anubis Amulet MET DP109371.jpg|Anubis amulet; 664–30 BC; faience; height: 4.7 cm; Metropolitan Museum of ArtFile:Recumbent Anubis MET DP228716.jpg|Recumbent Anubis; 664–30 BC; limestone, originally painted black; height: 38.1 cm, length: 64 cm, width: 16.5 cm; Metropolitan Museum of ArtFile:Statuette of Anubis MET 38.5 EGDP022863.jpg|Statuette of Anubis; 332–30 BC; plastered and painted wood; 42.3 cm; Metropolitan Museum of Art"
],
[
"Worship",
"Although he does not appear in many myths, he was extremely popular with Egyptians and those of other cultures.",
"The Greeks linked him to their god Hermes, the god who guided the dead to the afterlife.",
"The pairing was later known as Hermanubis.",
"Anubis was heavily worshipped because, despite modern beliefs, he gave the people hope.",
"People marveled in the guarantee that their body would be respected at death, their soul would be protected and justly judged.Anubis had male priests who sported wood masks with the god's likeness when performing rituals.",
"His cult center was at Cynopolis in Upper Egypt but memorials were built everywhere and he was universally revered in every part of the nation."
],
[
"In popular culture",
"In popular and media culture, Anubis is often falsely portrayed as the sinister god of the dead.",
"He gained popularity during the 20th and 21st centuries through books, video games, and movies where artists would give him evil powers and a dangerous army.",
"Despite his nefarious reputation, his image is still the most recognizable of the Egyptian gods and replicas of his statues and paintings remain popular."
],
[
"See also",
"* Abatur, Mandaean uthra who weighs the souls of the dead to determine their fate* * Anput* ''Anubias''* Bhairava* Hades"
],
[
"References",
"The African golden jackal was depicted as Anubis'''Informational notes''''''Citations''''''Bibliography'''* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * '''Further reading'''* * *"
],
[
"External links",
"**"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Arthur Jensen"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Arthur Robert Jensen''' (August 24, 1923 – October 22, 2012) was an American psychologist and writer.",
"He was a professor of educational psychology at the University of California, Berkeley.",
"Jensen was known for his work in psychometrics and differential psychology, the study of how and why individuals differ behaviorally from one another.He was a major proponent of the hereditarian position in the nature and nurture debate, the position that genetics play a significant role in behavioral traits, such as intelligence and personality.",
"He was the author of over 400 scientific papers published in refereed journals and sat on the editorial boards of the scientific journals ''Intelligence'' and ''Personality and Individual Differences''.Jensen was controversial, largely for his conclusions regarding the causes of race-based differences in IQ."
],
[
"Early life and education",
"Jensen was born August 24, 1923, in San Diego, California, the son of Linda Mary (née Schachtmayer) and Arthur Alfred Jensen, who operated and owned a lumber and building materials company.",
"His paternal grandparents were Danish immigrants and his mother was of half-Polish Jewish and half-German descent.As a child, Jensen was interested in herpetology and classical music, playing clarinet in the San Diego Symphony orchestra.Jensen received a B.A.",
"in psychology from the University of California, Berkeley in 1945 and went on to obtain his M.A.",
"in psychology in 1952 from San Diego State College.",
"He earned his Ph.D. in clinical psychology from Columbia University in 1956 under the supervision of Percival Symonds on the thematic apperception test.",
"From 1956 through 1958, he did postdoctoral research at the University of London, Institute of Psychiatry with Hans Eysenck.Upon returning to the United States, he became a researcher and professor at the University of California, Berkeley, where he focused on individual differences in learning, especially the influences of culture, development, and genetics on intelligence and learning.",
"He received tenure at Berkeley in 1962.He concentrated on the learning difficulties of culturally disadvantaged students.Jensen had a lifelong interest in classical music and was, early in his life, attracted by the idea of becoming a conductor himself.",
"At 14, he conducted a band that won a nationwide contest held in San Francisco.",
"Later, he conducted orchestras and attended a seminar given by Nikolai Sokoloff.",
"Soon after graduating from Berkeley, he moved to New York, mainly to be near the conductor Arturo Toscanini.",
"He was also deeply interested in the life and example of Gandhi, producing an unpublished book-length manuscript on his life.",
"During Jensen's period in San Diego he spent time working as a social worker with the San Diego Department of Public Welfare."
],
[
"IQ and academic achievement",
"Jensen's interest in learning differences directed him to the extensive testing of school children.",
"The results led him to distinguish between two separate types of learning ability.",
"''Level I'', or associative learning, may be defined as retention of input and rote memorization of simple facts and skills.",
"''Level II'', or conceptual learning, is roughly equivalent to the ability to manipulate and transform inputs, that is, the ability to solve problems.Later, Jensen was an important advocate in the mainstream acceptance of the general factor of intelligence, a concept which was essentially synonymous with his ''Level II'' conceptual learning.",
"The general factor, or ''g'', is an abstraction that stems from the observation that scores on all forms of cognitive tests correlate positively with one another.Jensen claimed, on the basis of his research, that general cognitive ability is essentially an inherited trait, determined predominantly by genetic factors rather than by environmental conditions.",
"He also contended that while associative learning, or memorizing ability, is equally distributed among the races, conceptual learning, or synthesizing ability, occurs with significantly greater frequency in some races than in others.Jensen's most controversial work, published in February 1969 in the ''Harvard Educational Review'', was titled \"How Much Can We Boost IQ and Scholastic Achievement?\"",
"It concluded, among other things, that Head Start programs designed to boost African-American IQ scores had failed, and that this was likely never to be remedied, largely because, in Jensen's estimation, 80% of the variance in IQ in the population studied was the result of genetic factors and the remainder was due to environmental influences.The work became one of the most cited papers in the history of psychological testing and intelligence research, although a large number of citations consisted of rebuttals of Jensen's work, or references to it as an example of a controversial paper.After the paper was released, large protests were held, demanding that Jensen be fired.",
"Jensen's car tires were slashed, the university police provided him with plain-clothes bodyguards, and he and his family received threats that were considered so realistic by the police that they temporarily left their house.",
"Jensen was spat on and was prevented from delivering lectures by disruptive protests.",
"The editorial board of the ''Harvard Educational Review'' for a time refused to let him have reprints of his article, and said that they had not solicited the section on racial differences; Jensen later provided correspondence in which the board had requested he do so.In a later article, Jensen argued that his claims had been misunderstood:Jensen was among the most frequent contributors to the German journal ''Neue Anthropologie'', a publication founded by the neo-Nazi Jürgen Rieger, and served alongside Rieger on this journal's editorial board.In 1994 he was one of 52 signatories on \"Mainstream Science on Intelligence,\" an essay written by Linda Gottfredson and published in ''The Wall Street Journal'', which declared the consensus of the signing scholars on the meaning and significance of IQ following the publication of the book ''The Bell Curve''.",
"Jensen received $1.1 million from the Pioneer Fund,an organization frequently described as racist and white supremacist in nature.The fund contributed a total of $3.5 million to researchers cited in The Bell Curve's most controversial chapter \"that suggests some races are naturally smarter than others\" with Jensen's works being cited twenty-three times in the book's bibliography."
],
[
"Death",
"He died on October 22, 2012, at his home in Kelseyville, California, at age 89."
],
[
"Assessment",
"===Support===Paul E. Meehl of the University of Minnesota, after being honored by the APA, wrote that Jensen's \"contributions, in both quality and quantity, certainly excelled mine\" and that he was \"embarrassed\" and \"distressed\" that APA refused to honor Jensen because of his ideology.Sandra Scarr of Yale University wrote that Jensen possessed an \"uncompromising personal integrity\" and set the standard for \"honest psychological science\".",
"She contrasted him and his work favorably to some of his critics, who she called \"politically driven liars, who distort scientific facts in a misguided and condescending effort to protect an impossible myth about human equality\".Steven J. Haggbloom, writing for ''Review of General Psychology'' in 2002, rated Jensen as one of the 100 most eminent psychologists of the 20th century, based on six different metrics chosen by Haggbloom.Francis Crick considered that there was \"much substance to Jensen's arguments.",
"\"In 1980 Jensen published a book in defense of the tests used to measure mental abilities, titled ''Bias in Mental Testing''.",
"Reviewing this book, psychologist Kenneth Kaye endorsed Jensen's distinction between bias and discrimination, saying that he found many of Jensen's opponents to be more politically biased than Jensen was.Although a critic of Jensen's thesis, economist Thomas Sowell, criticizing the taboo against research on race and intelligence, wrote:===Criticism===Melvin Konner of Emory University, wrote:Lisa Suzuki and Joshua Aronson of New York University wrote that Jensen had largely ignored evidence which failed to support his position that IQ test score gaps represent genetic racial differences.Paleontologist and evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould criticized Jensen's work in his 1981 book ''The Mismeasure of Man''.",
"Gould writes that Jensen misapplies the concept of \"heritability\", which is defined as a measure of the variation of a trait due to inheritance ''within'' a population (Gould 1981: 127; 156–157).",
"According to Gould, Jensen uses heritability to measure differences ''between'' populations.",
"Gould also disagrees with Jensen's belief that IQ tests measure a real variable, ''g'', or \"the general factor common to a large number of cognitive abilities\" which can be measured along a unilinear scale.",
"This is a claim most closely identified with Charles Spearman.",
"According to Gould, Jensen misunderstood the research of L. L. Thurstone to ultimately support this claim; Gould, however, argues that Thurstone's factor analysis of intelligence revealed ''g'' to be an illusion (1981: 159; 13-314).",
"Gould criticizes Jensen's sources including his use of Catharine Cox's 1926 ''Genetic Studies of Genius'', which examines historiometrically the IQs of historic intellectuals after their deaths (Gould 1981: 153–154).===Neutral responses===According to David Lubinski of Vanderbilt University, the \"extent to which Jensen's work was either admired or reviled by many distinguished scientists is unparalleled.",
"\"After Jensen's death, James Flynn of the University of Otago, a prominent advocate of the environmental position, told ''The New York Times'' that Jensen was without racial bias and had not initially foreseen that his research would be used to argue for racial supremacy and that his career was \"emblematic of the extent to which American scholarship is inhibited by political orthodoxy\", though he noted that Jensen shifted towards genetic explanations later in life."
],
[
"Books",
"=== ''Bias in Mental Testing'' ===''Bias in Mental Testing'' (1980) is a book examining the question of test bias in commonly used standardized tests.",
"The book runs almost 800 pages and has been called \"exhaustive\" by three researchers who reviewed the field 19 years after the book's publication.",
"It reviewed in detail the available evidence about test bias across major US racial/ethnic groups.",
"Jensen concluded that \"the currently most widely used standardized tests of mental ability -- IQ, scholastic aptitude, and achievement tests -- are, by and large, not biased against any of the native-born English-speaking minority groups on which the amount of research evidence is sufficient for an objective determination of bias, if the tests were in fact biased.",
"For most nonverbal standardized tests, this generalization is not limited to English-speaking minorities.\"",
"(p. ix).",
"Jensen also published a summary of the book the same year which was a target article in the journal ''Behavioral and Brain Sciences'' to which 27 commentaries were printed along with the author's reply.=== ''Straight Talk about Mental Tests'' ===''Straight Talk about Mental Tests'' (1981) is a book written about psychometrics for the general public.",
"John B. Carroll reviewed it favorably in 1982, saying it was a useful summary of the issues, as did Paul Cline writing for the ''British Journal of Psychiatry''.",
"In 2016, Richard J. Haier called it \"a clear examination of all issues surrounding mental testing\".===''The g Factor''===''The ''g'' Factor: The Science of Mental Ability'' (1998) is a book on the general intelligence factor (''g'').",
"The book deals with the intellectual history of g and various models of how to conceptualize intelligence, and with the biological correlates of g, its heritability, and its practical predictive power.===''Clocking the Mind''===''Clocking the Mind: Mental Chronometry and Individual Differences'' (2006) deals with mental chronometry (MC), and covers the speed with which the brain processes information and different ways this is measured.",
"Jensen argues mental chronometry represents a true natural science of mental ability, which is in contrast to IQ, which merely represents an interval (ranking) scale and thus possesses no true ratio scale properties.Joseph Glicksohn wrote in a 2007 review for ''Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology'' that \"The book should be perused with care in order to ensure the further profitable use of reaction time in both experimental and differential lines of research.",
"\"Douglas Detterman reviewed it in 2008 for ''Intelligence'', writing that \"the book would make a good introduction to the field of the measurement of individual differences in cognitive tasks for beginning graduate students.\"",
"Eric-Jan Wagenmakers and Han van der Mass, also writing for ''Intelligence'' in 2018, faulted the book for omitting the work by mathematical psychologists, advocating standardization of chronometric methods (which the authors consider problematic because it can hide method variance), and because it does not discuss topics such as the mutualism model of the ''g-''factor and the Flynn effect.",
"They describe the book's breadth as useful, despite its simplistic approach.",
"Jensen was on the editorial board of ''Intelligence'' when these reviews were published."
],
[
"Awards",
"In 2003, Jensen was awarded the Kistler Prize for original contributions to the understanding of the connection between the human genome and human society.",
"In 2006, the International Society for Intelligence Research awarded Jensen its Lifetime Achievement Award."
],
[
"See also",
"*Heritability of IQ*Race and intelligence*History of the race and intelligence controversy* Jensen box"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"===Interviews===* \"Profiles in Research.",
"Arthur Jensen.",
"Interview by Daniel H. Robinson and Howard Wainer.\"",
"Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics Fall 2006, Vol.",
"31, No.",
"3, pp.",
"327–352* ''Intelligence, Race, and Genetics: Conversations with Arthur R.",
"Jensen.''",
"(2002) Frank Miele (of ''Skeptic Magazine'').",
"Westview Press.",
"===Selected articles, books, and book chapters===*Jensen.",
"A. R. (1973).",
"''Educational differences''.",
"London.",
"Methuen.",
"google books link*****Jensen, A. R. (1993).",
"Spearman's g: Links between psychometrics and biology.",
"In F. M. Crinella, & J. Yu (Eds.",
"), ''Brain mechanisms: Papers in memory of Robert Thompson'' (pp. 103–129).",
"New York: Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.",
"**Jensen, A. R. (1996).",
"Giftedness and genius: Crucial differences.",
"In C. P. Benbow, & D. J. Lubinski (Eds), ''Intellectual talent: Psychometric and social issues'' (pp. 393–411).",
"Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University.",
"*Jensen, A. R. (1998) The g factor and the design of education.",
"In R. J. Sternberg & W. M. Williams (Eds.",
"), ''Intelligence, instruction, and assessment: Theory into practice.''",
"(pp. 111–131).",
"Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.",
"***Jensen, A. R. (2002).",
"Psychometric g: Definition and substantiation.",
"In R. J. Sternberg, & E. L. Grigorenko (Eds.).",
"''The general factor of intelligence: How general is it?''",
"(pp. 39–53).",
"Mahwah, NJ, US: Lawrence Erlbaum.",
"**Rushton, J. P., & Jensen, A. R.. (2005).",
"Thirty years of research on Black-White differences in cognitive ability.",
"''Psychology, Public Policy, & the Law, 11,'' 235–294.",
"( pdf)*Rushton, J. P., & Jensen, A. R. (2003).",
"African-White IQ differences from Zimbabwe on the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Revised are mainly on the ''g'' factor.",
"''Personality and Individual Differences, 34,'' 177–183.",
"( pdf)*Rushton, J. P., & Jensen, A. R. (2005).",
"Wanted: More race-realism, less moralistic fallacy.",
"''Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 11,'' 328–336.",
"( pdf)"
],
[
"External links",
"* Arthur Robert Jensen memorial site* Jensen's Response to Gould's Criticisms** Jensen biography at Southern Poverty Law Center"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''''A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum''''' (or '''''A Funny Thing''''' for short) is a musical with music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and book by Burt Shevelove and Larry Gelbart.Inspired by the farces of the ancient Roman playwright Plautus (254–184 BC), specifically ''Curculio'', ''Pseudolus'', ''Miles Gloriosus'', and ''Mostellaria'', the musical tells the bawdy story of a slave named Pseudolus and his attempts to win his freedom by helping his young master woo the girl next door.",
"The plot displays many classic elements of farce, including puns, the slamming of doors, cases of mistaken identity (frequently involving characters disguising themselves as one another), and satirical comments on social class.",
"The title derives from a line often used by vaudeville comedians to begin a story: \"A funny thing happened on the way to the theater\".The musical's original 1962 Broadway run won several Tony Awards, including Best Musical and Best Author (Musical).",
"''A Funny Thing'' has enjoyed several Broadway and West End revivals and was made into a successful film starring the original lead of the stage musical, Zero Mostel."
],
[
"Productions",
"===Original Broadway===''A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum'' opened on Broadway on May 8, 1962, at the Alvin Theatre, and then transferred to the Mark Hellinger Theatre and the Majestic Theatre, where the show closed on August 29, 1964, after 964 performances and 8 previews.The show's creators sought Phil Silvers for the lead role of Pseudolus, but he turned them down, allegedly because he would have to perform onstage without his glasses, and his vision was so poor that he feared tripping into the orchestra pit.",
"He is also quoted as turning down the role for being \"Sgt.",
"Bilko in a toga\".",
"(Silvers eventually played the role – wearing his glasses – in a 1972 revival.",
"In the film, he played Marcus Lycus, without glasses).",
"Milton Berle also passed on the role.",
"Eventually, Zero Mostel was cast.During out-of-town tryouts the show attracted little business and did not play well.",
"Jerome Robbins, to whom the show had originally been offered but who turned it down, was called in to give advice and make changes.",
"In the interim, Joshua Logan was invited to direct, but according to Sondheim was rejected \"because he wanted too much male nudity.\"",
"It was then offered to veteran director George Abbott, who found it to be difficult to handle alone.",
"The biggest change Robbins made was adding a new opening number to replace \"Love Is in the Air\" and introduce the show as a bawdy, wild comedy.",
"Stephen Sondheim wrote the song \"Comedy Tonight\" for this new opening.",
"From that point on, the show was a success.It was directed by George Abbott and produced by Hal Prince, with choreography by Jack Cole and uncredited staging and choreography by Robbins.",
"The scenic and costume design was by Tony Walton.",
"The wardrobe is on display at the Costume World Broadway Collection in Pompano Beach, Florida.",
"The lighting design was by Jean Rosenthal.",
"Along with Mostel, the musical featured a cast of seasoned performers, including Jack Gilford (Mostel's friend and fellow blacklist member), David Burns, John Carradine, Ruth Kobart, and Raymond Walburn.",
"The young lovers were played by Brian Davies and Preshy Marker.",
"Karen Black, originally cast as the ingenue, was replaced out of town.The show won six Tony Awards, including Best Musical, Best Actor (Mostel), Best Supporting Actor (Burns), Best Book, and Best Director.",
"The score, Sondheim's first Broadway production for which he wrote both music and lyrics, did not earn a nomination.===London===The show was presented twice in London's West End.",
"The 1963 production and its 1986 revival were staged at the Strand Theatre and the Piccadilly Theatre respectively, and starred Frankie Howerd as Pseudolus and Leon Greene as Miles Gloriosus in both.",
"In the 1963 production, Kenneth Connor appeared as Hysterium, 'Monsewer' Eddie Gray as Senex and Jon Pertwee as Marcus Lycus.",
"In the 1986 revival, Patrick Cargill was Senex with Ronnie Stevens as Hysterium and Derek Royle as Erronius.In 2004 there was a limited-run revival at the Royal National Theatre, starring Desmond Barrit as Pseudolus, Philip Quast as Miles Gloriosus, Hamish McColl as Hysterium and Isla Blair as Domina (who had previously played Philia in the 1963 production).",
"This production was nominated for the 2005 Olivier Award, Outstanding Musical Production.===Motion picture adaptation===Both Mostel and Gilford re-created their Broadway roles for the 1966 musical film directed by Richard Lester.",
"Leon Greene reprised his West End role (Miles Gloriosus), while Phil Silvers portrayed Lycus, Michael Crawford portrayed Hero, and Michael Hordern played Senex.",
"Buster Keaton made his final film appearance in the role of Erronius.===Broadway revivals===A revival opened on Broadway at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre on April 4, 1972, and closed on August 12, 1972, after 156 performances.",
"Directed by co-author Burt Shevelove the cast starred Phil Silvers as Pseudolus (later replaced by Tom Poston), Lew Parker as Senex, Carl Ballantine as Lycus and Reginald Owen as Erronius.",
"Larry Blyden, who played Hysterium, the role created by Jack Gilford, also co-produced.",
"\"Pretty Little Picture\" and \"That'll Show Him\" were dropped from the show, and were replaced with \"Echo Song\" (sung by Hero and Philia), and \"Farewell\" (added for Nancy Walker as Domina, as she and Senex depart for the country).",
"\"Echo Song\" and \"Farewell\" had been added to a production staged in Los Angeles the previous year and were composed by Sondheim.",
"They had to close soon after Phil Silvers suffered a stroke.",
"The show won two Tony Awards, Best Leading Actor in a Musical for Silvers, and Best Featured Actor in a Musical for Blyden.The musical was revived again with great success in 1996, opening at the St. James Theatre on April 18, 1996, and closing on January 4, 1998, after 715 performances.",
"The cast starred Nathan Lane as Pseudolus (replaced by Whoopi Goldberg and later by David Alan Grier), Mark Linn-Baker as Hysterium, Ernie Sabella as Lycus, Jim Stanek as Hero, Lewis J. Stadlen as Senex, and Cris Groenendaal as Miles Gloriosus.",
"The production was directed by Jerry Zaks, with choreography by Rob Marshall.",
"Lane won the 1996 Tony Award for Best Leading Actor and the Drama Desk Award, Outstanding Actor in a Musical; the production was nominated for the 1996 Tony Award and Drama Desk Award, Revival of a Musical.Every actor who has opened in the role of Pseudolus on Broadway (Zero Mostel, Phil Silvers, and Nathan Lane) has won a Best Leading Actor Tony Award for his performance.",
"In addition, Jason Alexander, who performed as Pseudolus in one scene in ''Jerome Robbins' Broadway'', also won a Tony for Best Actor in a Musical.===Other productions===The original Australian production with American actor Jack Collins as Pseudolus opened at the Theatre Royal in Sydney in July 1964, and toured other Australian cities through 1965.A production was directed by Stephen R. Buss at Boise State University in 1995, starring James B. Fisk, Randy Davison, Karen Wennstrom and Daniel Taylor.In 1998, Jon English starred as Pseudolus in Essgee Entertainment's production that opened New Year's Day at the State Theatre, Melbourne and toured Australia and New Zealand, closing September 1999.The Stephen Sondheim Center for the Performing Arts produced a limited-run revival of the musical from January 11 to 27, 2008.The production was directed by Randal K. West, with Justin Hill as musical director and Adam Cates as choreographer.",
"The cast featured Richard Kind as Pseudolus, Joel Blum as Senex, Stephen DeRosa as Marcus Lycus, Sean McCall as Hysterium, and Steve Wilson as Miles Gloriosus.",
"It also featured Diana Upton-Hill, Ryan Gaffney, Stephen Mark Crisp, Jack Kloppenborg, and Margret Clair.The Chung Ying Theatre Company in Hong Kong staged a Cantonese version of the musical at Kwai Tsing Theatre, to celebrate the company's 30th anniversary.",
"It was directed by Chung King Fai and Ko Tin Lung and ran from March 14 to 21, 2009.The Stratford Shakespeare Festival in Stratford, Ontario, Canada production ran from June 11 to November 7, 2009, with Des McAnuff directing and Wayne Cilento as choreographer.",
"Bruce Dow originally performed the role of Pseudolus, but was forced to withdraw from the entire 2009 season due to an injury, and the role was then performed by Seán Cullen as of September 5, 2009.Stephen Ouimette played Hysterium.",
"Mirvish Productions presented the earlier Stratford production at the Canon Theatre, Toronto, in December 2010 through January 2011.Bruce Dow and Sean Cullen were alternates in the lead role.In October 2012 the play opened at Her Majesty's Theatre, Melbourne, Australia, with Geoffrey Rush as Pseudolus, Magda Szubanski as Domina and Shane Bourne as Senex.",
"''A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum'' was produced at the Two River Theater in Red Bank, New Jersey from November 14, 2015 to December 13, 2015 with an all-male cast (Paul Castree, Eddie Cooper, Kevin Isola, David Josefsberg, Max Kumangai, Graham Rowat, Manny Stark, Bobby Conte Thornton, David Turner, Michael Urie, Tom Deckman, and Christopher Fitzgerald)."
],
[
"Plot",
"Graphic from the original Broadway cast albumIn ancient Rome, some neighbors live in three adjacent houses.",
"In the center is the house of Senex, who lives there with wife Domina, son Hero, and several slaves, including head slave Hysterium and the musical's main character Pseudolus.",
"A slave belonging to Hero, Pseudolus wishes to buy, win, or steal his freedom.",
"One of the neighboring houses is owned by Marcus Lycus, who is a buyer and seller of beautiful women; the other belongs to the ancient Erronius, who is abroad searching for his long-lost children (stolen in infancy by pirates).One day, Senex and Domina go on a trip and leave Pseudolus in charge of Hero.",
"Hero confides in Pseudolus that he is in love with the lovely Philia, one of the courtesans in the House of Lycus (albeit still a virgin).",
"Pseudolus promises to help him win Philia's love in exchange for his own freedom.",
"Unfortunately (as the two find out when they pay a visit on Lycus), Philia has been sold to the renowned warrior Miles Gloriosus, who is expected to claim her very soon.",
"Pseudolus, an excellent liar, uses Philia's cheery disposition to convince Lycus that she has picked up a plague from Crete, which causes its victims to smile endlessly in its terminal stages.",
"By offering to isolate her in Senex's house, he is able to give Philia and Hero some time alone together, and the two fall in love.",
"But Philia insists that, even though she is in love with Hero, she must honor her contract with the Captain, for \"that is the way of a courtesan.\"",
"To appease her, he tells her to wait (\"that's what virgins do best, isn't it?\")",
"inside, and that he will have the captain knock three times when he arrives.",
"Pseudolus comes up with a plan to slip Philia a sleeping potion that will render her unconscious.",
"He will then tell Lycus that she has died of the Cretan plague, and will offer to remove the body.",
"Hero will come along, and they will stow away on a ship headed for Greece.",
"Satisfied with his plan, Pseudolus steals Hysterium's book of potions and has Hero read him the recipe for the sleeping potion; the only ingredient he lacks is \"mare's sweat\", and Pseudolus goes off in search of some.Unexpectedly, Senex returns home early from his trip, and knocks three times on his own door.",
"Philia comes out of the house, and, thinking that Senex is the Captain, offers herself up to him.",
"Surprised but game, Senex instructs Philia to wait in the house for him, and she does.",
"Hysterium arrives to this confusion, and tells Senex that Philia is the new maid that he has hired.",
"Pseudolus returns, having procured the necessary mare's sweat; seeing that Senex has returned unexpectedly and grasping the need to keep him out of the way, Pseudolus discreetly sprinkles some of the horse-sweat onto him, then suggests that the road trip has left Senex in dire need of a bath.",
"Taking the bait, Senex instructs Hysterium to draw him a bath in the long-abandoned house of Erronius.",
"But while this is happening, Erronius returns home, finally having given up the search for his long-lost children.",
"Hysterium, desperate to keep him out of the house where his master is bathing, tells the old man that his house has become haunted – a story seemingly confirmed by the sound of Senex singing in his bath.",
"Erronius immediately determines to have a soothsayer come and banish the spirit from his house, and Pseudolus obligingly poses as one, telling Erronius that, in order to banish the spirit, he must travel seven times around the seven hills of Rome (thus keeping the old man occupied and out of the way for quite a while).When Miles Gloriosus arrives to claim his courtesan-bride, Pseudolus hides Philia on the roof of Senex's house; told that she has \"escaped\", Lycus is terrified to face the Captain's wrath.",
"Pseudolus offers to impersonate Lycus and talk his way out of the mess but, his ingenuity flagging, he ends up merely telling the Captain that Philia has disappeared, and that he, \"Lycus\", will search for her.",
"Displeased and suspicious, Miles insists that his soldiers accompany Pseudolus, but the wily slave loses them in Rome's winding streets.Complicating matters further, Domina returns from her trip early, suspicious that her husband Senex is \"up to something low.\"",
"She disguises herself in virginal white robes and a veil (much like Philia's) to try to catch Senex being unfaithful.",
"Pseudolus convinces Hysterium to help him by dressing in drag and pretending to be Philia, \"dead\" from the plague.",
"Unfortunately, it turns out that Miles Gloriosus has just returned from Crete, where there is of course no actual plague.",
"With the ruse thus revealed, the main characters run for their lives, resulting in a madcap chase across the stage with both Miles and Senex pursuing all three \"Philia\"s (Domina, Hysterium, and the actual Philia – all wearing identical white robes and veils).",
"Meanwhile, the courtesans from the house of Marcus Lycus – who had been recruited as mourners at \"Philia\"'s ersatz funeral – have escaped, and Lycus sends his eunuchs out to bring them all back, adding to the general pandemonium.Finally, the Captain's troops are able to round everyone up.",
"His plot thoroughly unraveled, Pseudolus appears to be in deep trouble – but Erronius, completing his third circuit of the Roman hills, shows up fortuitously to discover that Miles Gloriosus and Philia are wearing matching rings which mark them as his long-lost children.",
"Philia's betrothal to the Captain is nullified by the unexpected revelation that he is her brother, and, as the daughter of a free-born citizen, she is freed from Marcus Lycus.",
"Philia weds Hero with Erronius' blessing; Pseudolus gets his freedom and the lovely courtesan Gymnasia; Gloriosus receives twin courtesans to replace Philia; and Erronius is reunited with his children.",
"A happy ending prevails for all – except for poor Senex, stuck with his shrewish wife Domina."
],
[
"Characters",
"*'''Pseudolus''': A Roman slave, owned by Hero, who seeks to win freedom by helping Hero win the heart of Philia.",
"The slave name ''Pseudolus'' means \"Faker\".",
"While originally written as a male role, it has been performed by female actors as well.",
"*'''Hero''': Young son of Senex who falls in love with the virgin, Philia.",
"*'''Philia''': (Greek for \"love\") A virgin in the house of Marcus Lycus, and Hero's love interest.",
"Her name is also a homophone of the Latin word \"Filia\", which means daughter.",
"This foreshadows her status as the daughter of Erronius.",
"* '''Hysterium''': (Latin for \"Hysterical\", or \"Anxious\", the suffix \"-um\" makes the name neuter, and the character's gender is often mistaken throughout the piece) The chief slave in the house of Senex.",
"*'''Senex''': (Latin for \"old man\") A henpecked, sardonic Roman senator living in a less fashionable suburb of Rome.",
"*'''Domina''': (Latin for \"mistress\") The wife of Senex.",
"A manipulative, shrewish woman who is loathed by even her husband.",
"*'''Marcus Lycus''': A purveyor of courtesans, who operates from the house to the left of Senex.",
"(Name based on Lycus, the pimp in Plautus's ''Poenulus''.",
")*'''Miles Gloriosus''': (Latin for \"boastful soldier\", the archetype of the braggart soldier in Roman comedies) A captain in the Roman army to whom Marcus Lycus has promised Philia.",
"*'''Erronius''': (Latin for \"wandering\") Senex's elderly neighbor in the house to the right.",
"He has spent the past twenty years searching for his two children, kidnapped in infancy by pirates.",
"*'''Gymnasia''': (Greek for \"Athletic\", with the connotation of nakedness) A courtesan from the house of Lycus with whom Pseudolus falls in love.",
"*'''Tintinabula''': (Latin for \"Bells\") A jingling, bell-wearing courtesan in the house of Lycus.",
"*'''Vibrata''': (Latin for \"Vibrant\") A wild, vibrant courtesan in the house of Lycus.",
"*'''Geminae''': (Latin for \"Twins\") Twin courtesans in the house of Lycus.",
"*'''Panacea''': (Greek for \"Cure All\") A courtesan in the house of Lycus.",
"*'''Proteans''': Choristers who play multiple roles (slaves, citizens, soldiers, and eunuchs).",
"They accompany Pseudolus in \"Comedy Tonight\".",
"They are referred to as \"Three who do the work of thirty\"."
],
[
"Cast",
" RoleOriginal BroadwayOriginal London1966 film1972 Broadway revival1996 Broadway revival2004 London revival2023 ParisPrologus/Pseudolus Zero Mostel Frankie Howerd Zero Mostel Phil Silvers Nathan Lane Desmond Barrit Rufus HoundHero Brian Davies John Rye Michael Crawford John Hansen Jim Stanek Vince Leigh Josh St ClairPhilia Preshy Marker Isla Blair Annette Andre Pamela Hall Jessica Boevers Caroline Sheen Neima NaouriHysterium Jack Gilford Kenneth Connor Jack Gilford Larry Blyden Mark Linn-Baker Hamish McColl Andrew PepperSenex David Burns Eddie Gray Michael Hordern Lew Parker Lewis J. Stadlen Sam Kelly Patrick RyecartDomina Ruth Kobart Linda Gray Patricia Jessel Lizabeth Pritchett Mary Testa Isla Blair Valerie GabailMarcus Lycus John Carradine Jon Pertwee Phil Silvers Carl Ballantine Ernie Sabella David Schneider Martyn Ellis Miles Gloriosus Ronald Holgate Leon Greene Carl Lindstrom Cris Groenendaal Philip Quast John Owen-Jones Erronius Raymond Walburn Robertson Hare Buster Keaton Reginald Owen William Duell Harry Towb David Rintoul"
],
[
"Songs",
"'''Act I'''* \"Comedy Tonight\" – Pseudolus and Company* \"Love, I Hear\" – Hero* \"Free\" – Pseudolus and Hero* \"The House of Marcus Lycus\" – Lycus, Pseudolus and Courtesans* \"Lovely\" – Philia and Hero* \"Pretty Little Picture\" – Pseudolus, Hero, and Philia* \"Everybody Ought to Have a Maid\" – Senex, Pseudolus, Hysterium and Lycus* \"I'm Calm\" – Hysterium* \"Impossible\" – Senex and Hero* \"Bring Me My Bride\" – Miles Gloriosus, Pseudolus and Company'''Act II'''* \"That Dirty Old Man\" – Domina* \"That'll Show Him\" – Philia* \"Lovely\" (reprise) – Pseudolus and Hysterium* \"Funeral Sequence\" – Pseudolus, Miles Gloriosus and Company* \"Finale\" – Pseudolus, Hero, Philia, Domina, Senex, Miles, Erronius, Hysterium, Soldiers, Lycus and Company'''Cut songs:''' *\"Love Is in the Air\" – Prologus (Played by Senex) and Proteans (Originally intended as the opening number, replaced with \"Comedy Tonight\".",
"It was later featured in the 1996 film ''The Birdcage'', performed by Robin Williams and Christine Baranski.",
")*\"Invocation and Instructions to the Audience\" (Another version of the opening number.",
"Used in subsequent revues of Sondheim songs and was sung by Nathan Lane in the musical ''The Frogs''.",
")*\"I Do Like You\" – Pseudolus and Hysterium*\"There's Something About a War\" – Miles*\"Echo Song\" – Philia and Hero*\"Your Eyes Are Blue\" – Hero*\"The Gaggle of Geese\" – Erronius*\"What Do You Do With a Woman?\"",
"– Hero'''Notes:'''\"Pretty Little Picture\" is frequently dropped from productions, and one verse of \"I'm Calm\" is also often trimmed.",
"A song for Domina entitled \"Farewell\" was added for the 1972 revival as she and Senex depart for the country.",
"\"Echo Song\" was reinstated in the same revival."
],
[
"Awards and honors",
"===Original Broadway production=== Year Award ceremony Category Nominee Result 1962 Outer Critics Circle Award Special Award George Abbott 1963 Tony Award Best Musical Best Producer of a Musical Harold Prince Best Author Burt Shevelove and Larry Gelbart Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical Zero Mostel Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical David Burns Jack Gilford Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical Ruth Kobart Best Direction of a Musical George Abbott ===1972 Broadway revival=== Year Award Category Nominee Result1972Tony Award Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical Phil Silvers Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical Larry Blyden Best Direction of a Musical Burt Shevelove ===1996 Broadway revival=== Year Award Category Nominee Result1996Tony AwardBest Revival of a Musical Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical Nathan Lane Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical Lewis J. Stadlen Best Direction of a Musical Jerry Zaks Drama Desk AwardOutstanding Revival of a Musical Outstanding Actor in a Musical Nathan Lane Outer Critics Circle Award Outstanding Actor in a Musical Nathan Lane Outstanding Director of a Musical Jerry Zaks Drama League AwardDistinguished Production of a Revival ."
],
[
"References",
"'''Notes''''''Bibliography'''* \"'A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum' plot summary & character descriptions\" from StageAgent.com* \"Plot and production information\", guidetomusicaltheatre.com"
],
[
"External links",
"* * ''''A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum'' Sondheim Guide* * ''A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum'' at the Music Theatre International website"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Aleuts"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Aleuts''' ( ; ) are the Indigenous people of the Aleutian Islands, which are located between the North Pacific Ocean and the Bering Sea.",
"Both the Aleuts and the islands are politically divided between the US state of Alaska and the Russian administrative division of Kamchatka Krai.",
"This group is also known as the '''Unangax̂''' (Oo-NUNG-ukh) in Unangam Tunuu, the Aleut language.",
"There are 13 federally recognized Aleut tribes in the Aleut Region of Alaska.",
"In 2000, Aleuts in Russia were recognized by government decree as a small-numbered Indigenous people."
],
[
"Etymology",
"In the Aleut language, they are known by the endonyms '''Unangan''' (eastern dialect) and '''Unangas''' (western dialect); both terms mean \"people\".",
"The Russian term \"Aleut\" was a general term used for both the native population of the Aleutian Islands and their neighbors to the east in the Kodiak Archipelago, who were also referred to as \"Pacific Eskimos\" or Sugpiat/Alutiit."
],
[
"Language",
"Aleut people speak Unangam Tunuu, the Aleut language, as well as English and Russian in the United States and Russia respectively.",
"An estimated 150 people in the United States and five people in Russia speak Aleut.",
"The language belongs to the Eskaleut language family and includes three dialects: Eastern Aleut, spoken on the Eastern Aleutian, Shumagin, Fox and Pribilof Islands; Atkan, spoken on Atka and Bering islands; and the now extinct Attuan dialect.The Pribilof Islands has the highest number of active speakers of Unangam Tunuu.",
"Most native elders speak Aleut, but it is rare for common people to speak the language fluently.Beginning in 1829, Aleut was written in the Cyrillic script.",
"From 1870, the language has been written in the Latin script.",
"An Aleut dictionary and grammar have been published, and portions of the Bible were translated into Aleut."
],
[
"Tribes",
"Customary Aleut dressAleut (Unangan) dialects and tribes:* '''Attuan dialect''' and speaking tribes: ** ''Sasignan'' (in Attuan dialect)/''Sasxnan'' (in Eastern dialect)/''Sasxinas'' (in Western dialect) or ''Near Islanders'': in the Near Islands (Attu, Agattu, Semichi).",
"** ''Kasakam Unangangis'' (in Aleut, lit.",
"'Russian Aleut') or ''Copper Island Aleut'': in the Commander Islands of Russian Federation (Bering, Medny).*?",
"''Qax̂un'' or ''Rat Islanders'' : in the Buldir Island and Rat Islands (Kiska, Amchitka, Semisopochnoi).",
"* '''Atkan dialect''' or '''Western Aleut''' or ''Aliguutax̂'' (in Aleut) and speaking tribes: ** ''Naahmiĝus'' or ''Delarof Islanders'' : in the Delarof Islands (Amatignak) and Andreanof Islands (Tanaga).",
"** ''Niiĝuĝis'' or ''Andreanof Islanders'' : in the Andreanof Islands (Kanaga, Adak, Atka, Amlia, Seguam).",
"* '''Eastern Aleut dialect''' and speaking tribes: ** ''Akuuĝun'' or ''Uniiĝun'' or ''Islanders of the Four Mountains'' : in the Islands of Four Mountains (Amukta, Kagamil).",
"** ''Qawalangin'' or ''Fox Islanders'' : in the Fox Islands (Umnak, Samalga, western part of Unalaska).",
"** ''Qigiiĝun'' or ''Krenitzen Islanders'' : in the Krenitzin Islands (eastern part of Unalaska, Akutan, Akun, Tigalda).",
"** ''Qagaan Tayaĝungin'' or ''Sanak Islanders'' : in the Sanak Islands (Unimak, Sanak).",
"** ''Taxtamam Tunuu'' dialect of Belkofski.",
"** ''Qaĝiiĝun'' or ''Shumigan Islanders'' : in the Shumagin Islands."
],
[
"Population and distribution",
"Map of Aleut tribes and dialectsSettlement of Aleuts in the Far Eastern Federal District by urban and rural settlements in%, 2010 censusAleuts historically lived throughout the Aleutian Islands, the Shumagin Islands, and the far western part of the Alaska Peninsula, with an estimated population of around 25,000 prior to European contact.",
"In the 1820s, the Russian-American Company administered a large portion of the North Pacific during a Russian-led expansion of the fur trade.",
"They resettled many Aleut families to the Commander Islands (within the Aleutsky District of the Kamchatka Krai in Russia) and to the Pribilof Islands (in Alaska).",
"These continue to have majority-Aleut communities.According to the 2000 census, 11,941 people identified as being Aleut, while 17,000 identified as having partial Aleut ancestry.",
"Prior to sustained European contact, approximately 25,000 Aleut lived in the archipelago.",
"The Encyclopædia Britannica Online says more than 15,000 people have Aleut ancestry in the early 21st century.",
"Aleuts suffered high fatalities in the 19th and early 20th centuries from Eurasian infectious diseases to which they had no immunity.",
"In addition, the population suffered as their customary lifestyles were disrupted.",
"Russian traders and later Europeans married Aleut women and had families with them."
],
[
"History",
"===After contact with Russia===''Aleut in Festival Dress in Alaska'', watercolor by Mikhail Tikhanov, 1818After the arrival of Russian Orthodox missionaries in the late 18th century, many Aleuts became Christian.",
"Of the numerous Russian Orthodox congregations in Alaska, most are majority Alaska Native or Native Alaskan in ethnicity.",
"One of the earliest Christian martyrs in North America was Saint Peter the Aleut.Russian traders \"took Aleut women and children hostage\" to force Aleut men to hunt foxes and sea otters so the Russians could have their pelts, and often additionally enslaved Aleut men.Aleuts.",
"Ethnographic description of the peoples of the Russian Empire by Gustav-Fyodor Khristianovich Pauli (1862)====Recorded uprising against the Russians====In the 18th century, Russia ''promyshlenniki'' traders established settlements on the islands.",
"There was high demand for the furs that the Aleuts provided from hunting.",
"In May 1784, local Aleuts revolted on Amchitka against the Russian traders.",
"(The Russians had a small trading post there.)",
"According to the Aleuts, in an account recorded by Japanese castaways and published in 2004, otters were decreasing year by year.",
"The Russians paid the Aleuts less and less in goods in return for the furs they made.",
"The Japanese learned that the Aleuts felt the situation was at crisis.",
"The leading Aleuts negotiated with the Russians, saying they had failed to deliver enough supplies in return for furs.",
"Nezimov, leader of the Russians, ordered two of his men, Stephanov ( ) and Kazhimov ( ) to kill his mistress Oniishin ( ), who was the Aleut chief's daughter, because he doubted that Oniishin had tried to dissuade her father and other leaders from pushing for more goods.After the four leaders had been killed, the Aleuts began to move from Amchitka to neighboring islands.",
"Nezimov, leader of the Russian group, was jailed after the whole incident was reported to Russian officials.",
"(According to , written by Katsuragawa Hoshū after interviewing Daikokuya Kōdayū.",
")===Aleut genocide against the Nicoleño Tribe in California===According to Russian American Company (RAC) records which were translated and published in the ''Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology'', a 200-ton otter hunting ship named ''Il’mena'' with a mixed-nationality crew, including a majority Aleut contingent, was involved in conflict resulting in a massacre of the indigenous natives of San Nicolas Island.In 1811, to obtain more of the commercially valuable otter pelts, a party of Aleut hunters traveled to the coastal island of San Nicolas, near the Alta California-Baja California border.",
"The locally resident Nicoleño nation sought a payment from the Aleut hunters for the large number of otters being killed in the area.",
"Disagreement arose, turning violent; in the ensuing battle, the Aleuts killed nearly all the Nicoleño men.",
"Together with high fatalities from Eurasian diseases, the Nicoleños suffered so much from the loss of their men that by 1853, only one Nicoleñan (Juana Maria, ''the Lone Woman of San Nicolas'') remained alive.===Internment during World War II===In June 1942, during World War II, Japanese forces occupied Kiska and Attu Islands in the western Aleutians.",
"They later transported captive Attu Islanders to Hokkaidō, where they were held as prisoners of war in harsh conditions.",
"Fearing a Japanese attack on other Aleutian Islands and mainland Alaska, the U.S. government evacuated hundreds more Aleuts from the western chain and the Pribilofs, placing them in internment camps in southeast Alaska, where many died of measles, influenza and other infectious diseases which spread quickly in the overcrowded dormitories.",
"In total, about 75 died in American internment and 19 as a result of Japanese occupation.",
"The Aleut Restitution Act of 1988 was an attempt by Congress to compensate the survivors.",
"On June 17, 2017, the U.S. Government formally apologized for the internment of the Unangan people and their treatment in the camps.The World War II campaign by the United States to retake Attu and Kiska was a significant component of the operations in the American and Pacific theaters.===Population's decline===Before their way of life was changed by major influences from the outside world, there were approximately 25,000 Aleuts on the archipelago.",
"Foreign diseases, harsh treatment and disruption of aboriginal society soon reduced the population to less than one-tenth this number.",
"The 1910 Census count showed 1,491 Aleuts.",
"In the 2000 Census, 11,941 people identified as being Aleut; nearly 17,000 said Aleuts were among their ancestors."
],
[
"Culture",
"===Housing===Aleuts constructed partially underground houses called ''barabara''.",
"According to Lillie McGarvey, a 20th-century Aleut leader, ''s'' keep \"occupants dry from the frequent rains, warm at all times, and snugly sheltered from the high winds common to the area\".",
"Aleuts traditionally built houses by digging an oblong square pit in the ground, usually or smaller.",
"The pit was then covered by a roof framed with driftwood, thatched with grass, then covered with earth for insulation.",
"Inside trenches were dug along the sides, with mats placed on top to keep them clean.",
"The bedrooms were at the back of the lodge, opposite the entrance.",
"Several families would stay in one house, with their own designated areas.",
"Rather than fireplaces or bonfires in the middle, lanterns were hung in the house.===Subsistence===Aleuts survived by hunting and gathering.",
"They fished for salmon, crabs, shellfish, and cod, as well as hunting sea mammals such as seal, walrus, and whales.",
"They processed fish and sea mammals in a variety of ways: dried, smoked, or roasted.",
"Caribou, muskoxen, deer, moose, whale, and other types of game were eaten roasted or preserved for later use.",
"They dried berries.",
"They were also processed as , a mixture of berries, fat, and fish.",
"The boiled skin and blubber of a whale is a delicacy, as is that of walrus.Today, many Aleut continue to eat customary and locally sourced foods but also buy processed foods from Outside, which is expensive in Alaska.===Ethnobotany===A full list of their ethnobotany has been compiled, with 65 documented plant uses.=== Visual arts ===Men's , or bentwood hunting visor, Arvid Adolf Etholén collection, Museum of Cultures, Helsinki, FinlandUnknown Aleut artist, sea lyme grass basket and lid embellished with wool embroidery, early 20th century, Brooklyn Museum Customary arts of the Aleuts include weapon-making, building of ''baidarkas'' (special hunting boats), weaving, figurines, clothing, carving, and mask making.",
"Men as well as women often carved ivory and wood.",
"Nineteenth century craftsmen were famed for their ornate wooden hunting hats, which feature elaborate and colorful designs and may be trimmed with sea lion whiskers, feathers, and walrus ivory.",
"Andrew Gronholdt of the Shumagin Islands has played a vital role in reviving the ancient art of building the ''chagudax'' or bentwood hunting visors.Aleut women sewed finely stitched, waterproof parkas from seal gut and wove fine baskets from sea-lyme grass (''Elymus mollis'').",
"Some Aleut women continue to weave ryegrass baskets.",
"Aleut arts are practiced and taught throughout the state of Alaska.",
"As many Aleut have moved out of the islands to other parts of the state, they have taken with them the knowledge of their arts.",
"They have also adopted new materials and methods for their art, including serigraphy, video art, and installation art.Aleut carving, distinct in each region, has attracted traders for centuries, including early Europeans and other Alaska Natives.",
"Historically, carving was a male art and leadership attribute whereas today it is done by both genders.",
"Most commonly the carvings of walrus ivory and driftwood originated as part of making hunting weapons.",
"Sculptural carvings depict local animals, such as seals and whales.",
"Aleut sculptors also have carved human figures.Aleuts also carve walrus ivory for other uses, such as jewelry and sewing needles.",
"Jewelry is made with designs specific to the region of each people.",
"Each clan would have a specific style to signify their origin.",
"Jewelry ornaments were made for piercing lips (labrum), nose, and ears, as well as for necklaces.",
"Each woman had her own sewing needles, which she made, and that often had detailed end of animal heads.The main Aleut method of basketry was false embroidery (overlay).",
"Strands of grasses or reeds were overlaid upon the basic weaving surface, to obtain a plastic effect.",
"Basketry was an art reserved for women.",
"Early Aleut women created baskets and woven mats of exceptional technical quality, using only their thumbnail, grown long and then sharpened, as a tool.",
"Today, Aleut weavers continue to produce woven grass pieces of a remarkable cloth-like texture, works of modern art with roots in ancient tradition.",
"Birch bark, puffin feathers, and baleen are also commonly used by the Aleuts in basketry.",
"The Aleut term for grass basket is .",
"One Aleut leader recognized by the State of Alaska for her work in teaching and reviving Aleut basketry was Anfesia Shapsnikoff.",
"Her life and accomplishments are portrayed in the book ''Moments Rightly Placed'' (1998).Masks were created to portray figures of their myths and oral history.",
"The Atka people believed that another people lived in their land before them.",
"They portrayed such ancients in their masks, which show anthropomorphic creatures named in their language.",
"Knut Bergsland says their word means \"like those found in caves.\"",
"Masks were generally carved from wood and were decorated with paints made from berries or other natural products.",
"Feathers were inserted into holes carved out for extra decoration.",
"These masks were used in ceremonies ranging from dances to praises, each with its own meaning and purpose.===Tattoos and piercings===Tattooed Aleut womanThe tattoos and piercings of the Aleuts demonstrated accomplishments as well as their religious views.",
"They believed their body art would please the spirits of the animals and make any evil go away.",
"The body orifices were believed to be pathways for the entry of evil entities.",
"By piercing their orifices: the nose, the mouth, and ears, they would stop evil entities, , from entering their bodies.",
"Body art also enhanced their beauty, social status, and spiritual authority.Before the 19th century, piercings and tattoos were very common among Aleuts, especially among women.",
"Piercings, such as the nose pin, were common among both men and women and were usually performed a few days after birth.",
"The ornament was made of various materials, a piece of bark or bone, or an eagle's feather shaft.",
"From time to time, adult women decorated the nose pins by hanging pieces of amber and coral from strings on it; the semi-precious objects dangled down to their chins.Piercing ears was also common.",
"The Aleuts pierced holes around the rim of their ears with dentalium shells (tooth shells or tusk shells), bone, feathers, dried bird wings or skulls and/or amber.",
"Materials associated with birds were important, as birds were considered to defend animals in the spirit world.",
"A male would wear sea lion whiskers in his ears as a trophy of his expertise as a hunter.",
"Worn for decorative reasons, and sometimes to signify social standing, reputation, and the age of the wearer, Aleuts would pierce their lower lips with walrus ivory and wear beads or bones.",
"The individual with the most piercings held the highest respect.Tattooing for women began when they reached physical maturity, after menstruation, at about age 20.Historically, men received their first tattoo after killing their first animal, an important rite of passage.",
"Sometimes tattoos signaled social class.",
"For example, the daughter of a wealthy, famous ancestor or father would work hard at her tattoos to show the accomplishments of that ancestor or father.",
"They would sew, or prick, different designs on the chin, the side of the face, or under the nose.===Aleut clothing===Replica of the , an Aleut coat made from bird skins and sea otter furA Kamleika, or sea mammal intestine coat.Aleuts developed in one of the harshest climates in the world, and learned to create and protect warmth.",
"Both men and women wore parkas that extended below the knees.",
"The women wore the skin of seal or sea-otter, and the men wore bird skin parkas, the feathers turned in or out depending on the weather.",
"When the men were hunting on the water, they wore waterproof parkas made from seal or sea-lion guts, or the entrails of bear, walrus, or whales.",
"Parkas had a hood that could be cinched, as could the wrist openings, so water could not get in.",
"Men wore breeches made from the esophageal skin of seals.",
"Children wore parkas made of downy eagle skin with tanned bird skin caps.",
"They called these parkas '','' meaning 'rain gear' in the English language.Sea-lions, harbor seals, and sea otters are the most abundant marine mammals.",
"The men brought home the skins and prepared them by soaking them in urine and stretching them.",
"The women undertook the sewing.",
"Preparation of the gut for clothing involved several steps.",
"The prepared intestines were turned inside out.",
"A bone knife was used to remove the muscle tissue and fat from the walls of the intestine.",
"The gut was cut and stretched, and fastened to stakes to dry.",
"It was then cut and sewn to make waterproof parkas, bags, and other receptacles.",
"On some hunting trips, the men would take several women with them.",
"They would catch birds and prepare the carcasses and feathers for future use.",
"They caught puffins (''Lunda cirrhata'', ''Fratercula corniculata''), guillemots, and murres.It took 40 skins of tufted puffin and 60 skins of horned puffin to make one parka.",
"A woman would need a year for all the labor to make one parka.",
"Each lasted two years with proper care.",
"All parkas were decorated with bird feathers, beard bristles of seal and sea-lion, beaks of sea parrots, bird claws, sea otter fur, dyed leather, and caribou hair sewn in the seams.Women made needles from the wing bones of seabirds.",
"They made thread from the sinews of different animals and fish guts.",
"A thin strip of seal intestine could also be used, twisted to form a thread.",
"The women grew their thumbnail extra long and sharpened it.",
"They could split threads to make them as fine as a hair.",
"They used vermilion paint, hematite, the ink bag of the octopus, and the root of a kind of grass or vine to color the threads.===Gender===Russian travelers making early contact with the Aleuts mention traditional tales of two-spirits or third and fourth gender people, known as (male-bodied, 'man transformed into a woman') and (female-bodied, 'woman transformed into a man'), but it is unclear whether these tales are about historical individuals or spirits.===Hunting technologies=======Boats====Saint Paul Island, by Louis Choris, 1817The interior regions of the rough, mountainous Aleutian Islands provided little in terms of natural resources for the Aleutian people.",
"They collected stones for weapons, tools, stoves or lamps.",
"They collected and dried grasses for their woven baskets.",
"For everything else, the Aleuts had learned to use the fish and mammals they caught and processed to satisfy their needs.To hunt sea mammals and to travel between islands, the Aleuts became experts of sailing and navigation.",
"While hunting, they used small watercraft called ''baidarkas.''",
"For regular travel, they used their large ''s''.Men rowing a (large skin boat)The was a large, open, walrus-skin-covered boat.",
"Aleut families used it when traveling among the islands.",
"It was also used to transport goods for trade, and warriors took them to battle.The (small skin boat) was a small boat covered in sea lion skin.",
"It was developed and used for hunting because of its sturdiness and maneuverability.",
"Aleut resembles that of a Yup'ik kayak, but it is hydrodynamically sleeker and faster.",
"They made the for one or two persons only.",
"The deck was made with a sturdy chamber, the sides of the craft were nearly vertical and the bottom was rounded.",
"Most one-man ''s'' were about long and wide, whereas a two-man was on average about long and wide.",
"It was from the that Aleut men would stand on the water to hunt from the sea.====Weapons====The Aleuts hunted small sea mammals with barbed darts and harpoons slung from throwing boards.",
"These boards gave precision as well as some extra distance to these weapons.Harpoons were also called throwing-arrows when the pointed head fit loosely into the socket of the foreshaft and the head was able to detach from the harpoon when it penetrated an animal, and remain in the wound.",
"There were three main kinds of harpoon that the Aleuts used: a simple harpoon, with a head that kept its original position in the animal after striking, a compound (toggle-head) harpoon in which the head took a horizontal position in the animal after penetration, and the throwing-lance used to kill large animals.The simple Aleut harpoon consisted of four main parts: the wooden shaft, the bone foreshaft, and the bonehead (tip) with barbs pointed backward.",
"The barbed head was loosely fitted into the socket of the foreshaft so that when the animal was stabbed, it pulled the head away from the rest of the harpoon.",
"The sharp barbs penetrated with ease, but could not be pulled out.",
"The bone tip is fastened to a length of braided twine meanwhile; the hunter held the other end of the twine in his hand.The compound harpoon was the most prevalent weapon of the Aleuts.",
"Also known as the toggle-head spear, it was about the same size as the simple harpoon and used to hunt the same animals, however, this harpoon provided a more efficient and lethal weapon.",
"This harpoon separated into four parts.",
"The longest part was the shaft with the thicker stalk closer to the tip of the harpoon.",
"The shaft was fitted into the socket of the fore shaft and a bone ring was then placed over the joint to hold the two pieces together, as well as, protecting the wooden shaft from splitting.",
"Connected to the fore shaft of the harpoon is the toggle head spear tip.",
"This tip was made of two sub shafts that break apart on impact with an animal.",
"The upper sub shaft held the razor stone head and attached to the lower sub shaft with a small braided twine loop.",
"Once the tip penetrates the animal the upper sub head broke off from the rest of the shaft, however, since it was still connected with the braided loop it rotated the head into a horizontal position inside the animal's body so that it could not get away from the hunter.The throwing lance may be distinguished from a harpoon because all its pieces are fixed and immovable.",
"A lance was a weapon of war and it was also used to kill large marine animals after it has already been harpooned.",
"The throwing lance usually consisted of three parts: a wooden shaft, a bone ring or belt, and the compound head that was made with a barbed bonehead and a stone tip.",
"The length of the compound head was equivalent to the distance between the planes of a man's chest to his back.",
"The lance would penetrate the chest and pass through the chest cavity and exit from the back.",
"The bone ring was designed to break after impact so that the shaft could be used again for another kill.===Burial practices===They buried their dead ancestors near the village.",
"Archeologists have found many different types of burials, dating from a variety of periods, in the Aleutian Islands.",
"Aleuts developed a style of burials that were accommodated to local conditions, and honored the dead.",
"They have had four main types of burials: , cave, above-ground sarcophagi, and burials connected to communal houses.",
"burials are the most widely known type of mortuary practice found in the Aleutian Islands.",
"The people created burial mounds, that tend to be located on the edge of a bluff.",
"They placed stone and earth over the mound to protect and mark it.",
"Such mounds were first excavated by archeologists in 1972 on Southwestern Unmak Island, and dated to the early contact period.",
"Researchers have found a prevalence of these burials, and concluded it is a regional mortuary practice.",
"It may be considered a pan-Aleutian mortuary practice.Cave burials have been found throughout the eastern Aleutian Islands.",
"The human remains are buried in shallow graves at the rear of the cave.",
"These caves tend to be next to middens and near villages.",
"Some grave goods have been found in the caves associated with such burials.",
"For example, a deconstructed boat was found in a burial cave on Kanaga Island.",
"There were no other major finds of grave goods in the vicinity.Throughout the Aleutian Islands, gravesites have been found that are above-ground sarcophagi.",
"These sarcophagi are left exposed, with no attempt to bury the dead in the ground.",
"These burials tend to be isolated and limited to the remains of adult males, which may indicate a specific ritual practice.",
"In the Near Islands, isolated graves have also been found with the remains, and not just the sarcophagus, left exposed on the surface.",
"This way of erecting sarcophagi above ground is not as common as and cave burials, but it is still widespread.Another type of practice has been to bury remains in areas next to the communal houses of the settlement.",
"Human remains are abundant in such sites.",
"They indicate a pattern of burying the dead within the main activity areas of the settlement.",
"These burials consist of small pits adjacent to the houses and scattered around them.",
"In these instances, mass graves are common for women and children.",
"This type of mortuary practice has been mainly found in the Near Islands.In addition to these four main types, other kinds of burials have been found in the Aleutian Islands.",
"These more isolated examples in include mummification, private burial houses, abandoned houses, etc.",
"To date, such examples are not considered to be part of a larger, unifying cultural practice.",
"The findings discussed represent only the sites that have been excavated.The variety of mortuary practices mostly did not include the ritual of including extensive grave goods, as has been found in other cultures.",
"The remains so far have been mainly found with other human and faunal remains.",
"The addition of objects to \"accompany\" the dead is rare.",
"Archaeologists have been trying to dissect the absence of grave goods, but their findings have been ambiguous and do not really help the academic community to understand these practices more.Not much information is known about the ritual parts of burying the dead.",
"Archeologists and anthropologists have not found much evidence related to burial rituals.",
"This lack of ritual evidence could hint at either no ritualized ceremony, or one that has not yet been revealed in the archaeological record.",
"As a result, archaeologists cannot decipher the context to understand exactly why a certain type of burial was used in particular cases."
],
[
"Notable Aleuts",
"*John Hoover (1919–2011), sculptor* Carl E. Moses (1929–2014) businessman, state representative, who served from 1965 to 1973 as both a Republican and Democrat,* Jacob Netsvetov (1802–1864), Russian Orthodox saint and priest* Sergie Sovoroff (1901–1989), educator, (model sea kayak) builder* Eve Tuck, academic, indigenous studies*Olga (Arrsamquq) of Alaska (1916-1979) Eastern Orthodox Saint and Matushka*Peter the Aleut (1800–1815), Eastern Orthodox Saint and martyr"
],
[
"In popular culture",
"In ''Snow Crash'', a science fiction novel by American writer Neal Stephenson, a central character named Raven is portrayed as an Aleut with incredible toughness and hunting skill.",
"The story is about revenge due in part to perceived mistreatment of the Aleuts."
],
[
"See also",
"*Adamagan*Aleutian Islands*Aleutian tradition*Alutiiq*Indigenous Amerindian genetics*Maritime Fur Trade*Sadlermiut*Shamanism among Alaska Natives*Unangan Aleut* List of Native American peoples in the United States"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"*Black, Lydia T. ''Aleut Art: Unangam Aguqaadangin''.",
"Anchorage, Alaska: Aleutian/Pribilof Islands Association, 2005.",
"* Jochelson, Waldemar.",
"''History, Ethnology, and Anthropology of the Aleut''.",
"Washington: Carnegie institution of Washington, 1933.",
"* Jochelson, Waldemar, Bergsland, Knut (Editor) & Dirks, Moses (Editor).",
"''Unangam Ungiikangin Kayux Tunusangin = Unangam Uniikangis ama Tunuzangis = Aleut Tales and Narratives''.",
"Fairbanks, Alaska: Alaska Native Language Center, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, 1990..* Kohlhoff, Dean.",
"''When the Wind Was a River Aleut Evacuation in World War II''.",
"Seattle: University of Washington Press in association with Aleutian/Pribilof Islands Association, Anchorage, 1995.",
"**Lee, Molly, Angela J. Linn, and Chase Hensel.",
"Not Just a Pretty Face: Dolls and Human Figurines in Alaska Native Cultures.",
"Fairbanks, AK: University of Alaska, 2006.Print.",
"* Madden, Ryan Howard.",
"\"An enforced odyssey: The relocation and internment of Aleuts during World War II\" (PhD thesis U of New Hampshire, Durham, 1993) online * Murray, Martha G., and Peter L. Corey.",
"''Aleut Weavers''.",
"Juneau, AK: Alaska State Museums, Division of Libraries, Archives and Museums, 1997.",
"* National Park Service. \"",
"Aleutian World War II .\"",
"* Reedy-Maschner, Katherine.",
"\"Aleut Identities : Tradition and Modernity in an Indigenous Fishery\".",
"Montréal, Quebec: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2010.",
"* Veltre, Douglas W. ''Aleut Unangax̂ Ethnobotany An Annotated Bibliography''.",
"Akureyri, Iceland: CAFF International Secretariat, 2006."
],
[
"External links",
"* Aleut Corporation* Aleut Management Services* Aleutian Pribilof Island Association* Qawalangin Tribe of Unalaska* Museum of the Aleutians* Unalaska Communities of Memory Project Jukebox * Aleut International Association* ''A Grammar of Fox Island Aleutian'' Manuscript at Dartmouth College Library* Aleutian Pribilof Island Community Development Association"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act"
],
[
"Introduction",
"The '''Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act''' ('''ANCSA''') was signed into law by President Richard Nixon on December 18, 1971, constituting at the time the largest land claims settlement in United States history.",
"ANCSA was intended to resolve long-standing issues surrounding aboriginal land claims in Alaska, as well as to stimulate economic development throughout Alaska.The settlement established Alaska Native claims to the land by transferring titles to twelve Alaska Native regional corporations and over 200 local village corporations.",
"A thirteenth regional corporation was later created for Alaska Natives who no longer resided in Alaska.",
"The act is codified as 43 U.S.C.",
"1601 et seq."
],
[
"Background",
"===Alaskan statehood===Jay Greenfield, U.S.",
"Senator Ted Stevens and AFN President Emil Notti discussing ANCSA in the Senate TV Studio in 1969.When Alaska became a state in 1959, section 4 of the Alaska Statehood Act provided that any existing Alaska Native land claims would be unaffected by statehood and held in status quo.",
"Yet while section 4 of the act preserved Native land claims until later settlement, section 6 allowed for the state government to claim lands deemed vacant.",
"Section 6 granted the state of Alaska the right to select lands then in the hands of the federal government, with the exception of Native territory.",
"As a result, nearly from the public domain would eventually be transferred to the state.",
"The state government also attempted to acquire lands under section 6 of the Statehood Act that were subject to Native claims under section 4, and that were currently occupied and used by Alaska Natives.",
"The federal Bureau of Land Management began to process the Alaska government's selections without taking into account the Native claims and without informing the affected Native groups.It was against this backdrop that the original language for a land claims settlement was developed.A 9.2-magnitude earthquake struck the state in 1964.Recovery efforts drew the attention of the federal government.",
"The Federal Field Committee for Development Planning in Alaska decided that Natives should receive $100 million and 10% of revenue as a royalty.",
"Nothing was done with this proposal, however, and a freeze on land transfers remained in effect.===Founding of the Alaska Federation of Natives (AFN)===In 1966, Emil Notti called for a statewide meeting inviting numerous leaders around Alaska to gather and create the first meeting of a committee.",
"The historic meeting was held October 18, 1966 - on the 99th anniversary of the transfer of Alaska from Russia.",
"Notti presided over the three-day conference as it discussed matters of land recommendations, claims committees, and political challenges the act would have in getting through congress.",
"Many respected politicians and businessmen attended the meeting and delegates were astonished at the attention which they received from well-known political figures of the state.",
"The growing presence and political importance of Natives was evidenced when members were able to gain election to seven of the sixty seats in the legislature.",
"When the group met a second time early in 1967, it emerged with a new name, The Alaska Federation of Natives (AFN), and a new full-time President, Emil Notti.",
"AFN went on to profoundly change the human rights and economic stability of the Alaska Native population.===Native Land Claims Task Force===In 1967, Governor Walter Hickel summoned a group of Indigenous leaders and politicians to work out a settlement that would be satisfactory to Natives.",
"The group met for ten days and asked for $20 million in exchange for requested lands.",
"Among the other task force proposals were an outright grant of 1,000 acres per native village resident; a revenue-sharing program for state land claims and national mineral development projects; secured hunting and fishing rights on public lands; and a Native Commission to administrate state and federal compliance with the provisions of the claims settlement.",
"They proposed receiving 10% of federal mineral lease revenue for ten years, once the freeze which had been placed on land patents to allow oil exploration was lifted.===Oil===Cliff Groh was one of a number of non-Native lawyers who assisted various Native organizations and AFN's president Emil Notti in achieving passage of ANCSA.In 1968, the Atlantic-Richfield Company discovered oil at Prudhoe Bay on the Arctic coast, catapulting the issue of land ownership into headlines.",
"In order to lessen the difficulty of drilling at such a remote location and transporting the oil to the lower 48 states, the oil companies proposed building a pipeline to carry the oil across Alaska to the port of Valdez.",
"At Valdez, the oil would be loaded onto tankers and shipped to the contiguous states.The plan had been approved, but a permit to construct the pipeline, which would cross lands involved in the land claims dispute, could not be granted until the Native claims were settled.",
"Hearings were held for the first time before the United States House's Subcommittee on Indian Affairs in July 1968.Among those who attended the hearings were officials and legislators, as well as Laura Bergt, Roger Connor, Thoda Forslund, Cliff Groh, Barry Jackson, Flore Lekanof, Notti, and Morris Thompson.===Government negotiations and policy===Alaska Governor Walter Hickel was appointed as President Nixon's Interior Secretary.In 1969, President Nixon appointed Hickel as Secretary of the Interior.",
"The Alaska Federation of Natives (AFN) protested against Hickel's nomination, but he was eventually confirmed.",
"He worked with the AFN, negotiating with Native leaders and state government over the disputed lands.",
"Offers went back and forth, with each rejecting the other's proposals.",
"The AFN wanted rights to land, while then-Governor Keith Miller believed Natives did not have legitimate claims to state land in light of the provisions of the Alaska Statehood Act.",
"On July 8, 1970, Nixon delivered a speech reversing the Indian termination policy in favor of allowing tribal self-determination.",
"The following month, he established the National Council on Indian Opportunity, headed by Vice President Spiro Agnew, which included eight Native leaders: Frank Belvin (Choctaw), Bergt (Iñupiat), Betty Mae Jumper (Seminole), Earl Old Person (Blackfeet), John C. Rainer (Taos Pueblo), Martin Seneca, Jr. (Seneca), Harold Shunk (Yankton-Sioux), and Joseph C. \"Lone Eagle\" Vasquez (Apache-Sioux).Ted Stevens was key in the bill's passage.During the state administration of Governor William A. Egan positions were staked out upon which the AFN and other stakeholders could largely agree.",
"Native leaders, in addition to Alaska's congressional delegation and the state's newly elected Governor Egan, eventually reached the basis for presenting an agreement to Congress.",
"Bergt attended a March 1971 conference of the National Congress of American Indians in Kansas City, Missouri and was able to persuade Agnew there to meet with national officials, herself, Christiansen, an Alaska State Senator; Al Ketzler, chair of the Tanana Chiefs Conference; and Don Wright, president of the Alaska Federation of Natives a week later.",
"That meeting held on March 12, marked a turning-point in negotiations with the various parties.",
"The proposed settlement terms faced challenges in both houses but found a strong ally in Senator Henry M. Jackson from Washington state.",
"The most controversial issues that continued to hold up approval were methods for determining land selection by Alaska Natives and financial distribution.With major petroleum dollars on the line, pressure mounted to achieve a definitive legislative resolution at the federal level.",
"In 1971, the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act was signed into law by President Nixon.",
"It abrogated Native claims to aboriginal lands except those that are the subject of the law.",
"In return, Natives retained up to of land and were paid $963 million.",
"The land and money were to be divided among regional, urban, and village tribal corporations established under the law, often recognizing existing leadership.Alaskan officials were originally divided on the bill, though by 1970, with Interior Secretary Walter Hickel, Governor William Egan, Representative Nick Begich & Senators Ted Stevens & Mike Gravel all backing the bill, the opposition died down.",
"Stevens was particularly strongminded, and was key in the bill's passage.",
"Stevens, a freshman Senator for most of the fight, would later remark: \"ANCSA was my baptism of fire as a Senator from Alaska….",
"It didn't occur to me that some Senators had the opportunity to ease into their jobs.",
"Life in the Senate for me was fast-paced from the beginning….",
"With my experience working in the Department of the Interior and with the Statehood Act, and my faith in the determination and unity of purpose of Alaska's Native people, I believed from the beginning that a settlement could be achieved….",
"My memories of the Congressional action as ANCSA took shape aren't of a battle as much as they are of long hours of tough, hard negotiating, often two steps forward and one step back…\""
],
[
"Effect of land conveyances",
"In 1971, barely one million acres of land in Alaska were in private hands.",
"ANCSA, together with section 6 of Alaska Statehood Act, which the new act allowed to come to fruition, affected ownership to about of land in Alaska once wholly controlled by the federal government.",
"That is larger by than the combined areas of Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland and Virginia.When the bill passed in 1971, it included provisions that had never before been attempted in previous United States settlements with Native Americans.",
"The newly passed Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act created twelve Native regional economic development corporations.",
"Each corporation was associated with a specific region of Alaska and the Natives who had traditionally lived there.",
"This innovative approach to native settlements engaged the tribes in corporate capitalism.The idea originated with the AFN, who believed that the Natives would have to become a part of the capitalist system in order to survive.",
"As stockholders in these corporations, the Natives could earn some income and stay in their traditional villages.",
"If the corporations were managed properly, they could make profits that would enable individuals to stay, rather than having to leave Native villages to find better work.",
"This was intended to help preserve Native culture."
],
[
"Native and state land selection",
"Alaska Natives had three years from passage of ANCSA to make land selections of the granted under the act.",
"In some cases Native corporations received outside aid in surveying the land.",
"For instance, Doyon, Limited (one of the 13 regional corporations) was helped by the Geophysical Institute of the University of Alaska.",
"The Institute determined which land contained resources such as minerals and coal.",
"NASA similarly provided satellite imagery to aid in Native corporations finding areas most suited for vegetation and their traditional subsistence culture.",
"The imagery showed locations of caribou and moose, as well as forests with marketable timber.",
"In total about were analyzed for Doyon.",
"Natives were able to choose tens of thousands of acres of land rich with timber while Doyon used mineral analysis to attract businesses.The state of Alaska to date has been granted approximately 85% or of the land claims it has made under ANCSA.",
"The state is entitled to a total of under the terms of the Statehood Act.",
"Originally the state had 25 years after passage of the Alaska Statehood Act to file claims under section 6 of the act with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).",
"Amendments to ANCSA extended that deadline until 1994, with the expectation that BLM would complete processing of land transfers subject to overlapping Native claims by 2009.Nonetheless, some Native and state selections under ANCSA remained unresolved as late as December 2014."
],
[
"Criticism of ANCSA",
"There was largely positive reaction to ANCSA, although not entirely.",
"The act was supported by Natives as well as non-Natives, and likewise enjoyed bipartisan support.",
"Natives were heavily involved in the legislative process, and the final draft of the act used many AFN ideas.Some Natives have argued that ANCSA has hastened cultural genocide of Alaska Natives.",
"Some Natives critiqued ANCSA as an illegitimate treaty since only tribal leaders were involved and the provisions of the act were not voted on by indigenous populations.",
"One native described it as a social and political experiment.",
"Critics have also argued that Natives so feared massacre or incarceration that they offered no resistance to the act.Others have argued that the settlement was arguably the most generous afforded by the United States to a Native group.",
"They note that some of the largest and most profitable corporations in the state are the twelve created by ANCSA.",
"Other critics attacked the act as \"Native welfare\" and such complaints continue to be expressed.The corporation system has been critiqued, as in some cases stockholders have sold land to outside corporations that have leveled forests and extracted minerals.",
"But supporters of the system argue that it has provided economic benefits for indigenous peoples that outweigh these problems."
],
[
"Selected provisions of ANCSA",
"* Native claims in Alaska were extinguished by means of section 4 of ANCSA.",
"* In exchange for abrogating Native claims, approximately one-ninth of the state's land plus $962.5 million were distributed to more than 200 local Alaska Native \"village corporations\" established under section 8, in addition to 12 land-owning for-profit Alaska Native \"regional corporations\" and a non-land-owning thirteenth corporation for Alaska Natives who had left the state established under section 6.",
"* Of the compensation monies, $462.5 million was to come from the federal treasury and the rest from oil revenue-sharing.",
"* Settlement benefits would accrue to those with at least one-fourth Native ancestry under sections 3(b) and 5(a).",
"* Of the approximately 80,000 Natives enrolled under ANCSA, those living in villages (approximately two-thirds of the total) would receive 100 shares in both a village and a regional corporation.",
"* The remaining one-third would be \"at large\" shareholders with 100 shares in a regional corporation with additional rights to revenue from regional mineral and timber resources.",
"* The Alaska Native Allotment Act was revoked but with the proviso that pending claims under that act would continue to be processed under section 18.Successful applicants would be excluded under ANCSA by section 14(h)(5) from land to be used for a primary residence.",
"* The twelve regional corporations within the state would administer the settlement.",
"* A thirteenth corporation composed of Natives who had left the state would receive compensation but not land.",
"* Surface rights to were patented to the Native village and regional corporations under sections 12(c), as well as 14(h)(1) and (8).",
"* The surface rights to the patented land were granted to the village corporations and the subsurface right to the land were granted to the regional corporation, creating a split estate pursuant to section 14(f).===Alaska Native regional corporations===Regional corporations established by the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act.The following thirteen regional corporations were created under ANCSA:* Ahtna, Incorporated* The Aleut Corporation * Arctic Slope Regional Corporation * Bering Straits Native Corporation * Bristol Bay Native Corporation * Calista Corporation* Chugach Alaska Corporation* Cook Inlet Region, Inc. * Doyon, Limited* Koniag, Incorporated* NANA Regional Corporation * Sealaska Corporation* The 13th Regional CorporationAdditionally, most regions and some villages have created their own nonprofits providing social services and health care through grant funding and federal compacts.",
"The objectives of these nonprofits are varied, but focus generally on cultural and educational activities.",
"These include scholarships for Native students, sponsorship of cultural and artistic events, preservation efforts for Native languages, and protection of sites with historic or religious importance.===Alaska Native village and urban corporations===ANCSA created about 224 village and urban corporations.",
"Below is a representative list of village and urban corporations created under ANCSA:* Ukpeaġvik Iñupiat Corporation, village corporation for Utqiaġvik* Bethel Native Corporation, village corporation for Bethel* Cape Fox Corporation, village corporation for Saxman* Deloycheet, Inc., village corporation for Holy Cross* Huna Totem Corporation, village corporation for Hoonah* Haida Corporation, village corporation for Hydaburg* Goldbelt, Inc., urban corporation for Juneau* Paug-Vik, Inc. Ltd., village corporation for Naknek* Chenega Corporation, village corporation for Chenega* Afognak Native Corporation, village corporation for Afognak and Port Lions* Kavilco Incorporated, village corporation for Kasaan* Klukwan, Inc., village corporation for Klukwan* The Kuskokwim Corporation , village corporation for Aniak, Crooked Creek, Georgetown, Kalskag, Lower Kalskag, Napaimute, Red Devil, Russian Mission, Sleetmute and Stony River* Natives of Kodiak, Inc., urban corporation for Kodiak* Ounalashka Corporation, village corporation for Unalaska* Ouzinkie Native Corporation, village corporation for Ouzinkie* Shee Atika, Incorporated, urban corporation for Sitka"
],
[
"See also",
"*Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act*Alaska Statehood Act*Alaska Native Allotment Act*Alaska Land Transfer Acceleration Act*Emil Notti"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Bibliography",
"*Borneman, Walter R. ''Alaska: Saga of a Bold Land''.",
"Harper Perennial.",
"(2004)*Dombrowski, Kirk.",
"''Against Culture: Development, Politics, and Religion in Indian Alaska'' U of Nebraska Press.",
"(2001)*Haycox, Stephen.",
"''Alaska: An American Colony''.",
"University of Washington Press.",
"(2006)*Haycox, Stephen.",
"''Frigid Embrace: Politics, Economics, and Environment in Alaska'' Oregon University Press.",
"(2002) *Haynes, James B.",
"\"Land Selection and Development under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act,\" ''Arctic Institute of North America'', Vol.",
"28–3, pp.",
"201–208 (September 1975)*Linxwiler, James D. \"The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act: The First Twenty Years,\" ''Proceedings from the 38th Annual Rocky Mountain Mineral Law Institute''.",
"(1992)*Roderick, Libby.",
"''Alaska Native Cultures and Issues: Responses to Frequently Asked Questions''.",
"University of Alaska Press.",
"(2010)*Williams, Maria Sháa Tláa.",
"''The Alaska Native Reader: History, Culture, Politics''.",
"Duke University Press.",
"(2009).",
"*Worl, Rosita.",
"\"Reconstructing Sovereignty in Alaska,\" ''Cultural Survival Quarterly''.",
"(Fall 2001)"
],
[
"Further reading",
"*Arnold, Robert D. Alaska Native Land Claims, (Alaska Native Foundation 1978).",
"*Berry, Mary Clay.",
"The Alaska Pipeline: The Politics of Oil and Native Land Claims, (Indiana University Press 1975).",
"*Berger, Thomas R. Village Journey: The Report of the Alaska Native Review Commission, (Farrar, Straus and Giroux 1985).",
"*Case, David S. Alaska Natives and American Laws, (University of Alaska Press 3d ed.",
"2012)* ''GAO Report: Increased Use of Alaska Native Corporations’ Special 8(a) Provisions Calls for Tailored Oversight'' (April 2006)*Kentch, Gavin.",
"\"A Corporate Culture?",
"The Environmental Justice Challenges of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act\".",
"81 Miss.",
"L.J.",
"813 (2012)*Lazarus, Arthur Jr. \"The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act: A Flawed Victory,\" ''Law and Contemporary Problems''.",
"(Winter 1976)*London, J. Tate.",
"\"The \"1991 Amendments\" to the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act: Protection for Native Lands?",
"\", 8 Stan.",
"Envtl.",
"L.J.",
"200.",
"(1989)*Mitchell, Donald Craig.",
"Sold American: The Story of Alaska Natives and Their Land, 1867-1959, (University of Alaska Press 2003).",
"*Mitchell, Donald Craig.",
"Take My Land Take My Life: The Story of Congress's Historic Settlement of Alaska Native Land Claims, 1960-1971, (University of Alaska Press 2001).",
"*Morgan, Lael.",
"Art and Eskimo Power: The Life and Times of Alaskan Howard Rock, (Epicenter Press 1988).",
"*Senungetuk, Joseph E. Give or Take a Century: An Eskimo Chronicle, (The Indian Historian Press 1971).",
"*\"Settling the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act\", 38 Stan.",
"L. Rev.",
"227 (1985)."
],
[
"External links",
"* The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act Resource Center* Alaska Native Land Claims Settlement Act of 1971* Revisiting the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA)* Alaska Native Corporation Links"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Adoptionism"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Francesco Albani's ''The Baptism of Christ'', when Jesus became one with God according to adoptionism'''Adoptionism''', also called '''dynamic monarchianism''', is an early Christian nontrinitarian theological doctrine, subsequently revived in various forms, which holds that Jesus was adopted as the Son of God at his baptism, his resurrection, or his ascension.",
"How common adoptionist views were among early Christians is debated, but it appears to have been most popular in the first, second, and third centuries.",
"Some scholars see adoptionism as the belief of the earliest followers of Jesus, based on the epistles of Paul and other early literature.",
"However, adoptionist views sharply declined in prominence in the fourth and fifth centuries, as Church leaders condemned it as a heresy."
],
[
"Definition",
"Adoptionism is one of two main forms of monarchianism (the other being modalism, which considers God to be one while working through the different \"modes\" or \"manifestations\" of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit, without limiting his modes or manifestations).",
"Adoptionism denies the eternal pre-existence of Christ, and although it explicitly affirms his deity subsequent to events in his life, many classical trinitarians claim that the doctrine implicitly denies it by denying the constant hypostatic union of the eternal Logos to the human nature of Jesus.",
"Under adoptionism, Jesus is divine and has been since his adoption, although he is not equal to the Father, per \"my Father is greater than I\" and as such is a kind of subordinationism.",
"Adoptionism is sometimes, but not always, related to a denial of the virgin birth of Jesus."
],
[
"History",
"===Early Christianity=======Adoptionism and high Christology====Bart Ehrman holds that the New Testament writings contain two different Christologies, namely a \"low\" or adoptionist Christology, and a \"high\" or \"incarnation Christology\".",
"The \"low Christology\" or \"adoptionist Christology\" is the belief \"that God exalted Jesus to be his Son by raising him from the dead\", thereby raising him to \"divine status\".",
"The other early Christology is \"high Christology,\" which is \"the view that Jesus was a pre-existent divine being who became a human, did the Father's will on earth, and then was taken back up into heaven whence he had originally come,\" and from where he appeared on earth.",
"The chronology of the development of these early Christologies is a matter of debate within contemporary scholarship.According to the \"evolutionary model\" or evolutionary theories proposed by Bousset, followed by Brown, the Christological understanding of Christ developed over time, from a low Christology to a high Christology, as witnessed in the Gospels.",
"According to the evolutionary model, the earliest Christians believed that Jesus was a human who was exalted, and thus adopted as God's Son, when he was resurrected, signaling the nearness of the Kingdom of God, when all dead would be resurrected and the righteous exalted.",
"Adoptionist concepts can be found in the Gospel of Mark.",
"As Daniel Johansson notes, the majority of scholars hold Mark's Jesus as \"an exalted, but merely human figure\", especially when read in the apparent context of Jewish beliefs.",
"Later beliefs shifted the exaltation to his baptism, birth, and subsequently to the idea of his eternal existence, as witnessed in the Gospel of John.",
"Mark shifted the moment of when Jesus became the son to the baptism of Jesus, and later still Matthew and Luke shifted it to the moment of the divine conception, and finally John declared that Jesus had been with God from the beginning: \"In the beginning was the Word\".One notable passage that may have been cited by early adoptionists was what exactly God said at Jesus's baptism; three different versions are recorded.",
"One of them, found in the Codex Bezae version of Luke 3:22, is \"You are my son; today I have begotten you.\"",
"This seems to be quoted in Acts 13:32–33 as well (in all manuscripts, not just Bezae).",
"Quotes from second and third century Christian writers almost always use this variant as well, with many fourth and fifth century writers continuing to use it, if occasionally with embarrassment; Augustine cites the line, for example, but clarifies God meant an eternal \"today\".",
"Ehrman speculates that Orthodox scribes of the fourth and fifth century changed the passage in Luke to align with the version in Mark as a defense against adoptionists citing the passage in their favor.Since the 1970s, these late datings for the development of a \"high Christology\" have been contested, and a majority of scholars argue that this \"high Christology\" existed already before the writings of Paul.",
"According to the \"New \", or the Early High Christology Club, which includes Martin Hengel, Larry Hurtado, N. T. Wright, and Richard Bauckham, this \"incarnation Christology\" or \"high Christology\" did not evolve over a longer time, but was a \"big bang\" of ideas which were already present at the start of Christianity, and took further shape in the first few decades of the church, as witnessed in the writings of Paul.",
"Some 'Early High Christology' proponents scholars argue that this \"high Christology\" may go back to Jesus himself.According to Ehrman, these two Christologies existed alongside each other, calling the \"low Christology\" an \"adoptionist Christology, and \"the \"high Christology\" an \"incarnation Christology\".====New Testamental epistles====Adoptionist theology may also be reflected in canonical epistles, the earliest of which pre-date the writing of the gospels.",
"The letters of Paul the Apostle, for example, do not mention a virgin birth of Christ.",
"Paul describes Jesus as \"born of a woman, born under the law\" and \"as to his human nature was a descendant of David\" in the Epistle to the Galatians and the Epistle to the Romans.",
"Christian interpreters, however, take his statements in Philippians 2 to imply that Paul believed Jesus to have existed as equal to God before his incarnation.====Shepherd of Hermas====The 2nd-century work Shepherd of Hermas may also have taught that Jesus was a virtuous man filled with the Holy Spirit and adopted as the Son.",
"While the Shepherd of Hermas was popular and sometimes bound with the canonical scriptures, it did not retain canonical status, if it ever had it.====Theodotus of Byzantium====Theodotus of Byzantium ( late 2nd century), a Valentinian Gnostic, was the most prominent exponent of adoptionism.",
"According to Hippolytus of Rome (''Philosophumena'', VII, xxiii) Theodotus taught that Jesus was a man born of a virgin, according to the Council of Jerusalem, that he lived like other men, and was most pious.",
"At his baptism in the Jordan the \"Christ\" came down upon the man Jesus, in the likeness of a dove (''Philosophumena'', VII, xxiii), but Jesus was not himself God until after his resurrection.Adoptionism was declared heresy at the end of the 3rd century and was rejected by the Synods of Antioch and the First Council of Nicaea, which defined the orthodox doctrine of the Trinity and identified the man Jesus with the eternally begotten Son or Word of God in the Nicene Creed.",
"The belief was also declared heretical by Pope Victor I.====Ebionites====Adoptionism was also adhered to by the Jewish Christians known as Ebionites, who, according to Epiphanius in the 4th century, believed that Jesus was chosen on account of his sinless devotion to the will of God.The Ebionites were a Jewish Christian movement that existed during the early centuries of the Christian Era.",
"They show strong similarities with the earliest form of Jewish Christianity, and their specific theology may have been a \"reaction to the law-free Gentile mission\".",
"They regarded Jesus as the Messiah while rejecting his divinity and his virgin birth, and insisted on the necessity of following Jewish law and rites.",
"They used the Gospel of the Ebionites, one of the Jewish–Christian gospels; the Hebrew Book of Matthew starting at chapter 3; revered James the brother of Jesus (James the Just); and rejected Paul the Apostle as an apostate from the Law.",
"Their name (, derived from the Hebrew , meaning or ) suggests that they placed a special value on voluntary poverty.Distinctive features of the Gospel of the Ebionites include the absence of the virgin birth and of the genealogy of Jesus; an Adoptionist Christology, in which Jesus is chosen to be God's Son at the time of his Baptism; the abolition of the Jewish sacrifices by Jesus; and an advocacy of vegetarianism.=== Spanish Adoptionism ===Iberian Adoptionism was a theological position which was articulated in Umayyad and Christian-held regions of the Iberian peninsula in the 8th and 9th centuries.",
"The issue seems to have begun with the claim of archbishop Elipandus of Toledo that – in respect to his human nature – Christ was ''adoptive'' Son of God.",
"Another leading advocate of this Christology was Felix of Urgel.",
"In the Iberian peninsula, adoptionism was opposed by Beatus of Liebana, and in the Carolingian territories, the Adoptionist position was condemned by Pope Hadrian I, Alcuin of York, Agobard, and officially in Carolingian territory by the Council of Frankfurt (794).Despite the shared name of \"adoptionism\" the Spanish Adoptionist Christology appears to have differed sharply from the adoptionism of early Christianity.",
"Spanish advocates predicated the term of Christ only in respect to his humanity; once the divine Son \"emptied himself\" of divinity and \"took the form of a servant\" (Philippians 2:7), Christ's human nature was \"adopted\" as divine.Historically, many scholars have followed the Adoptionists' Carolingian opponents in labeling Spanish Adoptionism as a minor revival of \"Nestorian\" Christology.",
"John C. Cavadini has challenged this notion by attempting to take the Spanish Christology in its own Spanish/North African context in his study, ''The Last Christology of the West: Adoptionism in Spain and Gaul, 785–820''.=== Scholastic Neo-adoptionism ===A third wave was the revived form (\"Neo-adoptionism\") of Peter Abelard in the 12th century.",
"Later, various modified and qualified Adoptionist tenets emerged from some theologians in the 14th century.",
"Duns Scotus (1300) and Durandus of Saint-Pourçain (1320) admit the term in a qualified sense.",
"In more recent times the Jesuit Gabriel Vásquez, and the Lutheran divines Georgius Calixtus and Johann Ernst Immanuel Walch, have defended adoptionism as essentially orthodox.=== Modern adoptionist groups ===A form of adoptionism surfaced in Unitarianism during the 18th century as denial of the virgin birth became increasingly common, led by the views of Joseph Priestley and others.A similar form of adoptionism was expressed in the writings of James Strang, a Latter Day Saint leader who founded the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Strangite) after the death of Joseph Smith in 1844.In his Book of the Law of the Lord, a purported work of ancient scripture found and translated by Strang, he offers an essay entitled \"Note on the Sacrifice of Christ\" in which he explains his unique (for Mormonism as a whole) doctrines on the subject.",
"Jesus Christ, said Strang, was the natural-born son of Mary and Joseph, who was chosen from before all time to be the Savior of mankind, but who had to be born as an ordinary mortal of two human parents (rather than being begotten by the Father or the Holy Spirit) to be able to truly fulfill his Messianic role.",
"Strang claimed that the earthly Christ was in essence \"adopted\" as God's son at birth, and fully revealed as such during the Transfiguration.",
"After proving himself to God by living a perfectly sinless life, he was enabled to provide an acceptable sacrifice for the sins of men, prior to his resurrection and ascension.The Christian Community, an esoteric Christian denomination informed by the teachings of Rudolf Steiner, assumes an adoptionist Christology that treats Jesus and the Christ as separate beings until they are joined at baptism."
],
[
"See also",
"* Adoptivi* Arianism* Binitarianism"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Sources",
";Printed sources* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Philip Schaff ''History of the Christian Church'', Volume IV, 1882.",
"* * (6th German edition, translated by George Ogg)* ;Web sources"
],
[
"External links",
"* Adoptionism in ''Catholic Encyclopedia''* Adoptionism in ''Christian Cyclopedia''* Chapter XI.",
"Doctrinal Controversies, from Philip Schaff's History of the Christian Church"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Apollinarism"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Apollinarism''' or '''Apollinarianism''' is a Christological heresy proposed by Apollinaris of Laodicea (died 390) that argues that Jesus had a human body and sensitive human soul, but a divine mind and not a human rational mind, the Divine Logos taking the place of the latter.",
"It was deemed heretical in 381 and virtually died out within the following decades."
],
[
"History",
"The Trinity had been recognized at the First Council of Nicaea in 325, but debate about exactly what it meant continued.",
"A rival to the more common belief that Jesus Christ had two natures was monophysitism (\"one nature\"), the doctrine that Christ had only one nature.",
"Apollinarism and Eutychianism were two forms of monophysitism.",
"Apollinaris's rejection of Christ having a human mind was considered an over-reaction to Arianism and its teaching that Christ was a lesser god.Theodoret charged Apollinaris with confounding the persons of the Godhead and giving in to the heretical ways of Sabellius.",
"Basil of Caesarea accused him of abandoning the literal sense of the scripture, and taking it up wholly with the allegorical sense.",
"His views were condemned in a Synod at Alexandria, under Athanasius of Alexandria, in 362, and later subdivided into several different heresies, the main ones of which were the Polemians and the Antidicomarianites.Apollinaris, considering the rational soul and spirit as essentially liable to sin and capable, at its best, of only precarious efforts, saw no way of saving Christ's impeccability and the infinite value of Redemption, except by the elimination of the human spirit from Jesus' humanity, and the substitution of the Divine Logos in its stead.",
"Apollinarism was declared to be a heresy in 381 by the First Council of Constantinople."
],
[
"Neo-Apollinarism",
"Christian philosopher William Lane Craig has proposed a neo-Apollinarian Christology in which the divine Logos completes the human nature of Christ.",
"Craig says his proposal is tentative and he welcomes critique and interaction from other scholars.Craig also clarifies \"what I called a Neo-Apollinarian Christological model\" by stating that"
],
[
"See also",
"***"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Sources",
"**Artemi, E., «Mia physis of God Logos sesarkomeni» a)The analysis of this phrase according to Cyril of Alexandria b)The analysis of this phrase according to Apollinaris of Laodicea», Ecclesiastic Faros t. ΟΔ (2003), 293 – 304.",
"*Chan, Joyce (2021). ''",
"Apollinarianism'', Carey Theological College, University of British Columbia.",
"*McGrath, Alister.",
"1998.",
"''Historical Theology, An Introduction to the History of Christian Thought.''",
"Oxford: Blackwell Publishers.",
"Chapter 1.",
"*"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Acid–base reaction"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Video of reaction between gaseous hydrochloric acid and ammonia (base), forming white ammonium chlorideIn chemistry, an '''acid–base reaction''' is a chemical reaction that occurs between an acid and a base.",
"It can be used to determine pH via titration.",
"Several theoretical frameworks provide alternative conceptions of the reaction mechanisms and their application in solving related problems; these are called the acid–base theories, for example, Brønsted–Lowry acid–base theory.Their importance becomes apparent in analyzing acid–base reactions for gaseous or liquid species, or when acid or base character may be somewhat less apparent.",
"The first of these concepts was provided by the French chemist Antoine Lavoisier, around 1776.It is important to think of the acid–base reaction models as theories that complement each other.",
"For example, the current Lewis model has the broadest definition of what an acid and base are, with the Brønsted–Lowry theory being a subset of what acids and bases are, and the Arrhenius theory being the most restrictive."
],
[
"Acid–base definitions",
"===Historic development===The concept of an acid–base reaction was first proposed in 1754 by Guillaume-François Rouelle, who introduced the word \"base\" into chemistry to mean a substance which reacts with an acid to give it solid form (as a salt).",
"Bases are mostly bitter in nature.====Lavoisier's oxygen theory of acids====The first scientific concept of acids and bases was provided by Lavoisier in around 1776.Since Lavoisier's knowledge of strong acids was mainly restricted to oxoacids, such as (nitric acid) and (sulfuric acid), which tend to contain central atoms in high oxidation states surrounded by oxygen, and since he was not aware of the true composition of the hydrohalic acids (HF, HCl, HBr, and HI), he defined acids in terms of their containing ''oxygen'', which in fact he named from Greek words meaning \"acid-former\" ().",
"The Lavoisier definition held for over 30 years, until the 1810 article and subsequent lectures by Sir Humphry Davy in which he proved the lack of oxygen in hydrogen sulfide (), hydrogen telluride (), and the hydrohalic acids.",
"However, Davy failed to develop a new theory, concluding that \"acidity does not depend upon any particular elementary substance, but upon peculiar arrangement of various substances\".",
"One notable modification of oxygen theory was provided by Jöns Jacob Berzelius, who stated that acids are oxides of nonmetals while bases are oxides of metals.====Liebig's hydrogen theory of acids====In 1838, Justus von Liebig proposed that an acid is a hydrogen-containing compound whose hydrogen can be replaced by a metal.",
"This redefinition was based on his extensive work on the chemical composition of organic acids, finishing the doctrinal shift from oxygen-based acids to hydrogen-based acids started by Davy.",
"Liebig's definition, while completely empirical, remained in use for almost 50 years until the adoption of the Arrhenius definition.===Arrhenius definition===Svante ArrheniusThe first modern definition of acids and bases in molecular terms was devised by Svante Arrhenius.",
"A hydrogen theory of acids, it followed from his 1884 work with Friedrich Wilhelm Ostwald in establishing the presence of ions in aqueous solution and led to Arrhenius receiving the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1903.As defined by Arrhenius:* An ''Arrhenius acid'' is a substance that ionises in water to form hydrogen ions (); that is, an acid increases the concentration of H+ ions in an aqueous solution.This causes the protonation of water, or the creation of the hydronium () ion.",
"Thus, in modern times, the symbol is interpreted as a shorthand for , because it is now known that a bare proton does not exist as a free species in aqueous solution.",
"This is the species which is measured by pH indicators to measure the acidity or basicity of a solution.",
"* An ''Arrhenius base'' is a substance that dissociates in water to form hydroxide () ions; that is, a base increases the concentration of ions in an aqueous solution.",
"The Arrhenius definitions of acidity and alkalinity are restricted to aqueous solutions and are not valid for most non-aqueous solutions, and refer to the concentration of the solvent ions.",
"Under this definition, pure and HCl dissolved in toluene are not acidic, and molten NaOH and solutions of calcium amide in liquid ammonia are not alkaline.",
"This led to the development of the Brønsted–Lowry theory and subsequent Lewis theory to account for these non-aqueous exceptions.The reaction of an acid with a base is called a neutralization reaction.",
"The products of this reaction are a salt and water.In this traditional representation an acid–base neutralization reaction is formulated as a double-replacement reaction.",
"For example, the reaction of hydrochloric acid (HCl) with sodium hydroxide (NaOH) solutions produces a solution of sodium chloride (NaCl) and some additional water molecules.The modifier (aq) in this equation was implied by Arrhenius, rather than included explicitly.",
"It indicates that the substances are dissolved in water.",
"Though all three substances, HCl, NaOH and NaCl are capable of existing as pure compounds, in aqueous solutions they are fully dissociated into the aquated ions and .====Example: baking powder====Baking powder is used to cause the dough for breads and cakes to \"rise\" by creating millions of tiny carbon dioxide bubbles.",
"Baking powder is not to be confused with baking soda, which is sodium bicarbonate ().",
"Baking powder is a mixture of baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) and acidic salts.",
"The bubbles are created because, when the baking powder is combined with water, the sodium bicarbonate and acid salts react to produce gaseous carbon dioxide.",
"Whether commercially or domestically prepared, the principles behind baking powder formulations remain the same.",
"The acid–base reaction can be generically represented as shown: The real reactions are more complicated because the acids are complicated.",
"For example, starting with sodium bicarbonate and monocalcium phosphate (), the reaction produces carbon dioxide by the following stoichiometry:Monocalcium phosphate (\"MCP\") is a common acid component in domestic baking powders.A typical formulation (by weight) could call for 30% sodium bicarbonate, 5–12% monocalcium phosphate, and 21–26% sodium aluminium sulfate.",
"Alternately, a commercial baking powder might use sodium acid pyrophosphate as one of the two acidic components instead of sodium aluminium sulfate.",
"Another typical acid in such formulations is cream of tartar (), a derivative of tartaric acid.===Brønsted–Lowry definition===The Brønsted–Lowry definition, formulated in 1923, independently by Johannes Nicolaus Brønsted in Denmark and Martin Lowry in England, is based upon the idea of protonation of bases through the deprotonation of acids – that is, the ability of acids to \"donate\" hydrogen ions () otherwise known as protons to bases, which \"accept\" them.An acid–base reaction is, thus, the removal of a hydrogen ion from the acid and its addition to the base.",
"The removal of a hydrogen ion from an acid produces its ''conjugate base'', which is the acid with a hydrogen ion removed.",
"The reception of a proton by a base produces its ''conjugate acid'', which is the base with a hydrogen ion added.Unlike the previous definitions, the Brønsted–Lowry definition does not refer to the formation of salt and solvent, but instead to the formation of ''conjugate acids'' and ''conjugate bases'', produced by the transfer of a proton from the acid to the base.",
"In this approach, acids and bases are fundamentally different in behavior from salts, which are seen as electrolytes, subject to the theories of Debye, Onsager, and others.",
"An acid and a base react not to produce a salt and a solvent, but to form a new acid and a new base.",
"The concept of neutralization is thus absent.",
"Brønsted–Lowry acid–base behavior is formally independent of any solvent, making it more all-encompassing than the Arrhenius model.",
"The calculation of pH under the Arrhenius model depended on alkalis (bases) dissolving in water (aqueous solution).",
"The Brønsted–Lowry model expanded what could be pH tested using insoluble and soluble solutions (gas, liquid, solid).The general formula for acid–base reactions according to the Brønsted–Lowry definition is:where HA represents the acid, B represents the base, represents the conjugate acid of B, and represents the conjugate base of HA.For example, a Brønsted–Lowry model for the dissociation of hydrochloric acid (HCl) in aqueous solution would be the following:The removal of from the produces the chloride ion, , the conjugate base of the acid.",
"The addition of to the (acting as a base) forms the hydronium ion, , the conjugate acid of the base.Water is amphoteric that is, it can act as both an acid and a base.",
"The Brønsted–Lowry model explains this, showing the dissociation of water into low concentrations of hydronium and hydroxide ions:This equation is demonstrated in the image below:centerHere, one molecule of water acts as an acid, donating an and forming the conjugate base, , and a second molecule of water acts as a base, accepting the ion and forming the conjugate acid, .As an example of water acting as an acid, consider an aqueous solution of pyridine, .In this example, a water molecule is split into a hydrogen ion, which is donated to a pyridine molecule, and a hydroxide ion.In the Brønsted–Lowry model, the solvent does not necessarily have to be water, as is required by the Arrhenius Acid–Base model.",
"For example, consider what happens when acetic acid, , dissolves in liquid ammonia.An ion is removed from acetic acid, forming its conjugate base, the acetate ion, .",
"The addition of an ion to an ammonia molecule of the solvent creates its conjugate acid, the ammonium ion, .The Brønsted–Lowry model calls hydrogen-containing substances (like ) acids.",
"Thus, some substances, which many chemists considered to be acids, such as or , are excluded from this classification due to lack of hydrogen.",
"Gilbert N. Lewis wrote in 1938, \"To restrict the group of acids to those substances that contain hydrogen interferes as seriously with the systematic understanding of chemistry as would the restriction of the term oxidizing agent to substances containing oxygen.\"",
"Furthermore, and are not considered Brønsted bases, but rather salts containing the bases and .===Lewis definition===The hydrogen requirement of Arrhenius and Brønsted–Lowry was removed by the Lewis definition of acid–base reactions, devised by Gilbert N. Lewis in 1923, in the same year as Brønsted–Lowry, but it was not elaborated by him until 1938.Instead of defining acid–base reactions in terms of protons or other bonded substances, the Lewis definition defines a base (referred to as a ''Lewis base'') to be a compound that can donate an ''electron pair'', and an acid (a ''Lewis acid'') to be a compound that can receive this electron pair.For example, boron trifluoride, is a typical Lewis acid.",
"It can accept a pair of electrons as it has a vacancy in its octet.",
"The fluoride ion has a full octet and can donate a pair of electrons.",
"Thusis a typical Lewis acid, Lewis base reaction.",
"All compounds of group 13 elements with a formula can behave as Lewis acids.",
"Similarly, compounds of group 15 elements with a formula , such as amines, , and phosphines, , can behave as Lewis bases.",
"Adducts between them have the formula with a dative covalent bond, shown symbolically as ←, between the atoms A (acceptor) and D (donor).",
"Compounds of group 16 with a formula may also act as Lewis bases; in this way, a compound like an ether, , or a thioether, , can act as a Lewis base.",
"The Lewis definition is not limited to these examples.",
"For instance, carbon monoxide acts as a Lewis base when it forms an adduct with boron trifluoride, of formula .Adducts involving metal ions are referred to as co-ordination compounds; each ligand donates a pair of electrons to the metal ion.",
"The reactioncan be seen as an acid–base reaction in which a stronger base (ammonia) replaces a weaker one (water).The Lewis and Brønsted–Lowry definitions are consistent with each other since the reactionis an acid–base reaction in both theories.===Solvent system definition===One of the limitations of the Arrhenius definition is its reliance on water solutions.",
"Edward Curtis Franklin studied the acid–base reactions in liquid ammonia in 1905 and pointed out the similarities to the water-based Arrhenius theory.",
"Albert F.O.",
"Germann, working with liquid phosgene, , formulated the solvent-based theory in 1925, thereby generalizing the Arrhenius definition to cover aprotic solvents.Germann pointed out that in many solutions, there are ions in equilibrium with the neutral solvent molecules:* solvonium ions: a generic name for positive ions.",
"These are also sometimes called solvo-acids; when protonated solvent, they are lyonium ions.",
"* solvate ions: a generic name for negative ions.",
"These are also sometimes called solve-bases; when deprotonated solvent, they are lyate ions.",
"For example, water and ammonia undergo such dissociation into hydronium and hydroxide, and ammonium and amide, respectively:Some aprotic systems also undergo such dissociation, such as dinitrogen tetroxide into nitrosonium and nitrate, antimony trichloride into dichloroantimonium and tetrachloroantimonate, and phosgene into chlorocarboxonium and chloride:A solute that causes an increase in the concentration of the solvonium ions and a decrease in the concentration of solvate ions is defined as an ''acid''.",
"A solute that causes an increase in the concentration of the solvate ions and a decrease in the concentration of the solvonium ions is defined as a ''base''.Thus, in liquid ammonia, (supplying ) is a strong base, and (supplying ) is a strong acid.",
"In liquid sulfur dioxide (), thionyl compounds (supplying ) behave as acids, and sulfites (supplying ) behave as bases.The non-aqueous acid–base reactions in liquid ammonia are similar to the reactions in water:Nitric acid can be a base in liquid sulfuric acid:The unique strength of this definition shows in describing the reactions in aprotic solvents; for example, in liquid :Because the solvent system definition depends on the solute as well as on the solvent itself, a particular solute can be either an acid or a base depending on the choice of the solvent: is a strong acid in water, a weak acid in acetic acid, and a weak base in fluorosulfonic acid; this characteristic of the theory has been seen as both a strength and a weakness, because some substances (such as and ) have been seen to be acidic or basic on their own right.",
"On the other hand, solvent system theory has been criticized as being too general to be useful.",
"Also, it has been thought that there is something intrinsically acidic about hydrogen compounds, a property not shared by non-hydrogenic solvonium salts.===Lux–Flood definition===This acid–base theory was a revival of the oxygen theory of acids and bases proposed by German chemist Hermann Lux in 1939, further improved by Håkon Flood and is still used in modern geochemistry and electrochemistry of molten salts.",
"This definition describes an acid as an oxide ion () acceptor and a base as an oxide ion donor.",
"For example:This theory is also useful in the systematisation of the reactions of noble gas compounds, especially the xenon oxides, fluorides, and oxofluorides.===Usanovich definition===Mikhail Usanovich developed a general theory that does not restrict acidity to hydrogen-containing compounds, but his approach, published in 1938, was even more general than Lewis theory.",
"Usanovich's theory can be summarized as defining an acid as anything that accepts negative species or donates positive ones, and a base as the reverse.",
"This defined the concept of redox (oxidation-reduction) as a special case of acid–base reactions.Some examples of Usanovich acid–base reactions include:"
],
[
"Rationalizing the strength of Lewis acid–base interactions",
"===HSAB theory===In 1963, Ralph Pearson proposed a qualitative concept known as the Hard and Soft Acids and Bases principle.",
"later made quantitative with help of Robert Parr in 1984.",
"'Hard' applies to species that are small, have high charge states, and are weakly polarizable.",
"'Soft' applies to species that are large, have low charge states and are strongly polarizable.",
"Acids and bases interact, and the most stable interactions are hard–hard and soft–soft.",
"This theory has found use in organic and inorganic chemistry.===ECW model===The ECW model created by Russell S. Drago is a quantitative model that describes and predicts the strength of Lewis acid base interactions, .",
"The model assigned and parameters to many Lewis acids and bases.",
"Each acid is characterized by an and a .",
"Each base is likewise characterized by its own and .",
"The and parameters refer, respectively, to the electrostatic and covalent contributions to the strength of the bonds that the acid and base will form.",
"The equation isThe term represents a constant energy contribution for acid–base reaction such as the cleavage of a dimeric acid or base.",
"The equation predicts reversal of acids and base strengths.",
"The graphical presentations of the equation show that there is no single order of Lewis base strengths or Lewis acid strengths."
],
[
"Acid–base equilibrium",
"The reaction of a strong acid with a strong base is essentially a quantitative reaction.",
"For example, In this reaction both the sodium and chloride ions are spectators as the neutralization reaction,does not involve them.",
"With weak bases addition of acid is not quantitative because a solution of a weak base is a buffer solution.",
"A solution of a weak acid is also a buffer solution.",
"When a weak acid reacts with a weak base an equilibrium mixture is produced.",
"For example, adenine, written as AH, can react with a hydrogen phosphate ion, .The equilibrium constant for this reaction can be derived from the acid dissociation constants of adenine and of the dihydrogen phosphate ion.The notation X signifies \"concentration of X\".",
"When these two equations are combined by eliminating the hydrogen ion concentration, an expression for the equilibrium constant, is obtained."
],
[
"Acid–alkali reaction",
"An acid–alkali reaction is a special case of an acid–base reaction, where the base used is also an alkali.",
"When an acid reacts with an alkali salt (a metal hydroxide), the product is a metal salt and water.",
"Acid–alkali reactions are also neutralization reactions.In general, acid–alkali reactions can be simplified to:by omitting spectator ions.Acids are in general pure substances that contain hydrogen cations () or cause them to be produced in solutions.",
"Hydrochloric acid () and sulfuric acid () are common examples.",
"In water, these break apart into ions::The alkali breaks apart in water, yielding dissolved hydroxide ions::"
],
[
"See also",
"* Acid–base titration* Deprotonation* Donor number* Electron configuration* Gutmann–Beckett method* Lewis structure* Nucleophilic substitution * Neutralization (chemistry)* Protonation* Redox reactions * Resonance (chemistry)"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References",
"===Sources===****"
],
[
"External links",
"* Acid–base Physiology – an on-line text* John W. Kimball's online biology book section of acid and bases."
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Abu al-Faraj al-Isfahani"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Ali ibn al-Husayn al-Iṣfahānī''' (), also known as '''Abul-Faraj''', (full form: Abū al-Faraj ʿAlī ibn al-Ḥusayn ibn Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad ibn al-Ḥaytham al-Umawī al-Iṣfahānī) (897-967CE / 284–356AH) was a writer, historian, genealogist, poet, musicologist and scribe.",
"He was of Arab-Quraysh origin and mainly based in Baghdad.",
"He is best known as the author of ''Kitab al-Aghani'' (\"The Book of Songs\"), which includes information about the earliest attested periods of Arabic music (from the seventh to the ninth centuries) and the lives of poets and musicians from the pre-Islamic period to al-Isfahani's time.",
"Given his contribution to the documentation of the history of Arabic music, al-Isfahani is characterised by George Sawa as \"a true prophet of modern ethnomusicology\"."
],
[
"Dates",
"The commonly accepted dates of al-Isfahani's birth and death are 897–898 and 967, based on the dates given by al-Khatib al-Baghdadi which itself based its information on the testimony of al-Isfahani's student, Muhammad ibn Abi al-Fawaris.",
"However, the credibility of these dates is to be treated with caution.",
"No source places his death earlier than 967, but several place it later.",
"These dates are at odds with a reference in the ''Kitab Adab al-ghuraba'' (\"The Book of the Etiquettes of Strangers\"), attributed to al-Isfahani, to his being in the prime of youth (''fi ayyam al-shabiba wa-l-siba'') in 967.Calculation of the approximate dates of his birth and death through the life spans of his students and his direct informants suggests that he was born before 902 and died after 960."
],
[
"Biography",
"Abu al-Faraj al-Isfahani was born in Isfahan, Persia (present-day Iran) but spent his youth and undertook his early studies in Baghdad (present-day Iraq).",
"He was a direct descendant of the last of the Umayyad caliphs, Marwan II, and was thus connected with the Umayyad rulers in al-Andalus, and seems to have kept up a correspondence with them and to have sent them some of his works.",
"He became famous for his knowledge of early Arabian antiquities.His later life was spent in various parts of the Islamic world, including in Aleppo with its Hamdanid governor Sayf ad-Dawlah (to whom he dedicated the ''Book of Songs''), and in Ray with the Buwayhid vizier Ibn 'Abbad.=== Family ===The epithet, al-Isfahani, refers to the city, Isfahan, on the Iranian plateau.",
"Instead of indicating al-Isfahani's birthplace, this epithet seems to be common to al-Isfahani's family.",
"Every reference al-Isfahani makes to his paternal relatives includes the attributive, al-Isfahani.",
"According to Ibn Hazm (994–1064), some descendants of the last Umayyad caliph, Marwan b. Muhammad (691–750), al-Isfahani's ancestor, settled in Isfahan.",
"However, it has to be borne in mind that the earliest information available regarding al-Isfahani's family history only dates to the generation of his great-grandfather, Ahmad b. al-Ḥaytham, who settled in Samarra sometime between 835–6 and 847.Based on al-Isfahani's references in the ''Kitab al-Aghani'' (hereafter, the ''Aghani''), Ahmad b. al-Haytham seems to have led a privileged life in Sāmarrāʾ, while his sons were well-connected with the elite of the Abbasid capital at that time.",
"His son, Abd al-Aziz b. Ahmad, was \"one of the high ranking scribes in the days of al-Mutawakkil (r. 847–861) (''min kibār al-kuttāb fī ayyām al-Mutawakkil'')\".",
"Another son, Muhammad b. Ahmad (''viz''.",
"al-Isfahani's grandfather), was associated with Abbasid officials, the vizier Ibn al-Zayyāt (d. 847), the scribe Ibrahim b. al-Abbas al-Ṣūlī (792–857), and the vizier Ubaydallah b. Sulayman (d. 901), along with the Ṭālibid notables, including al-Husayn b. al-Husayn b. Zayd, who was the leader of the Banu Hashim.",
"The close ties with the Abbasid court continued with Muhammad's sons, al-Hasan and al-Husayn (al-Isfahani's father).In various places in the ''Aghani'', al-Isfahani refers to Yahya b. Muhammad b. Thawaba (from the Al Thawaba) as his grandfather on his mother's side.",
"It is often suggested that the family of Thawaba, being Shi'i, bequeathed their sectarian inclination to al-Isfahani.",
"However, the identification of the Thawaba family as Shi'is is only found in a late source, Yaqut's (1178–1225) work.",
"While many elite families working under the Abbasid caliphate were Shi'i-inclined, indeed allied with Alids or their partisans, there is no evidence that members of the Thawaba family embraced an extreme form of Shi'ism.In summary, al-Isfahani came from a family well-entrenched in the networks of the Abbasid elite, which included the officials and the Alids.",
"Despite the epithet, al-Isfahani, it does not seem that the Isfahani family had a strong connection with the city of Isfahan.",
"Rather, the family was mainly based in Sāmarrāʾ, from the generation of Ahmad b. al-Ḥaytham, and then Baghdad.",
"In the seats of the caliphate, a few members of the al-Isfahani family worked as scribes, while maintaining friendship or alliance with other scribes, viziers and notables.",
"Like many of the court elite, al-Isfahani's family maintained an amicable relationship with the offspring of Ali and allied with families, such as the Thawaba family, sharing their veneration of Ali and Alids.",
"However, it is hard to pinpoint such a reverential attitude towards Alids in terms of sectarian alignment, given the scanty information about al-Isfahani's family and the fluidity of sectarian identities at the time.=== Education and career ===The Isfahani family's extensive network of contacts is reflected in al-Isfahani's sources.",
"Among the direct informants whom al-Isfahani cites in his works, are members of his own family, who were further connected to other notable families, the Al Thawaba, the Banū Munajjim, the Yazīdīs, the Ṣūlīs, the Banū Ḥamdūn, the Ṭāhirids, the Banū al-Marzubān and the Ṭālibids.Given that al-Isfahani and his family very likely settled in Baghdad around the beginning of the tenth century, he interacted with a considerable number of the inhabitants of or visitors to that city, including: Jaḥẓa (d. 936), al-Khaffāf, Ali b. Sulaymān al-Akhfash (d. 927/8), and Muhammad b. Jarir al-Ṭabari (d. 922).",
"Like other scholars of his time, al-Isfahani travelled in pursuit of knowledge.",
"Although the details are insufficient to establish the dates of his journeys, based on the chains of transmission (''asānīd'', sing.",
"''isnād'') al-Isfahani cites consistently and meticulously in every report, it is certain that he transmitted from ʿAbd al-Malik b. Maslama and ʿĀṣim b. Muhammad in Antakya; ʿAbdallāh b. Muhammad b. Ishaq in Ahwaz; and Yahya b. Aḥmad b. al-Jawn in Raqqa.",
"If we accept the attribution of the ''Kitab Adab al-ghuraba'' to al-Isfahani, he once visited Baṣra as well as Ḥiṣn Mahdī, Mattūth, and Bājistrā.",
"Yet, none of these cities seems to have left as much of an impact on al-Isfahani as Kūfa and Baghdad did.",
"While al-Isfahani's Baghdadi informants were wide-ranging in their expertise as well as sectarian and theological tendencies, his Kūfan sources can be characterised as either Shi'i or keen on preserving and disseminating memories that favoured Ali and his family.",
"For example, Ibn ʿUqda (d. 944), mentioned in both the ''Aghānī'' and the ''Maqātil,'' was invariably cited for the reports about the Alids and their merits.The journey in search for knowledge taken by al-Isfahani may not be particularly outstanding by the standard of his time, but the diversity of his sources' occupations and expertise is impressive.",
"His informants can be assigned into one or more of the following categories: philologists and grammarians; singers and musicians; booksellers and copyists (''sahhafun'' or ''warraqun'', sing.",
"''sahhaf'' or ''Warraq''); friends; tutors (''muʾaddibūn'', sing.",
"''muʾaddib''); scribes (''kuttāb'', sing.",
"''kātib''); imams or preachers (''khuṭabāʾ'', sing.",
"''khaṭīb''); religious scholars (of the ''ḥadīth'', the Qurʾānic recitations and exegeses, or jurisprudence) and judges; poets; and ''akhbārīs'' (transmitters of reports of all sorts, including genealogical, historical, and anecdotal reports).",
"The variety of the narrators and their narrations enriched al-Iṣfahānī's literary output, which covers a wide range of topics from amusing tales to the accounts of the Alids' martyrdom.",
"His erudition is best illustrated by Abu Ali al-Muhassin al-Tanukhi's (941–994) comment: \"With his encyclopaedic knowledge of music, musicians, poetry, poets, genealogy, history, and other subjects, al-Iṣfahānī established himself as a learned scholar and teacher.",
"\"He was also a scribe and this is not surprising, given his families’ scribal connections, but the details of his ''kātib'' activities are rather opaque.",
"Although both al-Tanūkhī and al-Baghdādī refer to al-Isfahani with the attribute, ''kātib'', they mention nothing of where he worked or for whom.",
"The details of his occupation as a scribe only came later, with Yaqut, many of whose reports about al-Isfahani prove problematic.",
"For instance, a report from Yaqut claims that al-Isfahani was the scribe of Rukn al-Dawla (d. 976) and mentions his resentment towards Abū al-Faḍl b. al-ʿAmīd (d. 970).",
"However, the very same report was mentioned by Abū Ḥayyān al-Tawḥīdī (active tenth century) in his ''Akhlāq al-wazīrayn'', where the scribe of Rukn al-Dawla is identified as Abū al-Faraj Ḥamd b. Muhammad, not Abū al-Faraj al-Isfahani.",
"Thus, it is hard to know with certainty how and where al-Isfahani was engaged in his capacity as a ''kātib''.",
"Nevertheless, al-Isfahani's association with the vizier, Abū Muḥammad al-Muhallabī (903–963), is well-documented.",
"The friendship between the two began before al-Muhallabī's became vizier in 950.The firm relationship between them is supported by al-Isfahani's poetry collected by al-Thaʿālibī (961–1038): half of the fourteen poems are panegyrics dedicated to al-Muhallabī.",
"In addition, al-Isfahani's own work, ''al-Imāʾ al-shawāʿir'' (“Enslaved Women Who Composed Poetry”), is dedicated to the vizier, presumably, al-Muhallabī.",
"His no longer surviving ''Manājīb al-khiṣyān'' (“The Noble Eunuchs”), which addresses two castrated male singers owned by al-Muhallabī, was composed for him.",
"His ''magnum opus'', the ''Aghānī'', was very likely intended for al-Muhallabī, as well.",
"In return for his literary efforts, according to al-Tanūkhī, al-Isfahani frequently received rewards from the vizier.",
"Furthermore, for the sake of their long-term friendship and out of his respect for al-Isfahani's genius, al-Muhallabī exceptionally tolerated al-Isfahani's uncouth manners and poor personal hygiene.",
"The sources say nothing about al-Isfahani's fate after al-Muhallabī's death.",
"In his last years, according to his student, Muhammad b. Abī al-Fawāris, he suffered from senility (''khallaṭa'').=== Personality, preferences, and beliefs ===As a friend, al-Isfahani was unconventional in the sense that he did not seem to have been bothered to observe the social decorum of his time, as noted by a late biographical source: with his uncleanliness and gluttony, he presented a counterexample to elegance (''ẓarf''), as defined by one of his teachers, Abu al-Ṭayyib al-Washshāʾ (d. 937).",
"His unconformity to the social norms did not hinder him from being part of al-Muhallabī's entourage or participation in the literary assemblies, but, inevitably, it resulted in frictions with other scholars and detraction by his enemies.",
"Although al-Isfahani appeared eccentric to his human associates, he was a caring owner of his cat, named Yaqaq (white): he treated Yaqaq's colic (''qulanj'') with an enema (''al-ḥuqna'').In contrast to his personal habits, al-Isfahani's prose style is lucid, “in clear and simple language, with unusual sincerity and frankness”.",
"Al-Isfahani's capacity as a writer is well illustrated by Abu Deeb, who depicts al-Isfahani as \"one of the finest writers of Arabic prose in his time, with a remarkable ability to relate widely different types of ''aḵbār'' in a rich, lucid, rhythmic, and precise style, only occasionally exploiting such formal effects as ''saǰʿ'' (rhyming prose).",
"He was also a fine poet with an opulent imagination.",
"His poetry displays preoccupations similar to those of other urban poets of his time\".",
"His pinpoint documentation of ''asānīd'' and meticulous verification of information, provided in all his works, embody a truly scholarly character.",
"Usually, in his treatment of a subject or an event, al-Isfahani lets his sources speak, but, occasionally, he voices his evaluation of poems and songs, as well as their creators.",
"When dealing with conflicting reports, al-Isfahani either leaves his readers to decide or issues his judgement as to the most credible account.",
"Yet, he frankly condemns sources whom he holds to be unreliable, for instance, Ibn Khurdādhbih on musicological information and Ibn al-Kalbī on genealogy.",
"Indeed, al-Isfahani assesses his source material with a critical eye, while striving to present a more balanced view on his biographies, by focusing on their merits instead of elaborating on their flaws.That said, al-Isfahani's personal preferences and sectarian partisanship are not absent from his works.",
"In terms of music and songs, al-Isfahani favours Ishaq b. Ibrahim al-Mawsili (772–850).",
"In al-Isfahani's view, Ishaq b. Ibrahim was a multi-talented man, who excelled in a number of subjects, but, most importantly, music.",
"Ishaq b. Ibrahim, as a collector of the reports about poets and singers, is an important source in his ''Aghānī''.",
"Besides being a mine of information, Ishaq b. Ibrahim's terminology for the description of the melodic modes is preferred over that of his opponent, Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi (779–839), and adopted by al-Isfahani in his ''Aghani''.",
"Furthermore, al-Isfahani embarked on the compilation of the ''Aghānī'' because he was commissioned by his patron to reconstruct the list of the exquisite songs selected by Ishaq.",
"In other words, the ''raison d’etre'' of the ''Aghānī'' is partly related to al-Isfahani's idol, Ishaq b. Ibrahim, and its information about singers, songs and performance owes a tremendous amount to him.",
"Al-Isfahani's admiration for scholars or men of letters can be detected from time to time, usually in the passing comments in the chains of transmission.",
"Yet al-Isfahani outspokenly expresses his admiration, in some cases, such as that of Ibn al-Muʿtazz (862–909).As an Umayyad by ancestry, al-Isfahani's later biographers mention his Shi'i affiliation with surprise.",
"Yet, in the light of the history of the family's connections with the Abbasid elite of Shi'i inclination and the Ṭālibids, and of his learning experience in Kūfa, his Shi'i conviction is understandable.",
"Al-Tusi (995–1067) is the only early source specifying the exact sect to which al-Isfahani belonged in the fluid Shi'i world: he was a Zaydī.",
"Although al-Ṭūsī's view is widely accepted, its veracity is not beyond doubt.",
"Al-Isfahani does not seem to have been informed of the latest Zaydī movements in Yemen and Ṭabaristān during his life, while his association with the Kūfan Zaydī community, which to some degree became less distinguishable from the Sunnīs, is yet to be studied in depth.",
"It is clear, based on examination of how al-Isfahani amended the reports at his disposal, that he honoured Ali, who played a far more prominent role in his works than the first three caliphs, and some of his descendants, including Zaydi Shi'ism's eponym, Zayd ibn Ali (694–740), by presenting them positively, while, in some cases, leaving their enemies’ rectitude in question.",
"In spite of that, al-Isfahani is neither keen to identify the imams in the past, nor discuss the qualities of an imam.",
"As a matter of fact, he hardly uses the word, not even applying it to Zayd b. Ali.",
"Furthermore, he does not unconditionally approve any Alid revolt and seems lukewarm towards the group he refers to as Zaydis.",
"Taken together, al-Isfahani's Shi'i conviction is better characterised as moderate love for Ali without impugning the dignity of the caliphs before him."
],
[
"Legacy",
"Al-Isfahani authored a number of works, but only a few survive.",
"Three of them are preserved through quotations: ''al-Qiyan'' (\"The Singing Girls Enslaved by Men\"), ''al-Diyarat'' (\"The Monasteries\"), and ''Mujarrad al-aghani'' (“The Abridgement of the Book of Songs”).",
"A fragment of the ''Mujarrad al-aghani'' is found in Ibn Abi Uṣaybi'a's ʿ''Uyun al-anba' fi tabaqat al-atibba''ʾ, which quotes a poem by the caliph, al-Maʾmūn (r. 813–833), which was arranged as a song by Mutayyam.",
"The first two have been reconstructed and published by al-ʿAtiyya, who collected and collateed the passages from later works that quote from al-Isfahani.",
"The former, ''al-Qiyān'', is a collection of the biographies of the enslaved singing girls.",
"In it, al-Isfahani provided the basic information about the biographical subjects, the men who enslaved them, and their interaction with poets, notables such as caliphs, and their admirers, with illustration of their poetic and/or musical talents.",
"The latter, ''al-Diyārāt'', provides information related to monasteries, with the indication of their geographical locations and, sometimes, history and topographical characteristics.",
"However, it is questionable to what extent the reconstructed editions can represent the original texts, since the passages, which quote al-Isfahani as a source for the given subject and are thus included by the editor, seldom identify the titles of the works.Four works survive in manuscripts and have been edited and published: ''Maqātil al-Ṭālibīyīn'' (\"The Ṭālibid Martyrs\"), ''Kitab al-Aghani'' (\"The Book of the Songs\"), ''Adab al-ghuraba'' (\"The Etiquettes of the Strangers\"), and ''al-Ima al-shawair'' (\"The Enslaved Women Who Composed Poetry\").",
"As noted above, al-Isfahani's authorship of the ''Adab al-ghurabaʾ'' is disputed.",
"The author, whoever he may have been, mentions in the preface his sufferings from the hardship of time and vicissitude of fate, and the solace which he seeks through the stories of bygone people.",
"Hence, he collects in the ''Adab al-ghuraba'' the reports about the experiences of strangers; those away from their homes or their beloved ones.",
"Some of the stories centre on the hardship which strangers, anonymous or not, encountered in their journey or exile, usually shown in the epigrams written on monuments, rocks, or walls.",
"Others relate excursions to the monasteries for drinking.The ''al-Imāʾ al-shawāʿir'' was composed at the order of the vizier al-Muhallabī, al-Isfahani's patron, who demanded the collection of the reports about the enslaved women who composed poetry from the Umayyad to the Abbasid periods.",
"Al-Isfahani confesses that he could not find any noteworthy poetess in the Umayyad period, because the people at that time were not impressed with verses featuring tenderness and softness.",
"Thus, he only records the Abbasid poetesses, with mention of the relevant fine verses or the pleasant tales, and arranges them in chronological order.",
"There are 31 sections, addressing 32 poetesses, most of which are short and usually begin with al-Isfahani's summary of the subject.The ''Maqātil al-Ṭālibīyīn'' is a historical-biographical compilation concerning the descendants of Abu Talib, who died by being killed, poisoned to death in a treacherous way, on the run from the rulers’ persecution, or confined until death.",
"The ''Maqātil'' literature was rather common, particularly amongst Shi'is, before al-Isfahani and he used many works of this genre as sources for the ''Maqātil al-Ṭālibīyīn''.",
"Al-Isfahani does not explain the motivation behind this compilation nor mention to whom they were dedicated, but according to the preface of this work, he sets out as a condition to recount the reports about the Ṭālibids who were “praiseworthy in their conduct and rightly guided in their belief (''maḥmūd al-ṭarīqa wa-sadīd al-madhhab'')”.",
"Like the ''al-Imāʾ'', the work is structured in chronological order, beginning with the first Ṭālibī martyr, Jaʿfar b. Abī Ṭālib, and ends in the year of its compilation, August 925 (Jumādā I 313).",
"For each biographical entry, al-Isfahani gives the full name, the lineage (sometimes adding the maternal side).",
"Less often, he additionally gives the virtues and personal traits of the subject and other material he thinks noteworthy, for example the prophetic ''ḥadīth'' about, or transmitted by, the subject of the biography in question.",
"Then, al-Isfahani gives the account of the death which, more often than not, constitutes the end of the entry.",
"Sometimes poetry for or by the subject is attached.",
"The ''Maqātil'' was used as a reliable source of information by many Shi'i and non-Shi'i compilers of the following centuries.The ''Kitab al-Aghani'', al-Isfahanis best known work, is an immense compilation, including songs provided with musical indications (melodic modes and meters of songs), the biographies of poets and musicians of different periods in addition to historical material.",
"As noted above, al-Isfahani embarks on compiling the ''Aghani'' first under the command of a patron, whom he calls ''ra'is'' (chief), to reconstruct the list of one hundred fine songs, selected by Ishaq b. Ibrahim.",
"Due to an obscure report in Yaqut's ''Mu'jam'', this ''raʾīs'' is often assumed to be Sayf al-Dawla al-Ḥamdānī (r. 945–967), but recent studies suggest that a more plausible candidate for the dedication of the ''Aghani'' is the vizier al-Muhallabī.",
"The ''Aghani'' is divided into three parts: first, The Hundred Songs (''al-mi'a al-ṣawt al-mukhtara'') and other song collections; second, the songs of the caliphs and of their children and grandchildren (''aghani al-khulafa wa-awladihim wa-awlad awladihim''); and third, al-Isfahanis selection of songs.",
"The articles in each part are arranged based on different patterns, but it is mostly the song which introduces the articles on biographies or events.",
"The ''Kitab al-Aghani'' is not the first book or collection of songs in Arabic, but it can be asserted that it is the most important one, for it \"is a unique mine of information not only on hundreds of song texts with their modes and meters, but also on the lives of their poets and composers, and on the social context of music making in early Islam and at the courts of the caliphs in Damascus and Baghdad\".",
"Because of al-Isfahani's pedantic documentation of his sources, the ''Kitab al-Aghani'' can also be used to reconstruct earlier books of songs or biographical dictionaries on musicians that are otherwise lost.As for the works that did not survive, based on their contents, as implied by their titles, they can be divided into the following categories:The genealogical works: ''Nasab Bani Abd Shams'' (\"The Genealogy of the Banu Abd Shams\"), ''Jamharat al-nasab'' (\"The Compendium of Genealogies\"), ''Nasab Bani Shayban'' (\"The Genealogy of the Banu Shayban\"), and ''Nasab al-Mahaliba'' (\"The Genealogy of the Muhallabids\"), this last probably dedicated to his patron, the vizier al-Muhallabi.The reports about specified or unspecified topics, such as ''Kitab al-Khammarin wa-l-khammarat'' (\"The Book of Tavern-Keepers, Male and Female\"), ''Akhbar al-tufayliyin'' (\"Reports about Party Crashers\"), ''al-Akhbar wa-l-nawadir'' (\"The Reports and Rare Tales\"), and ''Ayyam al-arab'' (\"The Battle-Days of the Arabs\"), which mentions 1700 days of the pre-Islamic tribal battles and was in circulation only in Andalusia.The reports about music, musicians and singers: the aforementioned ''Manajib al-khisyan'' (\"The Noble Eunuchs\"), ''Akhbzr Jahza al-Barmaki'' (\"The Reports concerning Jahza al-Barmaki\"), ''al-Mamalik al-shu'ara'' (\"The Slave Poets\"), ''Adab al-samz'' (\"The Etiquettes of Listening to Music\"), and ''Risala fi 'ilal al-nagham'' (\"The Treatise on the Rules of Tones\").There are two works, only mentioned by al-Tusi: ''Kitab ma nazala min al-Qur'an fi amir al-mu'minīn wa-ahl baytih 'alayhim al-salam'' (\"The Book about the Qur'anic Verses Revealed regarding the Commander of the Faithful and the People of His Family, Peace upon Them\") and ''Kitab fihi kalam Fatima alayha al-salam fi Fadak'' (\"The Book concerning the Statements of Fāṭima, Peace upon Her, regarding Fadak\").",
"Should the attribution of these two works to al-Isfahani be correct, together with the ''Maqatil al-Talibiyin'', they reveal al-Isfahani's Shi'i partisanship.===Works===Al-Isfahani is best known as the author of ''Kitab al-Aghani'' (\"The Book of Songs\"), an encyclopaedia of over 20 volumes and editions.",
"However, he additionally wrote poetry, an anthology of verses on the monasteries of Mesopotamia and Egypt, and a genealogical work.",
"*''Kitāb al-Aġānī'' () 'Book of Songs', a collection of Arabic chants rich in information on Arab and Persian poets, singers and other musicians from the 7th to the 10th centuries of major cities such as Mecca, Damascus, Isfahan, Rey, Baghdād and Baṣrah.",
"The Book of Songs contains details of the ancient Arab tribes and courtly life of the Umayyads and provides a complete overview of the Arab civilization from the pre-Islamic Jahiliyya era, up to his own time.",
"Abu ‘l-Faraj employs the classical Arabic genealogical device, or ''isnad'', (chain of transmission), to relate the biographical accounts of the authors and composers.",
"Although originally the poems were put to music, the musical signs are no longer legible.",
"Abu ‘l-Faraj spent in total 50 years creating this work, which remains an important historical source.The first printed edition, published in 1868, contained 20 volumes.",
"In 1888 Rudolf Ernst Brünnow published a 21st volume being a collection of biographies not contained in the Bulāq edition, edited from manuscripts in the Royal Library of Munich.",
"*''Maqātil aṭ-Ṭālibīyīn'' (}), Tālibid Fights, a collection of more than 200 biographies of the descendants of Abu Talib ibn Abd al-Muttalib, from the time of the Prophet Muhammad to the writing of the book in 925/6, who died in an unnatural way.",
"As Abul-Faraj said in the foreword to his work, he included only those Tālibids who rebelled against the government and were killed, slaughtered, executed or poisoned, lived underground, fled or died in captivity.",
"The work is a major source for the Umayyad and Abbāsid Alid uprisings and the main source for the Hashimite meeting that took place after the assassination of the Umayyad Caliph al-Walīd II in the village of al-Abwā' between Mecca and Medina.",
"At this meeting, al-'Abdallah made the Hashimites pledge an oath of allegiance to his son Muhammad al-Nafs al-Zakiyya as the new Mahdi.",
"*''Kitāb al-Imā'āš-šawā'ir'' () 'The Book of the Poet-slaves', a collection of accounts of poetic slaves of the Abbasid period."
],
[
"See also",
"*List of Arab scientists and scholars*List of Iranian scientists and scholars"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Works cited",
"*********************************************************************"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Alcobaça, Portugal"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Alcobaça''' () is a Portuguese city and municipality in the Oeste region, in the historical province of Estremadura, and in the Leiria District.",
"The city grew along the valleys of the rivers Alcoa and Baça, from which it derives its name.",
"The municipality population in 2011 was 56,693, in an area of .",
"The city proper has a population of 15,800 inhabitants.The city of Alcobaça became notable after the first king of Portugal, Afonso Henriques, decided to build a church to commemorate the Conquest of Santarém from the Moors in 1147.The church later evolved into the Monastery of Alcobaça, one of the most magnificent Gothic monuments in the country.",
"In the church are the tombs of Pedro I of Portugal and his murdered mistress Inês de Castro.",
"Over the centuries this monastery played an important role in shaping Portuguese culture.A few kilometers to the north of Alcobaça is the Monastery of Batalha, another Gothic building constructed in memory of a different important battle, that of Aljubarrota.",
"To the west of Alcobaça is the fishing village of Nazaré, now a popular resort town.",
"To the south is the city of Caldas da Rainha and the medieval town of Óbidos.",
"To the northeast is the town of Porto de Mós with its rebuilt castle."
],
[
"History",
"Alcobaça became notable in the 12th century, when it was chosen as the future site of Portugal's largest church.",
"In March 1147, the young King Dom Afonso Henriques defeated the Moors by capturing the city of Santarém.",
"As a tribute to his victory, he vowed to build a magnificent home for the Order of Cistercians.",
"It took another 76 years before this task was completed.",
"The monarchy continued to carry out further construction and 60 years later King Dinis built the main cloister.",
"The monastery was consecrated in 1262.The church contains the tombs of Pedro I of Portugal and his murdered mistress Inês de Castro.",
"Pedro had married Constanza, the ''Infanta'' (princess) of Castile, but escaped with his mistress Inês and later lived in the city of Coimbra.",
"His father, King Afonso IV, believing that the family of Inês was a threat to his kingdom, had her murdered.",
"Shortly after the death of his father, Pedro declared that he had married Inês in a prior secret ceremony in Bragança, and took a gruesome revenge on the killers and exhumed her body.",
"He presented the embalmed corpse at the court with a crown on her head and demanded that all his courtiers kneel and individually pay homage to her decomposed hand.",
"Today, their ornate tombs face each other so that on Judgment Day his first sight would be of Inês.During the following centuries, the monks from this monastery had a major influence on the development of Portuguese culture.",
"Notably, in 1269 they were the first to give public lessons to their congregation, and later they produced the first authoritative history on Portugal in a series of books.",
"In 1810, the invading French pillaged the abbey, taking with them most of its most important treasures, including the noteworthy library.",
"The items that remained were later stolen in 1834 during an anti-clerical riot and the banning of religious orders in Portugal."
],
[
"Climate",
"Alcobaça has a Mediterranean climate (Köppen:''Csb'') with warm, dry summers and mild, wet winters.Serra de Candeeiros in the backgroundAlcobaça and the monastery at night"
],
[
"Parishes",
"Administratively, the municipality is divided into 13 civil parishes (''freguesias''):* Alcobaça e Vestiaria* Alfeizerão* Aljubarrota* Bárrio* Benedita* Cela* Coz, Alpedriz e Montes* Évora de Alcobaça* Maiorga* Pataias e Martingança* São Martinho do Porto* Turquel* Vimeiro"
],
[
"City information",
"The main feature of the city is essentially the monastery that proudly presents a long and sombre façade with 18th-century embellishments.",
"This austerity is further emphasized in the cloisters with its apt name of \"Cloister of Silence\".",
"In contrast within the Abbey is the massive kitchen with a running stream specially diverted to pass through as a supply of fresh water.",
"The open area of the kitchen chimney is large enough to take a whole ox for roasting.",
"The surround to the sacristy doorway is an outstanding example of Manueline decoration.",
"In 1794, Lord Beckford visited the Abbey and commented that he found some 300 monks \"living in a very splendid manner\"!Alcobaça - panoramio (1).jpg|Alcobaça, panoramioAlcobaça Praça da República.jpg|Square in Alcobaça"
],
[
"Nearby locations",
"Gothic fountain house and renaissance water basin in the cloister of the Alcobaça Monastery.A few kilometers to the north of Alcobaça is another wondrous building constructed in memory of a different important battle, that of Aljubarrota in 1385, when King John I of Portugal defeated the Castilians and ensuring two hundred years of independence from the Castilian invaders.",
"The construction of the Abbey at Batalha commenced in 1388 and was added to by various Portuguese Kings over these next two centuries.",
"To the east of Batalha is the world-famous location of Fátima and a point of pilgrimage for the Roman Catholic religion due to the vision of the Virgin Mary in 1917 by three young children whilst tending their flock.",
"To the west of Alcobaça is the well-known fishing village of Nazaré.",
"Today, the village is now a small town and a popular holiday resort with most of its past and traditions having rapidly evaporated in the course of time.",
"A very successful Portuguese feature film was made in the early 20th century that dramatically captured the primitive and dangerous life of these fishermen.",
"Stoutly Catholic, the inhabitants have retained some of their past as can be still seen in their own particular style of costume.",
"To the south is Caldas da Rainha and the quaint medieval town of Óbidos that is an attraction for any tourists that enjoys a true glimpse of the past.",
"Also to the south is the town of Porto de Mós with its fanciful rebuilt castle.",
"This town borders the Nature Reserve Parque Natural das Serras de Aire e Candeeiros.",
"These 390 square kilometres of limestone-covered landscape is also known for its caverns.",
"The best known being the Grutas de Mira de Aire can be visited and consists of tunnels, caverns with stalactites, stalagmites, lakes, and a music and light finale."
],
[
"Major events",
"* Market days – Every Monday* Carnaval de Alcobaça – February/March* Cistermúsica – classical music festival – June / July* Saint Bernard's fair – August 20* Municipal holiday – August 20* ''Marionetas na Cidade'' – puppetry festival – mid-October* Saint Simon's fair – 4th week of October* International display of Sweets and Conventual Liqueurs – November"
],
[
"Notable people from Alcobaça",
"João Pedro Silva, 2012* Joaquim Ferreira Bogalho (1889–1977) the 20th president of S.L.",
"Benfica* Virgínia Vitorino, (Wiki PT) (1895-1967) a teacher, poet and playwright.",
"* Joaquim Vieira de Natividade, (Wiki PT) (1899-1968) an agricultural engineer* José Aurélio, (Wiki PT) (born 1938) a sculptor, works in stone, wood and bronze* João Lourenço (born 1942) a former footballer with 207 club caps * Alberto Costa (born 1947) politician, Minister of Justice, 2005-2009.",
"* Nuno Gonçalves, a Portuguese musician, founder of The Gift.",
"* João Traquina (born 1988) a Portuguese footballer with over 350 club caps* João Pedro Silva (born 1989) a Portuguese professional triathlete, competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics * The Gift (formed 1994) a Portuguese alternative rock band* Loto (formed 2002) an electro-pop-rock-dance music band* Spartak!",
"(2006–2008) a musical collective from Alcobaça* JÜRA Popular pop artist based in Lisbon"
],
[
"International relations",
"Alcobaça is twinned with:* Aubergenville, France* Bełchatów, Poland* Cacuaco, Angola* Chicopee, United States"
],
[
"See also",
"*Alcobaça IPR*Monastery of Alcobaça*Monastery of Batalha*Nazaré"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* Municipality official website"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Amphisbaena"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Amphisbaena in an illustration from the Aberdeen Bestiary (c. 1200)AmphisbaenaThe '''amphisbaena''' (, , or , plural: '''amphisbaenae'''; ) is a mythological, ant-eating serpent with a head at each end.",
"The creature is alternatively called the '''amphisbaina''', '''amphisbene''', '''amphisboena''', '''amphisbona''', '''amphista''', '''amfivena''', '''amphivena''', or '''anphivena''' (the last two being feminine), and is also known as the \"Mother of Ants\".",
"Its name comes from the Greek words '''', meaning \"both ways\", and '''', meaning \"to go\"."
],
[
"Mythology",
"According to Greek mythology, the amphisbaena was spawned from the blood that dripped from the Gorgon Medusa's head as Perseus flew over the Libyan Desert with her head in his hand, after which Cato's army then encountered it along with other serpents on the march.",
"Amphisbaena fed on the corpses left behind.",
"The amphisbaena has been referred to by various poets such as Nicander, John Milton, Alexander Pope, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Alfred Tennyson, Aimé Césaire, A. E. Housman and Allen Mandelbaum; as a mythological and legendary creature, it has been referenced by Lucan, Pliny the Elder, Isidore of Seville, and Thomas Browne, the last of whom debunked its existence ( book three chapter XV)."
],
[
"Appearance",
"A 15th-century amphisbaena on a misericord in BuckinghamshireThese early descriptions of the amphisbaena depict a venomous, dual-headed snakelike creature.",
"However, medieval and later drawings often show it with two or more scaled feet, particularly chicken feet, and feathered wings.",
"Some even depict it as a horned, dragon-like creature with a serpent-headed tail and small, round ears, while others have both \"necks\" of equal size so that it cannot be determined which is the rear head.",
"Many descriptions of the amphisbaena say its eyes glow like candles or lightning, but the poet Nicander seems to contradict this by describing it as \"always dull of eye\".",
"He also says: \"From either end protrudes a blunt chin; each is far from each other.\"",
"Nicander's account seems to be referring to what is indeed called the Amphisbaenia, a group of real lizards."
],
[
"Habitat",
"Amphisbaena devouring a bird on the coat of arms of Gmina Zapolice in PolandThe amphisbaena is said to make its home in the desert."
],
[
"Folk medicine",
"In ancient times, the supposedly dangerous amphisbaena had many uses in the art of folk medicine and other such remedies.",
"Pliny notes that expecting women wearing a live amphisbaena around their necks would have safe pregnancies; however, if one's goal was to cure ailments such as arthritis or the common cold, one should wear only its skin.",
"By eating the meat of the amphisbaena, one could supposedly attract many lovers of the opposite sex, and slaying one during the full moon could give power to one who is pure of heart and mind.",
"Lumberjacks suffering from cold weather on the job could nail its carcass or skin to a tree to keep warm, while in the process allowing the tree to be felled more easily."
],
[
"Origins",
"Illustration of the flora and fauna of India, c. 1540, including a pair of conjoined snakes resembling an amphisbaenaIn ''The Book of Beasts'', T.H.",
"White suggests that the creature derives from sightings of the worm lizards of the same name.",
"These creatures are found in the Mediterranean countries where many of these legends originated.The Códice Casanatense (), a Portuguese book describing the areas the Portuguese had visited, includes an illustration of the flora and fauna of India.",
"One of the animals shown is a two-headed snake (conjoined twin snakes), with one head on each end, much like an amphisbaena.",
"The image is captioned, \"''two headed snakes of India are harmless''\".",
"It is possible a sighting of an animal like this was the origin of the amphisbaena."
],
[
"In media",
"In Dante's ''Inferno'', the amphisbaena is listed as one of the types of reptiles that torment thieves in the seventh bolgia.In John Milton's ''Paradise Lost'', after the Fall and the return of Satan to Hell, some of the fallen angelic host are transformed into the amphisbaena, to represent the animal by which the Fall was caused, i.e.",
"a snake.Amphisbaena appears in some editions of the tabletop roleplaying game ''Dungeons & Dragons''.Amphisbaena has appeared in several video games as an enemy or boss monster, including ''La-Mulana'' and ''Bravely Second: End Layer.''",
"A creature called Amphisbaena appears in the games ''Castlevania: Symphony of the Night'' and ''Portrait of Ruin'' but bears little resemblance to other renditions of the creature, appearing as an eyeless 4-legged reptile with the upper body of a human woman sprouting from its long tail instead of a double-headed serpent.In the 1984 animated film ''Gallavants'', an amphisbaena (called a 'Vanterviper' in the film) appears as a minor antagonist.",
"The two heads, a red one named Edil and a blue one called Fice, frequently disagree and argue, and sing a song about their miserable plight.The amphisbaena is mentioned in ''The Last Wish'', from ''The Witcher'' series by Andrzej Sapkowski, while protagonist Geralt of Rivia recalls past events.",
"The amphisbaena was endangering the region of Kovir until the beast was slain by Geralt's hand.Amphisbaena is referenced in ''RWBY'', an animated web series created by Monty Oum, in the form of an evil creature called Grimm.",
"Of the different Grimm, the amphisbaena appears to be the King Taijitu, a two-headed snake or serpent.",
"The king's name references the taijitu, a symbol or diagram in Chinese philosophy representing ''Taiji'' in both its monist and dualist aspects.",
"The Grimm's coloration visually symbolizes the taijitu, with one head and body section black and the opposite side white.The amphisbaena appears in the ''Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles'' episode \"Battle Nexus: New York.\"",
"This version is one of the known champions of the Battle Nexus.",
"Big Mama had Michelangelo and Meat Sweats compete to feed each of its heads in order to satisfy the amphisbaena.",
"They managed to work together to pull it off.Brandon Sanderson's novel ''Skyward'' has a character whose name is Arturo Mendez.",
"His call sign is amphisbaena."
],
[
"See also",
"* Amphisbaenia* Polycephaly* Ouroboros* Double-headed serpent* Pushmi-Pullyu"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Bibliography",
"* Hunt, Jonathan (1998).",
"''Bestiary: An Illuminated Alphabet of Medieval Beasts'' (1st ed.).",
"Hong Kong: Simon & Schuster.",
".",
"* Levy, Sidney J.",
"(1996).",
"\"Stalking the Amphisbaena\", ''Journal of Consumer Research'', 23 (3), Dec. 1996, pp.",
"163–176."
],
[
"External links",
"* * Theoi Greek Mythology : Amphisbaena"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Amyl alcohol"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Amyl alcohols''' are alcohols with the formula C5H11OH.",
"Eight are known.",
"A mixture of amyl alcohols (also called amyl alcohol) can be obtained from fusel alcohol.",
"Amyl alcohol is used as a solvent and in esterification, by which is produced amyl acetate and other products.",
"The name ''amyl alcohol'' without further specification applies to the normal (straight-chain) form, 1-pentanol.",
":+'''Amyl alcohol isomers''' Common name Structure Type IUPAC name Boiling point (°C) 1-pentanolor normal amyl alcohol 150px primary Pentan-1-ol 138.5 2-methyl-1-butanolor active amyl alcohol 120px primary 2-Methylbutan-1-ol 128.7 3-methyl-1-butanolor isoamyl alcoholor isopentyl alcohol 120px primary 3-Methylbutan-1-ol 131.2 2,2-dimethyl-1-propanolor neopentyl alcohol 100px primary 2,2-Dimethylpropan-1-ol 113.1 2-pentanolor ''sec''-amyl alcoholor methyl (n) propyl carbinol 100px secondary Pentan-2-ol 118.8 3-methyl-2-butanolor ''sec''-isoamyl alcoholor methyl isopropyl carbinol 80px secondary 3-Methylbutan-2-ol 113.6 3-Pentanol 100px secondary Pentan-3-ol 115.3 2-methyl-2-butanolor ''tert''-amyl alcohol 100px tertiary 2-Methylbutan-2-ol 102Three of these alcohols, 2-methyl-1-butanol, 2-pentanol, and 3-methyl-2-butanol (methyl isopropyl carbinol), contain stereocenters, and are therefore chiral and optically active.The most important amyl alcohol is isoamyl alcohol, the chief one generated by fermentation in the production of alcoholic beverages and a constituent of fusel oil.",
"The other amyl alcohols may be obtained synthetically."
],
[
"References"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Amyl nitrite"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Amyl nitrite''' is a chemical compound with the formula C5H11ONO.",
"A variety of isomers are known, but they all feature an amyl group attached to the nitrite functional group.",
"The alkyl group is unreactive and the chemical and biological properties are mainly due to the nitrite group.",
"Like other alkyl nitrites, amyl nitrite is bioactive in mammals, being a vasodilator, which is the basis of its use as a prescription medicine.",
"As an inhalant, it also has a psychoactive effect, which has led to its recreational use, with its smell being described as that of old socks or dirty feet.",
"It was first documented in 1844 and came into medical use in 1867."
],
[
"Uses",
"* Amyl nitrite is employed medically to treat heart diseases as well as angina.",
"* Amyl nitrite is sometimes used as an antidote for cyanide poisoning.",
"It can act as an oxidant, to induce the formation of methemoglobin.",
"Methemoglobin in turn can sequester cyanide as cyanomethemoglobin.",
"* Amyl nitrite is used as a cleaning agent and solvent in industrial and household applications.",
"It replaced dichlorodifluoromethane, an industrial chemical universally banned in 1996 due to damage to the ozone layer, as a printed circuit board cleaner.",
"Trace amounts are added to some perfumes.",
"* It is also used recreationally as an inhalant drug that induces a brief euphoric state, and when combined with other intoxicant stimulant drugs such as cocaine or MDMA, the euphoric state intensifies and is prolonged.",
"Once some stimulative drugs wear off, a common side effect is a period of depression or anxiety, colloquially called a \"come down\"; amyl nitrite is sometimes used to combat these negative after-effects.",
"This effect, combined with its dissociative effects, has led to its use as a recreational drug (see poppers)."
],
[
"Nomenclature",
"The term \"amyl nitrite\" encompasses several isomers.",
"In older literature, the common non-systematic name '''amyl''' was often used for the pentyl group, where the amyl group is a linear or normal (n) alkyl group, and the resulting amyl nitrite would have the structural formula CH3(CH2)3CH2ONO, also referred to as n-amyl nitrite.A common form of amyl nitrite is the isomer with the formula (CH3)2CHCH2CH2ONO, which may be more specifically referred to as isoamyl nitrite.The similarly named amyl nitrate has very different properties.",
"At the same time, isopropyl nitrite has a similar structure and similar uses (also called 'poppers') but with worse side-effects.",
"Amyl nitrite is sometimes referred to colloquially as ''banapple gas''."
],
[
"Synthesis and reactions",
"Alkyl nitrites are prepared by the reaction of alcohols with nitrous acid::ROH + HONO → RONO + H2O, where R = alkyl groupThe reaction is called esterification.",
"Synthesis of alkyl nitrites is, in general, straightforward and can be accomplished in home laboratories.",
"A common procedure includes the dropwise addition of concentrated sulfuric acid to a cooled mixture of an aqueous sodium nitrite solution and an alcohol.",
"The intermediately-formed stoichiometric mixture of nitrogen dioxide and nitric oxide then converts the alcohol to the alkyl nitrite, which, due to its low density, will form an upper layer that can be easily decanted from the reaction mixture.Isoamyl nitrite decomposes in the presence of base to give nitrite salts and the isoamyl alcohol::C5H11ONO + NaOH → C5H11OH + NaNO2Amyl nitrite, like other alkyl nitrites, reacts with carbanions to give oximes.Amyl nitrites are also useful as reagents in a modification of the Sandmeyer reaction.",
"The reaction of the alkyl nitrite with an aromatic amine in a halogenated solvent produces a radical aromatic species, this then frees a halogen atom from the solvent.",
"For the synthesis of aryl iodides diiodomethane is used, whereas bromoform is the solvent of choice for the synthesis of aryl bromides."
],
[
"Physiological effects",
"An early container of amyl nitrite, Hunterian Museum, GlasgowAmyl nitrite, in common with other alkyl nitrites, is a potent vasodilator; it expands blood vessels, resulting in lowering of the blood pressure.",
"Amyl nitrite may be used during cardiovascular stress testing in patients with suspected hypertrophic cardiomyopathy to cause vasodilation and thereby reduce afterload and provoke obstruction of blood flow towards the aorta from the ventricle by increasing the pressure gradient, thereby causing left ventricular outflow obstruction.",
"Alkyl nitrites are a source of nitric oxide, which signals for relaxation of the involuntary muscles.",
"Physical effects include decrease in blood pressure, headache, flushing of the face, increased heart rate, dizziness, and relaxation of involuntary muscles, especially the blood vessel walls and the internal and external anal sphincter.",
"There are no withdrawal symptoms.",
"Overdose symptoms include nausea, vomiting, hypotension, hypoventilation, shortness of breath, and fainting.",
"The effects set in very quickly, typically within a few seconds and disappear within a few minutes.",
"Amyl nitrite may also intensify the experience of synesthesia.",
"Amyl nitrite, when given as a medication for patients with angina, can also be administered as an ampule.",
"The ampule is put in a gauze pad and then inhaled by the patient during an angina attack and repeated every fifteen minutes.",
"However, oral dosing of amyl nitrite is ineffective due to poor absorption and extensive hepatic metabolism.",
"Amyl nitrite has been widely replaced by nitroglycerin for the treatment of acute angina."
],
[
"Toxicity",
"Although there are case reports of life-threatening toxicity involving unusually large amounts, typical inhaled doses of amyl nitrite are considered relatively safe.",
"However, liquid amyl nitrite is highly toxic when ingested because of the unsafely high concentration it causes in blood.",
"Regardless of the form or route of administration, acute toxicity principally results when the nitrite oxidizes a significant proportion of hemoglobin in the blood without oxygen, forming methemoglobin, which cannot carry oxygen.",
"Severe poisoning cases will progress to methemoglobinemia, characterized by a blue-brown discoloration under the skin which could be mistaken for cyanosis.",
"Treatment with oxygen and intravenous methylene blue frustrates visual confirmation further as methylene blue itself is, as its name suggests, a blue dye; the patient's changes in different shades of blue notwithstanding, it is an effective antidote by way of catalyzing the production of the enzyme responsible for reducing the methemoglobin in the blood back to hemoglobin.The discoloration does mean that regular near-infrared–based pulse oximetry becomes useless.",
"More fundamentally, blood gas analysis on the whole has limited effectiveness, as the increased methemoglobin level increases the oxygen binding affinity of regular hemoglobin.",
"Therefore, the measurement of actual ratios and levels of methemoglobin and hemoglobin must accompany any blood gas partial pressure sample in these cases."
],
[
"In popular culture",
"The ''Columbo'' episode titled \"Troubled Waters\" (1974-1975) features amyl nitrite inhaled by the antagonist Hayden Danziger – played by Robert Vaughn – to help him feign a heart attack for his alibi.",
"However, the episode consistently refers to the substance incorrectly as amyl nitrate.The 1978 Derek Jarman film ''Jubilee'' features a character named Amyl Nitrate (a misspelled reference to amyl nitrite).The punk band Amyl and the Sniffers reference recreational use of amyl nitrite in their name."
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* Editorial on the use of the word \"amyl\"."
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Autumn"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Autumn''', also known as '''fall''' in North American English, is one of the four temperate seasons on Earth.",
"Outside the tropics, autumn marks the transition from summer to winter, in September (Northern Hemisphere) or March (Southern Hemisphere).",
"Autumn is the season when the duration of daylight becomes noticeably shorter and the temperature cools considerably.",
"Day length decreases and night length increases as the season progresses until the Winter Solstice in December (Northern Hemisphere) and June (Southern Hemisphere).",
"One of its main features in temperate climates is the striking change in colour for the leaves of deciduous trees as they prepare to shed."
],
[
"Date definitions",
"Some cultures regard the autumnal equinox as \"mid-autumn\", while others with a longer temperature lag treat the equinox as the start of autumn.",
"In the English-speaking world of high latitude countries, autumn traditionally began with Lammas Day and ended around Hallowe'en, the approximate mid-points between midsummer, the autumnal equinox, and midwinter.",
"Meteorologists (and Australia and most of the temperate countries in the southern hemisphere) use a definition based on Gregorian calendar months, with autumn being September, October, and November in the northern hemisphere, and March, April, and May in the southern hemisphere.In the higher latitude countries in the Northern Hemisphere, autumn traditionally starts with the September equinox (21 to 24 September) and ends with the winter solstice (21 or 22 December).",
"Popular culture in the United States associates Labor Day, the first Monday in September, as the end of summer and the start of autumn; certain summer traditions, such as wearing white, are discouraged after that date.",
"As daytime and nighttime temperatures decrease, trees change colour and then shed their leaves.",
"Persians celebrate the beginning of the autumn on Mehregan.Under the traditional East Asian solar term system, autumn starts on or around 8 August and ends on or about 7 November.",
"In Ireland, the autumn months according to the national meteorological service, Met Éireann, are September, October, and November.",
"However, according to the Irish Calendar, which is based on ancient Gaelic traditions, autumn lasts throughout the months of August, September, and October, or possibly a few days later, depending on tradition.",
"In the Irish language, September is known as (\"middle of autumn\") and October as (\"end of autumn\").",
"Late Roman Republic scholar Marcus Terentius Varro defined autumn as lasting from the third day before the Ides of Sextilis (August 11) to the fifth day before the Ides of November (November 9)."
],
[
"Etymology",
"The word ''autumn'' () is derived from Latin ''autumnus'', archaic ''auctumnus'', possibly from the ancient Etruscan root ''autu-'' and has within it connotations of the passing of the year.",
"Alternative etymologies include Proto-Indo-European (\"cold\") or (\"dry\").After the Greek era, the word continued to be used as the Old French word '''' ('''' in modern French) or '''' in Middle English, and was later normalised to the original Latin.",
"In the Medieval period, there are rare examples of its use as early as the 12th century, but by the 16th century, it was in common use.Before the 16th century, ''harvest'' was the term usually used to refer to the season, as it is common in other West Germanic languages to this day (cf.",
"Dutch '''', German '''', and Scots '''').",
"However, as more people gradually moved from working the land to living in towns, the word ''harvest'' lost its reference to the time of year and came to refer only to the actual activity of reaping, and ''autumn'', as well as ''fall'', began to replace it as a reference to the season.The alternative word ''fall'' for the season traces its origins to old Germanic languages.",
"The exact derivation is unclear, with the Old English '''' or '''' and the Old Norse '''' all being possible candidates.",
"However, these words all have the meaning \"to fall from a height\" and are clearly derived either from a common root or from each other.",
"The term came to denote the season in 16th-century England, a contraction of Middle English expressions like \"fall of the leaf\" and \"fall of the year\".",
"Compare the origin of ''spring'' from \"spring of the leaf\" and \"spring of the year\".During the 17th century, Englishmen began emigrating to the new North American colonies, and the settlers took the English language with them.",
"While the term ''fall'' gradually became nearly obsolete in Britain, it became the more common term in North America.The name ''backend'', a once common name for the season in Northern England, has today been largely replaced by the name ''autumn''."
],
[
"Associations",
"===Harvest===Association with the transition from warm to cold weather, and its related status as the season of the primary harvest, has dominated its themes and popular images.",
"In Western cultures, personifications of autumn are usually pretty, well-fed females adorned with fruits, vegetables and grains that ripen at this time.",
"Many cultures feature autumnal harvest festivals, often the most important on their calendars.Still-extant echoes of these celebrations are found in the autumn Thanksgiving holiday of the United States and Canada, and the Jewish Sukkot holiday with its roots as a full-moon harvest festival of \"tabernacles\" (living in outdoor huts around the time of harvest).",
"There are also the many festivals celebrated by indigenous peoples of the Americas tied to the harvest of ripe foods gathered in the wild, the Chinese Mid-Autumn or Moon festival, and many others.",
"The predominant mood of these autumnal celebrations is a gladness for the fruits of the earth mixed with a certain melancholy linked to the imminent arrival of harsh weather.This view is presented in English poet John Keats' poem ''To Autumn'', where he describes the season as a time of bounteous fecundity, a time of \"mellow fruitfulness\".In North America, while most foods are harvested during the autumn, foods usually associated with the season include pumpkins (which are integral parts of both Thanksgiving and Halloween) and apples, which are used to make the seasonal beverage apple cider.===Melancholia===\"Jesień\" (Autumn) Józef Chełmoński picture of 1875 presenting a typical view of autumn in Polish 19th century countrysideAutumn, especially in poetry, has often been associated with melancholia.",
"The possibilities and opportunities of summer are gone, and the chill of winter is on the horizon.",
"Skies turn grey, the amount of usable daylight drops rapidly, and many people turn inward, both physically and mentally.",
"It has been referred to as an unhealthy season.Similar examples may be found in Irish poet W.B.",
"Yeats' poem ''The Wild Swans at Coole'' where the maturing season that the poet observes symbolically represents his own ageing self.",
"Like the natural world that he observes, he too has reached his prime and now must look forward to the inevitability of old age and death.",
"French poet Paul Verlaine's \"''Chanson d'automne''\" (\"Autumn Song\") is likewise characterised by strong, painful feelings of sorrow.",
"Keats' ''To Autumn'', written in September 1819, echoes this sense of melancholic reflection but also emphasises the lush abundance of the season.",
"The song \"Autumn Leaves\", based on the French song \"Les Feuilles mortes\", uses the melancholic atmosphere of the season and the end of summer as a metaphor for the mood of being separated from a loved one.===Halloween===Autumn is associated with Halloween (influenced by Samhain, a Celtic autumn festival), and with it a widespread marketing campaign that promotes it.",
"The Celtic people also used this time to celebrate the harvest with a time of feasting.",
"At the same time though, it was a celebration of death as well.",
"Crops were harvested, livestock were butchered, and Winter was coming.Halloween, 31 October, is in autumn in the northern hemisphere.",
"Television, film, book, costume, home decoration, and confectionery businesses use this time of year to promote products closely associated with such a holiday, with promotions going from late August or early September to 31 October, since their themes rapidly lose strength once the holiday ends, and advertising starts concentrating on Christmas.===Other associations===In some parts of the northern hemisphere, autumn has a strong association with the end of summer holiday and the start of a new school year, particularly for children in primary and secondary education.",
"\"Back to School\" advertising and preparations usually occurs in the weeks leading to the beginning of autumn.Thanksgiving Day is a national holiday celebrated in Canada, in the United States, in some of the Caribbean islands and in Liberia.",
"Thanksgiving is celebrated on the second Monday of October in Canada, on the fourth Thursday of November in the United States (where it is commonly regarded as the start of the Christmas and holiday season), and around the same part of the year in other places.",
"Similarly named festival holidays occur in Germany and Japan.Television stations and networks, particularly in North America, traditionally begin their regular seasons in their autumn, with new series and new episodes of existing series debuting mostly during late September or early October (series that debut outside the autumn season are usually known as mid-season replacements).",
"A sweeps period takes place in November to measure Nielsen Ratings.American football is played almost exclusively in the autumn months; at the high school level, seasons run from late August through early November, with some playoff games and holiday rivalry contests being played as late as Thanksgiving.",
"In many American states, the championship games take place in early December.",
"College football's regular season runs from September through November, while the main professional circuit, the National Football League, plays from September through to early January.Summer sports, such as association football (in Northern America, East Asia, Argentina, and South Africa), Canadian football, stock car racing, tennis, golf, cricket, and professional baseball, wrap up their seasons in early to late autumn; Major League Baseball's championship World Series is popularly known as the \"Fall Classic\".",
"(Amateur baseball is usually finished by August.)",
"Likewise, professional winter sports, such as ice hockey and basketball, and most leagues of association football in Europe, are in the early stages of their seasons during autumn; American college basketball and college ice hockey play teams outside their athletic conferences during the late autumn before their in-conference schedules begin in winter.The Christian religious holidays of All Saints' Day and All Souls' Day are observed in autumn in the Northern hemisphere.",
"Easter falls in autumn in the southern hemisphere.The secular celebration of International Workers' Day also falls in autumn in the southern hemisphere.Since 1997, Autumn has been one of the top 100 names for girls in the United States.In Indian mythology, autumn is considered to be the preferred season for the goddess of learning Saraswati, who is also known by the name of \"goddess of autumn\" (Sharada).In Asian mysticism, Autumn is associated with the element of metal, and subsequently with the colour white, the White Tiger of the West, and death and mourning."
],
[
"Tourism",
"Autumn colouration at the Kalevanpuisto park in Pori, Finland.Although colour change in leaves occurs wherever deciduous trees are found, coloured autumn foliage is noted in various regions of the world: most of North America, Eastern Asia (including China, Korea, and Japan), Europe, southeast, south, and part of the midwest of Brazil, the forest of Patagonia, eastern Australia and New Zealand's South Island.Eastern Canada and New England are famous for their autumnal foliage, and this attracts major tourism (worth billions of US dollars) for the regions."
],
[
"Views of autumn",
"File:Maple Trees by Creek.jpg|Maple leaves changing colour by a creek.File:Pumpkin-Pie-Whole-Slice.jpg|Pumpkin pie is commonly served on and around Thanksgiving in North AmericaFile:01259 All Saints Day Sanok, 2011.jpg|All Saints' Day at a cemetery in Sanok—flowers and lit candles are placed to honour the memory of deceased relatives.File:Autumnleavesfalling-kanagawa-2022Dec5.webm|Falling autumn leaves in Kanagawa, JapanFile:Harvest Straw Bales in Schleswig-Holstein.jpg|Harvest straw bales in a field of Schleswig-Holstein, GermanyFile:Pumpkins-2009.jpg|Halloween pumpkinsFile:Чарівна мить жовтневого світанку.jpg|Autumn in Sedniv, UkraineFile:Autumn in Arrowtown, New Zealand.jpg|Autumn colours in Arrowtown, New Zealand"
],
[
"Allegories of autumn in art",
"File:Allegory_of_Autumn_-_sala_di_Prometeo.jpg|''Autumn'', by Giuseppe CollignonFile:Autumn_Legros_Louvre_MR1981.jpg|''Autumn'', by Pierre Le Gros the ElderFile:Giuseppe Arcimboldo - Autumn, 1573.jpg|''Autumn'' (1573), by Giuseppe ArcimboldoFile:Alfons_Mucha_-_1896_-_Autumn.jpg|''Autumn'' (1896), by Art Nouveau artist Alphonse MuchaFile:Autumn_LCCN90708855.jpg|''Autumn'' (1871), by Currier & IvesFile:Maxfield_Parrish_-_Autumn_(1905).jpg|This 1905 print by Maxfield Frederick Parrish illustrated John Keats' poem ''Autumn''"
],
[
"See also",
"* Autumn in New England* Diwali"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Alameda, California"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Alameda''' ( ; ; Spanish for \"tree-lined path\") is a city in Alameda County, California, United States, located in the East Bay region of the Bay Area.",
"The city is built on an informal archipelago in San Francisco Bay, consisting of Alameda Island, Bay Farm Island and Coast Guard Island, along with other smaller islands.",
"As of the 2020 census, the city's population was 78,280."
],
[
"History",
"===Spanish and Mexican era===Alameda and much of the East Bay was part of Rancho San Antonio, granted to the Peralta family in 1820.Alameda occupies what was originally a peninsula connected to Oakland.",
"Much of it was low-lying and marshy.",
"The higher ground nearby and adjacent parts of what is now downtown Oakland were the site of one of the largest coastal oak forests in the world.",
"Spanish colonists called the area ''Encinal'', meaning \"forest of evergreen oak\".",
"''Alameda'' is Spanish for \"grove of poplar trees\" or \"tree-lined avenue\".",
"It was chosen as the name of the city in 1853 by popular vote.The inhabitants at the time of the arrival of the Spanish in the late 18th century were a local band of the Ohlone tribe.",
"The peninsula was included in the vast Rancho San Antonio granted in 1820 to Luis Peralta by the Spanish king who claimed California.",
"The grant was later confirmed by the Republic of Mexico upon its independence in 1821 from Spain.Over time, the place became known as Bolsa de Encinal or Encinal de San Antonio.===Post-Conquest era===The ''Alameda Shore'', painted by Joseph Lee The city was founded on June 6, 1853, after the United States acquired California following the Mexican–American War of 1848.The town originally contained three small settlements.",
"\"Alameda\" referred to the village at Encinal and High streets, Hibbardsville was located at the North Shore ferry and shipping terminal, and Woodstock was on the west near the ferry piers of the South Pacific Coast Railroad and the Central Pacific.",
"Eventually, the Central Pacific's ferry pier became the Alameda Mole.",
"The borders of Alameda were made coextensive with the island in 1872, incorporating Woodstock into Alameda.",
"In his autobiography, writer Mark Twain described Alameda as \"The Garden of California.\"",
"Alameda shipyards at the turn of the 20th centuryThe first post office opened in 1854.The first school, Schermerhorn School, was opened in 1855 (and eventually renamed as Lincoln School).",
"The San Francisco and Alameda Railroad opened the Encinal station in 1864.The early formation of the Park Street Historic Commercial District (or downtown) was centered near the train lines.",
"Encinal's own post office opened in 1876, was renamed West End in 1877, and closed in 1891.On September 6, 1869, the Alameda Terminal made history; it was the site of the arrival of the first train via the First transcontinental railroad to reach the shores of San Francisco Bay, thus achieving the first coast to coast transcontinental railroad in North America.The Croll Building, on the corner of Webster Street and Central Avenue, was the site of Croll's Gardens and Hotel, used as training quarters for some of the most popular fighters in boxing from 1883 to 1914.Jack Johnson and several other champions all stayed and trained here.The need for expanded shipping facilities and increased flow of current through the estuary led to the dredging of a tidal canal through the marshland between Oakland and Alameda.",
"Construction started in 1874, but it was not completed until 1902, resulting in Alameda becoming an island.===Modern era===Neptune Beach, established in 1917In 1917, a private entertainment park called Neptune Beach was built in the area now known as Crab Cove, which became a major recreation destination in the 1920s and 1930s.",
"Both the American snow cone and the popsicle were first sold at Neptune Beach.",
"The Kewpie doll became the original prize for winning games of chance at the beach – another Neptune Beach innovation.",
"The park closed down in 1939.The Alameda Works Shipyard was one of the largest and best-equipped shipyards in the country.",
"Together with other industrial facilities, it became part of the defense industry buildup before and during World War II, which attracted many migrants from other parts of the United States for the high-paying jobs.",
"In the 1950s, Alameda's industrial and shipbuilding industries thrived along the Alameda Estuary.In the early 21st century, the Port of Oakland, across the estuary, has become one of the largest ports on the West Coast.",
"Its operators use shipping technologies originally experimented within Alameda.",
"As of March 21, 2006, Alameda is a \"Coast Guard City\", one of seven then designated in the country.",
"As of 2018, it is one of twenty-one within the country.Aerial view of Alameda, 1936In addition to the regular trains running to the Alameda Mole, Alameda was also served by local steam commuter lines of the Southern Pacific (initially, the Central Pacific).",
"Alameda was the site of the Southern Pacific's West Alameda Shops, where all the electric trains were maintained and repaired.",
"These were later adapted as the East Bay Electric Lines.",
"The trains ran to both the Oakland Mole and the Alameda Mole.In the 1930s Pan American Airways established a seaplane port along with the fill that led to the Alameda Mole, the original home base for the China Clipper flying boat.",
"In 1929, the University of California established the San Francisco Airdrome located near the current Webster Street tube as a public airport.",
"The Bay Airdrome had its gala christening party in 1930.The Airdrome was closed in 1941 when its air traffic interfered with the newly built Naval Air Station Alameda (NAS Alameda).In the late 1950s, the Utah Construction Company began a landfill beyond the ''Old Sea Wall'' and created ''South Shore''.On February 7, 1973, a USN Vought A-7E Corsair II fighter jet on a routine training mission from Lemoore Naval Air Station suddenly caught fire above the San Francisco Bay, crashing into the Tahoe Apartments in Alameda.",
"Eleven people, including pilot Lieutenant Robert Lee Ward, died in the crash and fire."
],
[
"Geography",
"Fruitvale Bridge, spanning the Oakland Estuary, connects Alameda in the south to Oakland in the north.Alameda's nickname is \"The Island City\" (or simply \"the island\").",
"The current city occupies three islands as well as a small section of the mainland.",
"Today, the city consists of the main original section, with the former Naval Air Station Alameda (NAS Alameda) at the west end of Alameda Island, Southshore along the southern side of Alameda Island, and Bay Farm Island, which is part of the mainland proper.The area of the former NAS is now known as \"Alameda Point.\"",
"The Southshore area is separated from the main part of Alameda Island by a lagoon; the north shore of the lagoon is located approximately where the original south shore of the island was.",
"Alameda Point and Southshore are built on bay fill.Coast Guard IslandNot all of Alameda Island is part of the City of Alameda; a small portion of a dump site west of the former runway at Alameda Naval Air Station extends far enough into San Francisco Bay that it is over the county line and therefore part of the City and County of San Francisco.",
"Coast Guard Island, a small island between Alameda Island and Oakland, is also part of Alameda and is the home of Integrated Support Command Alameda.Ballena Isle, an even smaller island, is also part of Alameda.===Climate===This region experiences warm (but not hot), dry summers, and cool (but not cold), wet winters.",
"According to the Köppen climate classification system, Alameda has a warm-summer Mediterranean climate, abbreviated \"Csb\" on climate maps.",
"Annual precipitation is about , all rain (snow is extremely rare at sea level in the San Francisco Bay Area).=== Hazards ===The low-lying island has seen sea-level and groundwater level rise threaten its infrastructure and people not just through flooding events, but through the increased liquefaction risk from more saturated soils.",
"The locations of increasing groundwater-induced risks and flooding risks (such as from another megaflood) may be most precise in private insurance company maps."
],
[
"Demographics",
"===2020===+'''Alameda, California – Racial and ethnic composition''' (''NH = Non-Hispanic'')Race / EthnicityPop 2000Pop 2010% 2000% 2010White alone (NH)37,92133,46832,15252.48%45.34%41.07%Black or African American alone (NH)4,3504,5164,3996.02%6.12%5.62%Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH)3652471730.51%0.33%0.22%Asian alone (NH)18,75722,82225,10725.96%30.92%32.07%Pacific Islander alone (NH)4073423560.56%0.46%0.45%Other race alone (NH)2352785560.33%0.38%0.71%Mixed race or Multiracial (NH)3,4994,0476,1024.84%5.48%7.80%Hispanic or Latino (any race)6,7258,0929,4359.31%10.96%12.05%'''Total''''''72,259''''''73,812''''''78,280''''''100.00%''''''100.00%''''''100.00%'''===2010===First Presbyterian ChurchThe 2010 United States Census reported that Alameda had a population of 73,812.",
"(2015 census estimates place the population at 78,630)The population density was .",
"The racial makeup of Alameda was 37,460 (50.8%) White, 23,058 (31.2%) Asian, 4,759 (6.4%) African American, 426 (0.6%) Native American, 381 (0.5%) Pacific Islander, 2,463 (3.3%) from other races, and 5,265 (7.1%) from two or more races.",
"Hispanic or Latino of any race were 8,092 persons (11.0%).The Census reported that 72,316 people (98.0% of the population) lived in households, 857 (1.2%) lived in non-institutionalized group quarters, and 639 (0.9%) were institutionalized.There were 30,123 households, out of which 9,144 (30.4%) had children under the age of 18 living in them, 13,440 (44.6%) were opposite-sex married couples living together, 3,623 (12.0%) had a female householder with no husband present, 1,228 (4.1%) had a male householder with no wife present.",
"There were 1,681 (5.6%) unmarried opposite-sex partnerships, and 459 (1.5%) same-sex married couples or same-sex partnerships.",
"9,347 households (31.0%) were made up of individuals, and 2,874 (9.5%) had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older.",
"The average household size was 2.40.There were 18,291 families (60.7% of all households); the average family size was 3.06.The age distribution of the population shows 15,304 people (20.7%) under the age of 18, 5,489 people (7.4%) aged 18 to 24, 21,000 people (28.5%) aged 25 to 44, 22,044 people (29.9%) aged 45 to 64, and 9,975 people (13.5%) who were 65 years of age or older.",
"The median age was 40.7 years.",
"For every 100 females, there were 91.7 males.",
"For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 88.5 males.Per capita annual income (in 2013 dollars) in 2009–2013 was $41,340 per the US Census.",
"Median household income in 2009–2013 was $74,606 per the US Census.There were 32,351 housing units at an average density of , of which 30,123 were occupied, of which 14,488 (48.1%) were owner-occupied, and 15,635 (51.9%) were occupied by renters.",
"The homeowner vacancy rate was 1.1%; the rental vacancy rate was 5.7%.",
"37,042 people (50.2% of the population) lived in owner-occupied housing units and 35,274 people (47.8%) lived in rental housing units.===2000===Twin Towers ChurchAs of the census of 2000, there were 72,259 people, 30,226 households, and 17,863 families residing in the city.",
"The population density was 2,583.3/km (6,693.4/mi2).",
"There were 31,644 housing units at an average density of 1,131.3/km (2,931.2/mi2).",
"The racial makeup of the city was 56.95% White, 6.21% Black or African American, 0.67% Native American, 26.15% Asian, 0.60% Pacific Islander, 3.29% from other races, and 6.13% from two or more races.",
"9.31% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.There were 30,226 households, out of which 27.7% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 43.7% were married couples living together, 11.4% had a female householder with no husband present, and 40.9% were non-families.",
"Of all households, 32.2% were made up of individuals, and 9.4% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older.",
"The average household size was 2.35 and the average family size was 3.04.In the city, the age distribution of the population shows 21.5% under the age of 18, 7.0% from 18 to 24, 33.6% from 25 to 44, 24.6% from 45 to 64, and 13.3% who were 65 years of age or older.",
"The median age was 38 years.",
"For every 100 females, there were 92.3 males.",
"For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 89.5 males.The median income for a household in the city was $56,285, and the median income for a family was $68,625.Males had a median income of $49,174 versus $40,165 for females.",
"The per capita income for the city was $30,982.About 6.0% of families and 8.2% of the population were below the poverty line, including 11.4% of those under age 18 and 6.1% of those age 65 or over.There is a large Filipino community; and also a major Portuguese community, from which Tom Hanks' mother came and where Lyndsy Fonseca was raised for some time.",
"Alameda also has a historic Japanese American community and had a small Japanese business district on a portion of Park Street before World War II, when the city's Japanese population was interned.",
"A Japanese Buddhist church is one of the few remaining buildings left of Alameda's pre-war Japanese American community."
],
[
"Economy",
"Waterfront homes in AlamedaThe Croll Building, built 1879Masonic Temple and LodgeNaval Air Station Alameda (NAS), decommissioned in 1997, was turned over to the City of Alameda for civilian development, today known as Alameda Point.The aircraft carrier , a museum ship, has been moored at the former Naval Air Station as the USS ''Hornet'' Museum since 1998.A cluster of artisan distilleries, wineries, breweries and tasting rooms along Monarch Street at Alameda Point is now referred to by the City of Alameda as \"Spirits Alley\".",
"Admiral Maltings also sits in this area, supplying craft brewers and whisky producers, and is the first craft malting house in California.Following the exit of the former Oakland Raiders, the Oakland Roots of the USL Championship have a license agreement for the former Raiders performance center with the City of Oakland and the County of Alameda.",
";Top employersAccording to the city's 2020 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, the top employers in the city are: # Employer # of Employees1Penumbra Inc.1,8392Alameda Unified School District1,0683Alameda Hospital7504Abbott Diabetes Care Inc.5655City of Alameda5436Kaiser Foundation Health Plan4507U.S.",
"Department of Transportation3708Alameda Alliance For Health3669Bay Ship & Yacht Co.31610College of Alameda266"
],
[
"Arts and culture",
"Alameda TheatreThe Alameda Arts Council (AAC) serves as the local Alameda City arts council.",
"The Alameda Civic Ballet is the ballet troupe of the city.",
"The Alameda Museum features displays on the history of Alameda.",
"The Alameda Art Association has about 80 members as of January 2011, and has a gallery space at South Shore Center mall.",
"The Association began in 1944.An annual benefit, Circus for Arts in the Schools, was started by clown artist Jeff Raz in 2004.Photo-realist Robert Bechtle has painted numerous Alameda subjects, including ''Alameda Gran Torino'', which was acquired by SFMOMA in 1974 and remains one of Bechtle's most famous works.===Theaters===Veterans Memorial BuildingThe city restored the historic Art Deco city landmark Alameda Theatre, expanding it to include a theater multiplex.",
"The public opening was May 21, 2008.The Altarena Playhouse, which performs comedies, dramas, and musicals, was founded in 1938 and is the longest continuously operating community theater in the San Francisco Bay Area.===Festivals===The Fourth of July parade is advertised as the second oldest and second-longest Fourth of July parade in the United States.",
"It features homemade floats, classic cars, motorized living room furniture, fire-breathing dragons, and marching bands.There are three major events when the street in Alameda's historic downtown district is closed to vehicular traffic.",
"The ''Park Street Spring Festival'' takes place every May during the weekend of Mother's Day and attracts over 50,000 visitors.",
"The ''Park Street Art & Wine Faire'' takes place the last weekend of every July and attracts over 100,000 visitors.",
"The ''Park Street Classic Car Show'' is held on the second Saturday every October and displays over 400 vintage vehicles.The annual Sand Castle and Sculpture Contest takes place in June at the Robert Crown Memorial State Beach.",
"The first contest was held in 1967."
],
[
"Government",
"Alameda Free LibraryAccording to the California Secretary of State, as of February 10, 2019, Alameda has 48,609 registered voters.",
"Of those, 27,323 (56.2%) are registered Democrats, 5,240 (10.8%) are registered Republicans, and 13,950 (28.7%) have declined to state a political party.===Alameda Free Library===After two previous failures, voters in the city passed a ballot measure in 2000 authorizing a bond measure for construction of a new main library to replace the city's Carnegie Library, damaged during the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.",
"The city also received state funds for the new main library and opened the doors to the new facility in November 2006.There are three library locations: the Main Library in downtown Alameda and two library branches; the Bay Farm Island Library serving the Bay Farm and Harbor Bay communities and the West End Library serving the West End of Alameda."
],
[
"Education",
"View of Bay Farm IslandPublic primary and secondary education in Alameda is the responsibility of the Alameda Unified School District, which is legally separate from the City of Alameda government (as is common throughout California).",
"The College of Alameda, a two-year community college in the West End is part of the Peralta Community College District.",
"The city has numerous private primary schools, and one private high school, St. Joseph Notre Dame High School, a Catholic school."
],
[
"Media",
"Alameda's first newspaper, the ''Encinal'', appeared in the early 1850s.",
"Following the ''Encinal'', several other papers appeared along geographic lines, and the ''Daily Argus'' eventually rose to prominence.",
"Around 1900, the ''Daily Argus'' began to fade in importance and east and west papers ''The Times'' and ''The Star'' combined to take the leading role as the ''Alameda Times-Star'' in the 1930s.",
"The ''Times-Star'' was sold to the Alameda Newspaper Group in the 1970s.",
"In 1997, the Hills Newspaper chain was bought by Knight Ridder.",
"In 2001, a new locally based newspaper, the ''Alameda Sun'', was founded.The Alameda community is currently served by two weekly newspapers, the Alameda Journal and the Alameda Sun, and a non-profit online news outlet called the Alameda Post."
],
[
"Transportation",
"Alameda Portal of the Posey and Webster Street TubesHigh Street BridgeVehicle access to Alameda Island is via three bridges from Oakland (Park Street, Fruitvale Avenue, and High Street Bridges), as well as the two one-way Posey and Webster Street Tubes leading into Oakland's Chinatown.",
"Connections from Alameda to Bay Farm Island are provided via the Bay Farm Island Bridge for vehicular traffic as well as the Bay Farm Island Bicycle Bridge (the only pedestrian/bicycle-only drawbridge in the United States).California State Route 61 runs down city streets from the Posey and Webster Street Tubes, across the Bay Farm Island Bridge, and south to the Oakland Airport.",
"The island is just minutes off Interstate 880 in Oakland.",
"The speed limit for the city is 25 mph (40 km/h) on almost every road.Public transportation options include:* AC Transit buses, which range from local connections to Oakland and Berkeley to express service to San Francisco* Ferry services – In addition to the Alameda/Oakland Ferry and the Alameda Harbor Bay Ferry routes, San Francisco Bay Ferry also provides service between Alameda Main Street Station and South San Francisco.",
"All ferry services are operated by the Water Transit Authority.",
"* The closest BART stations are Lake Merritt and 12th Street, near the exit to the Posey Tube, and Fruitvale, near the Fruitvale Bridge.",
"BART's long-term plans for a second tunnel include Alameda as a candidate for the first stop on a new East Bay line."
],
[
"Notable buildings",
"* Alameda City Hall; NRHP-listed* Alameda High School; NRHP-listed * Croll Building; NRHP-listed and a California Historical Landmark* Masonic Temple and Lodge; NRHP-listed, and part of the Park Street Historic Commercial District * Park Street Historic Commercial District; NRHP-listed and a California Historical Landmark"
],
[
"Notable people",
"* Albert Arents, a mining engineer who helped develop mineral resources of the Rocky Mountains.",
"* John Baker, MLB catcher for San Diego Padres and Chicago Cubs, was born in Alameda.",
"* Hester A. Benedict (1838–1921), president, Pacific Coast Women's Press Association* Mike Brisiel, an offensive guard for Oakland Raiders.",
"* Virginia Lee Burton, Caldecott-winning children's author and illustrator.",
"* Harold Camping, television and radio personality, president and general manager of Family Stations, Inc.* Phyllis Diller, television comedian, attended Sunday school at First Presbyterian, married and lived in Alameda at the start of her comedy act in San Francisco in the 1950s.",
"* General James Doolittle, who received the Medal of Honor for his bombing of Japan during World War II; Doolittle was born in Alameda in 1896.",
"* Garrett Eckbo, landscape architect who lived in Alameda as a child, later forming the Bay Area firm of Eckbo, Royston, Williams with Robert Royston and Edward Williams.",
"* Leif Erickson, actor, born in Alameda in 1911.",
"* Larry Eustachy, college basketball coach, born in Alameda.",
"* Debbi Fields, founder of Mrs. Fields Cookies, attended Alameda High School, where she was a cheerleader.",
"* Albert Ghiorso, nuclear scientist, co-discoverer of 12 chemical elements on the periodic table; in Guinness Book of World Records for Most Elements Discovered.",
"* Brad Gillis, guitarist with Night Ranger, a San Francisco rock band formed in the 1980s.",
"* Katharine Graham, the late publisher of ''The Washington Post'', lived in Alameda as a child, according to ''Personal History'', her autobiography.",
"* Tim Hardaway Jr., a professional basketball player, was born in Alameda.",
"* Horace Heidt, bandleader and radio personality, born in Alameda on May 21, 1901.",
"* Emily Heller, comedian* Marielle Heller, actress and director* Bruce Henderson, author, grew up in Alameda, according to his book ''Hero Found: The Greatest POW Escape of the Vietnam War''.",
"* Benjamin Jealous, former President of the NAACP, lived in Alameda.",
"* Joseph R. Knowland, congressman and Alameda native, was editor and publisher of the ''Oakland Tribune''.",
"* William Fife Knowland, U.S.",
"Senator, was student body president at Alameda High School.",
"* Robert L. Lippert, theater chain owner and film producer, was an Alameda native.",
"* Paul Mantz, air racer and Hollywood stunt pilot, was born in Alameda in 1903.",
"* Louis A. McCall Sr., drummer and musician known as the co-founder of Con Funk Shun.",
"* Margaret McNamara, founder of Reading is Fundamental, and wife of Robert McNamara, grew up in Alameda.",
"* George P. Miller, a congressman from 1945 to 1973.",
"* Jack Mingo, author* Hugo Wilhelm Arthur Nahl, designer of the Seal of California.",
"* Don Perata, former President Pro Tempore of California State Senate, lives in Alameda; once taught at Saint Joseph Notre Dame High, Encinal High, and Alameda High, among other Alameda schools.",
"* Carl Ravazza, bandleader, born in Alameda, 1910.",
"* Bill Rigney, Major League Baseball player and manager, was born in Alameda.",
"* Dutch Ruether, pitcher for 1927 New York Yankees, was born in Alameda.",
"*Jane Sibbett, actress and comedian, grew up in Alameda.",
"* Operatic mezzo-soprano Frederica Von Stade has lived in Alameda since 1992.",
"* Sharon Tate, actress, resident in early to late-1960s.",
"* Charles Lee Tilden, for whom Tilden Regional Park is named, was a longtime resident of Alameda; Tilden Way at the southeast end of the city is named for him.",
"* Baseball Hall of Famer Willie Stargell, MLB player Tommy Harper, MLB player Curtell Howard Motton, 2003 National League Rookie of the Year Dontrelle Willis, 2007 National League Most Valuable Player Jimmy Rollins, NBA player J.R. Rider, and NFL players Melvin Carver and Junior Tautalatasi all attended Encinal High School.",
"* Jason Kidd (NBA player and coach) and Joe Nelson (MLB pitcher) attended St. Joseph Notre Dame High School in Alameda.",
"* MLB players Ray French, Johnny Vergez, Andy Carey, Bill Serena, Erik Schullstrom, Dick Bartell, Duffy Lewis, Chris Speier, and Bryan Woo all attended Alameda High School.",
"* Many people from naval families, including celebrities such as Ann Curry, Brigette Lundy-Paine, Tom Hanks, and Jim Morrison of The Doors, have lived in Alameda."
],
[
"Sister cities",
"Alameda's relationships with Wuxi and Jiangyin were initiated in 2005, in part, by Stewart Chen, who then served on the City of Alameda Social Service and Human Relations board, and who went on to be elected to Alameda City Council in November 2012.Wuxi, China, is a so-called friendship city, because the diplomacy organization Sister Cities International does not recognize the relationship.",
"* Jiangyin, China* Arita, Japan* Yeongdong-gun, South Korea* Lidingö, Sweden.",
"Initiated in 1959 as part of President Eisenhower's people-to-people-movement, whose purpose was to develop better understanding among people from different countries after World War II.",
"Both Alameda and Lidingö are islands with a bridge connecting them to a big city.",
"* Dumaguete, Philippines* Varazze, Italy===Friendship city===* Wuxi, China (Friendship city since 2004)"
],
[
"See also",
"* Alameda Island* Bay Farm Island * Coast Guard Island* List of islands of California* List of ships built in Alameda, California"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* * *"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Alpha helix"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Three-dimensional structure of an alpha helix in the protein crambinAn '''alpha helix''' (or '''α-helix''') is a sequence of amino acids in a protein that are twisted into a coil (a helix).The alpha helix is the most common structural arrangement in the secondary structure of proteins.",
"It is also the most extreme type of local structure, and it is the local structure that is most easily predicted from a sequence of amino acids.The alpha helix has a right hand-helix conformation in which every backbone N−H group hydrogen bonds to the backbone C=O group of the amino acid that is four residues earlier in the protein sequence."
],
[
"Other names",
"The alpha helix is also commonly called a:* '''Pauling–Corey–Branson α-helix''' (from the names of three scientists who described its structure).",
"* '''3.613-helix''' because there are 3.6 amino acids in one ring, and there are an average of 13 residues per helical turn, with 13 atoms being involved in the ring formed by the hydrogen bond."
],
[
"Discovery",
"In the early 1930s, William Astbury showed that there were drastic changes in the X-ray fiber diffraction of moist wool or hair fibers upon significant stretching.",
"The data suggested that the unstretched fibers had a coiled molecular structure with a characteristic repeat of ≈.Astbury initially proposed a linked-chain structure for the fibers.",
"He later joined other researchers (notably the American chemist Maurice Huggins) in proposing that:* the unstretched protein molecules formed a helix (which he called the α-form)* the stretching caused the helix to uncoil, forming an extended state (which he called the β-form).Although incorrect in their details, Astbury's models of these forms were correct in essence and correspond to modern elements of secondary structure, the α-helix and the β-strand (Astbury's nomenclature was kept), which were developed by Linus Pauling, Robert Corey and Herman Branson in 1951 (see below); that paper showed both right- and left-handed helices, although in 1960 the crystal structure of myoglobin showed that the right-handed form is the common one.",
"Hans Neurath was the first to show that Astbury's models could not be correct in detail, because they involved clashes of atoms.",
"Neurath's paper and Astbury's data inspired H. S. Taylor, Maurice Huggins and Bragg and collaborators to propose models of keratin that somewhat resemble the modern α-helix.Two key developments in the modeling of the modern α-helix were: the correct bond geometry, thanks to the crystal structure determinations of amino acids and peptides and Pauling's prediction of ''planar'' peptide bonds; and his relinquishing of the assumption of an integral number of residues per turn of the helix.",
"The pivotal moment came in the early spring of 1948, when Pauling caught a cold and went to bed.",
"Being bored, he drew a polypeptide chain of roughly correct dimensions on a strip of paper and folded it into a helix, being careful to maintain the planar peptide bonds.",
"After a few attempts, he produced a model with physically plausible hydrogen bonds.",
"Pauling then worked with Corey and Branson to confirm his model before publication.",
"In 1954, Pauling was awarded his first Nobel Prize \"for his research into the nature of the chemical bond and its application to the elucidation of the structure of complex substances\" (such as proteins), prominently including the structure of the α-helix."
],
[
"Structure",
"=== Geometry and hydrogen bonding ===The amino acids in an α-helix are arranged in a right-handed helical structure where each amino acid residue corresponds to a 100° turn in the helix (i.e., the helix has 3.6 residues per turn), and a translation of along the helical axis.",
"Dunitz describes how Pauling's first article on the theme in fact shows a left-handed helix, the enantiomer of the true structure.",
"Short pieces of left-handed helix sometimes occur with a large content of achiral glycine amino acids, but are unfavorable for the other normal, biological -amino acids.",
"The pitch of the alpha-helix (the vertical distance between consecutive turns of the helix) is , which is the product of 1.5 and 3.6.What is most important is that the N-H group of an amino acid forms a hydrogen bond with the C=O group of the amino acid ''four'' residues earlier; this repeated ''i'' + 4 → ''i'' hydrogen bonding is the most prominent characteristic of an α-helix.",
"Official international nomenclature specifies two ways of defining α-helices, rule 6.2 in terms of repeating ''φ'', ''ψ'' torsion angles (see below) and rule 6.3 in terms of the combined pattern of pitch and hydrogen bonding.",
"The α-helices can be identified in protein structure using several computational methods, one of which is DSSP (Define Secondary Structure of Protein).Contrast of helix end views between α (offset squarish) vs 310 (triangular)Similar structures include the 310 helix (''i'' + 3 → ''i'' hydrogen bonding) and the π-helix (''i'' + 5 → ''i'' hydrogen bonding).",
"The α-helix can be described as a 3.613 helix, since the ''i'' + 4 spacing adds three more atoms to the H-bonded loop compared to the tighter 310 helix, and on average, 3.6 amino acids are involved in one ring of α-helix.",
"The subscripts refer to the number of atoms (including the hydrogen) in the closed loop formed by the hydrogen bond.Ramachandran plot (''φ'', ''ψ'' plot), with data points for α-helical residues forming a dense diagonal cluster below and left of center, around the global energy minimum for backbone conformation.Residues in α-helices typically adopt backbone (''φ'', ''ψ'') dihedral angles around (−60°, −45°), as shown in the image at right.",
"In more general terms, they adopt dihedral angles such that the ''ψ'' dihedral angle of one residue and the ''φ'' dihedral angle of the ''next'' residue sum to roughly −105°.",
"As a consequence, α-helical dihedral angles, in general, fall on a diagonal stripe on the Ramachandran diagram (of slope −1), ranging from (−90°, −15°) to (−70°, −35°).",
"For comparison, the sum of the dihedral angles for a 310 helix is roughly −75°, whereas that for the π-helix is roughly −130°.",
"The general formula for the rotation angle ''Ω'' per residue of any polypeptide helix with ''trans'' isomers is given by the equation:The α-helix is tightly packed; there is almost no free space within the helix.",
"The amino-acid side-chains are on the outside of the helix, and point roughly \"downward\" (i.e., toward the N-terminus), like the branches of an evergreen tree (Christmas tree effect).",
"This directionality is sometimes used in preliminary, low-resolution electron-density maps to determine the direction of the protein backbone.=== Stability ===Helices observed in proteins can range from four to over forty residues long, but a typical helix contains about ten amino acids (about three turns).",
"In general, short polypeptides do not exhibit much α-helical structure in solution, since the entropic cost associated with the folding of the polypeptide chain is not compensated for by a sufficient amount of stabilizing interactions.",
"In general, the backbone hydrogen bonds of α-helices are considered slightly weaker than those found in β-sheets, and are readily attacked by the ambient water molecules.",
"However, in more hydrophobic environments such as the plasma membrane, or in the presence of co-solvents such as trifluoroethanol (TFE), or isolated from solvent in the gas phase, oligopeptides readily adopt stable α-helical structure.",
"Furthermore, crosslinks can be incorporated into peptides to conformationally stabilize helical folds.",
"Crosslinks stabilize the helical state by entropically destabilizing the unfolded state and by removing enthalpically stabilized \"decoy\" folds that compete with the fully helical state.",
"It has been shown that α-helices are more stable, robust to mutations and designable than β-strands in natural proteins, and also in artificially designed proteins.An α-helix in ultrahigh-resolution electron density contours, with oxygen atoms in red, nitrogen atoms in blue, and hydrogen bonds as green dotted lines (PDB file 2NRL, 17–32).",
"The N-terminus is at the top, here.=== Visualization ===The 3 most popular ways of visualizing the alpha-helical secondary structure of oligopeptide sequences are (1) a helical wheel, (2) a wenxiang diagram, and (3) a helical net.",
"Each of these can be visualized with various software packages and web servers.",
"To generate a small number of diagrams, Heliquest can be used for helical wheels, and NetWheels can be used for helical wheels and helical nets.",
"To programmatically generate a large number of diagrams, helixvis can be used to draw helical wheels and wenxiang diagrams in the R and Python programming languages."
],
[
"Experimental determination",
"Since the α-helix is defined by its hydrogen bonds and backbone conformation, the most detailed experimental evidence for α-helical structure comes from atomic-resolution X-ray crystallography such as the example shown at right.",
"It is clear that all the backbone carbonyl oxygens point downward (toward the C-terminus) but splay out slightly, and the H-bonds are approximately parallel to the helix axis.",
"Protein structures from NMR spectroscopy also show helices well, with characteristic observations of nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) couplings between atoms on adjacent helical turns.",
"In some cases, the individual hydrogen bonds can be observed directly as a small scalar coupling in NMR.There are several lower-resolution methods for assigning general helical structure.",
"The NMR chemical shifts (in particular of the Cα, Cβ and C′) and residual dipolar couplings are often characteristic of helices.",
"The far-UV (170–250 nm) circular dichroism spectrum of helices is also idiosyncratic, exhibiting a pronounced double minimum at around 208 and 222 nm.",
"Infrared spectroscopy is rarely used, since the α-helical spectrum resembles that of a random coil (although these might be discerned by, e.g., hydrogen-deuterium exchange).",
"Finally, cryo electron microscopy is now capable of discerning individual α-helices within a protein, although their assignment to residues is still an active area of research.Long homopolymers of amino acids often form helices if soluble.",
"Such long, isolated helices can also be detected by other methods, such as dielectric relaxation, flow birefringence, and measurements of the diffusion constant.",
"In stricter terms, these methods detect only the characteristic prolate (long cigar-like) hydrodynamic shape of a helix, or its large dipole moment."
],
[
"Amino-acid propensities",
"Different amino-acid sequences have different propensities for forming α-helical structure.",
"Methionine, alanine, leucine, glutamate, and lysine uncharged (\"MALEK\" in the amino-acid 1-letter codes) all have especially high helix-forming propensities, whereas proline and glycine have poor helix-forming propensities.",
"Proline either breaks or kinks a helix, both because it cannot donate an amide hydrogen bond (having no amide hydrogen), and also because its sidechain interferes sterically with the backbone of the preceding turn inside a helix, this forces a bend of about 30° in the helix's axis.",
"However, proline is often seen as the ''first'' residue of a helix, it is presumed due to its structural rigidity.",
"At the other extreme, glycine also tends to disrupt helices because its high conformational flexibility makes it entropically expensive to adopt the relatively constrained α-helical structure.=== Table of standard amino acid alpha-helical propensities ===Estimated differences in free energy change, Δ(Δ''G''), estimated in kcal/mol per residue in an α-helical configuration, relative to alanine arbitrarily set as zero.",
"Higher numbers (more positive free energy changes) are less favoured.",
"Significant deviations from these average numbers are possible, depending on the identities of the neighbouring residues.",
":+Differences in free energy change per residue Amino acid 3-letter 1-letter Helical penaltykcal/molkJ/mol Alanine Ala A Arginine Arg R Asparagine Asn N Aspartic acid Asp D Cysteine Cys C Glutamic acid Glu E Glutamine Gln Q Glycine Gly G Histidine His H Isoleucine Ile I Leucine Leu L Lysine Lys K Methionine Met M Phenylalanine Phe F Proline Pro P Serine Ser S Threonine Thr T Tryptophan Trp W Tyrosine Tyr Y Valine Val V"
],
[
"Dipole moment",
"A helix has an overall dipole moment due to the aggregate effect of the individual microdipoles from the carbonyl groups of the peptide bond pointing along the helix axis.",
"The effects of this macrodipole are a matter of some controversy.",
"α-helices often occur with the N-terminal end bound by a negatively charged group, sometimes an amino acid side chain such as glutamate or aspartate, or sometimes a phosphate ion.",
"Some regard the helix macrodipole as interacting electrostatically with such groups.",
"Others feel that this is misleading and it is more realistic to say that the hydrogen bond potential of the free NH groups at the N-terminus of an α-helix can be satisfied by hydrogen bonding; this can also be regarded as set of interactions between local microdipoles such as ."
],
[
"Coiled coils",
"Coiled-coil α helices are highly stable forms in which two or more helices wrap around each other in a \"supercoil\" structure.",
"Coiled coils contain a highly characteristic sequence motif known as a '''heptad repeat''', in which the motif repeats itself every seven residues along the sequence (''amino acid'' residues, not DNA base-pairs).",
"The first and especially the fourth residues (known as the ''a'' and ''d'' positions) are almost always hydrophobic; the fourth residue is typically leucine this gives rise to the name of the structural motif called a ''leucine zipper'', which is a type of coiled-coil.",
"These hydrophobic residues pack together in the interior of the helix bundle.",
"In general, the fifth and seventh residues (the ''e'' and ''g'' positions) have opposing charges and form a salt bridge stabilized by electrostatic interactions.",
"Fibrous proteins such as keratin or the \"stalks\" of myosin or kinesin often adopt coiled-coil structures, as do several dimerizing proteins.",
"A pair of coiled-coils a four-helix bundle is a very common structural motif in proteins.",
"For example, it occurs in human growth hormone and several varieties of cytochrome.",
"The Rop protein, which promotes plasmid replication in bacteria, is an interesting case in which a single polypeptide forms a coiled-coil and two monomers assemble to form a four-helix bundle."
],
[
"Facial arrangements",
"The amino acids that make up a particular helix can be plotted on a helical wheel, a representation that illustrates the orientations of the constituent amino acids (see the article for leucine zipper for such a diagram).",
"Often in globular proteins, as well as in specialized structures such as coiled-coils and leucine zippers, an α-helix will exhibit two \"faces\" one containing predominantly hydrophobic amino acids oriented toward the interior of the protein, in the hydrophobic core, and one containing predominantly polar amino acids oriented toward the solvent-exposed surface of the protein.Changes in binding orientation also occur for facially-organized oligopeptides.",
"This pattern is especially common in antimicrobial peptides, and many models have been devised to describe how this relates to their function.",
"Common to many of them is that the hydrophobic face of the antimicrobial peptide forms pores in the plasma membrane after associating with the fatty chains at the membrane core."
],
[
"Larger-scale assemblies",
"The Hemoglobin molecule has four heme-binding subunits, each made largely of α-helices.Myoglobin and hemoglobin, the first two proteins whose structures were solved by X-ray crystallography, have very similar folds made up of about 70% α-helix, with the rest being non-repetitive regions, or \"loops\" that connect the helices.",
"In classifying proteins by their dominant fold, the Structural Classification of Proteins database maintains a large category specifically for all-α proteins.Hemoglobin then has an even larger-scale quaternary structure, in which the functional oxygen-binding molecule is made up of four subunits."
],
[
"Functional roles",
"DNA-binding helices: transcription factor Max (PDB file 1HLO)PDB file 1GZM), with a bundle of seven helices crossing the membrane (membrane surfaces marked by horizontal lines)=== DNA binding ===α-Helices have particular significance in DNA binding motifs, including helix-turn-helix motifs, leucine zipper motifs and zinc finger motifs.",
"This is because of the convenient structural fact that the diameter of an α-helix is about including an average set of sidechains, about the same as the width of the major groove in B-form DNA, and also because coiled-coil (or leucine zipper) dimers of helices can readily position a pair of interaction surfaces to contact the sort of symmetrical repeat common in double-helical DNA.",
"An example of both aspects is the transcription factor Max (see image at left), which uses a helical coiled coil to dimerize, positioning another pair of helices for interaction in two successive turns of the DNA major groove.=== Membrane spanning ===α-Helices are also the most common protein structure element that crosses biological membranes (transmembrane protein), it is presumed because the helical structure can satisfy all backbone hydrogen-bonds internally, leaving no polar groups exposed to the membrane if the sidechains are hydrophobic.",
"Proteins are sometimes anchored by a single membrane-spanning helix, sometimes by a pair, and sometimes by a helix bundle, most classically consisting of seven helices arranged up-and-down in a ring such as for rhodopsins (see image at right) and other G protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs).",
"The structural stability between pairs of α-Helical transmembrane domains rely on conserved membrane interhelical packing motifs, for example, the Glycine-xxx-Glycine (or small-xxx-small) motif.=== Mechanical properties ===α-Helices under axial tensile deformation, a characteristic loading condition that appears in many alpha-helix-rich filaments and tissues, results in a characteristic three-phase behavior of stiff-soft-stiff tangent modulus.",
"Phase I corresponds to the small-deformation regime during which the helix is stretched homogeneously, followed by phase II, in which alpha-helical turns break mediated by the rupture of groups of H-bonds.",
"Phase III is typically associated with large-deformation covalent bond stretching."
],
[
"Dynamical features",
"Alpha-helices in proteins may have low-frequency accordion-like motion as observed by the Raman spectroscopy and analyzed via the quasi-continuum model.",
"Helices not stabilized by tertiary interactions show dynamic behavior, which can be mainly attributed to helix fraying from the ends."
],
[
"Helix–coil transition",
"Homopolymers of amino acids (such as polylysine) can adopt α-helical structure at low temperature that is \"melted out\" at high temperatures.",
"This '''helix–coil transition''' was once thought to be analogous to protein denaturation.",
"The statistical mechanics of this transition can be modeled using an elegant transfer matrix method, characterized by two parameters: the propensity to initiate a helix and the propensity to extend a helix."
],
[
"In art",
"Julian Voss-Andreae's ''Alpha Helix for Linus Pauling'' (2004), powder coated steel, height .",
"The sculpture stands in front of Pauling's childhood home on 3945 SE Hawthorne Boulevard in Portland, Oregon, USA.At least five artists have made explicit reference to the α-helix in their work: Julie Newdoll in painting and Julian Voss-Andreae, Bathsheba Grossman, Byron Rubin, and Mike Tyka in sculpture.San Francisco area artist Julie Newdoll, who holds a degree in microbiology with a minor in art, has specialized in paintings inspired by microscopic images and molecules since 1990.Her painting \"Rise of the Alpha Helix\" (2003) features human figures arranged in an α helical arrangement.",
"According to the artist, \"the flowers reflect the various types of sidechains that each amino acid holds out to the world\".",
"This same metaphor is also echoed from the scientist's side: \"β sheets do not show a stiff repetitious regularity but flow in graceful, twisting curves, and even the α-helix is regular more in the manner of a flower stem, whose branching nodes show the influence of environment, developmental history, and the evolution of each part to match its own idiosyncratic function.",
"\"Julian Voss-Andreae is a German-born sculptor with degrees in experimental physics and sculpture.",
"Since 2001 Voss-Andreae creates \"protein sculptures\" based on protein structure with the α-helix being one of his preferred objects.",
"Voss-Andreae has made α-helix sculptures from diverse materials including bamboo and whole trees.",
"A monument Voss-Andreae created in 2004 to celebrate the memory of Linus Pauling, the discoverer of the α-helix, is fashioned from a large steel beam rearranged in the structure of the α-helix.",
"The , bright-red sculpture stands in front of Pauling's childhood home in Portland, Oregon.Ribbon diagrams of α-helices are a prominent element in the laser-etched crystal sculptures of protein structures created by artist Bathsheba Grossman, such as those of insulin, hemoglobin, and DNA polymerase.",
"Byron Rubin is a former protein crystallographer now professional sculptor in metal of proteins, nucleic acids, and drug molecules many of which featuring α-helices, such as subtilisin, human growth hormone, and phospholipase A2.Mike Tyka is a computational biochemist at the University of Washington working with David Baker.",
"Tyka has been making sculptures of protein molecules since 2010 from copper and steel, including ubiquitin and a potassium channel tetramer."
],
[
"See also",
"* 310 helix* Beta sheet* Davydov soliton* Folding (chemistry)* Knobs into holes packing* Pi helix*"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* .",
"* * * * * * * * * * * * *"
],
[
"External links",
"* NetSurfP ver.",
"1.1 – Protein Surface Accessibility and Secondary Structure Predictions* α-helix rotational angle calculator* Artist Julie Newdoll's website* Artist Julian Voss-Andreae's website"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Accrington"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Accrington''' is a town in the Hyndburn borough of Lancashire, England.",
"It lies about east of Blackburn, west of Burnley, east of Preston, north of Manchester and is situated on the culverted River Hyndburn.",
"Commonly abbreviated by locals to \"Accy\", the town has a population of 35,456 according to the 2011 census.Accrington is a former centre of the cotton and textile machinery industries.",
"The town is famed for manufacturing the hardest and densest building bricks in the world, \"The Accrington NORI\" (iron), which were used in the construction of the Empire State Building and for the foundations of Blackpool Tower; famous for Accrington Stanley F.C.",
"and the Haworth Art Gallery which holds Europe's largest collection of Tiffany glass."
],
[
"History",
"===Etymology===The name \"Accrington\" likely has Anglo-Saxon origins.",
"The earliest known recording of the name is found in the Parish of Whalley records from 850, where it is written as \"Akeringastun\".",
"In subsequent records, the name appears in various forms, including \"Akarinton\" in 1194, \"Akerunton\", \"Akerinton\", and \"Akerynton\" in 1258, \"Acrinton\" in 1292, \"Ackryngton\" in 1311, and \"Acryngton\" in 1324.The name may derive from the Old English words \"æcern\", meaning \"acorn\", and \"tun\", meaning \"farmstead\" or \"village\", thus possibly meaning \"acorn farmstead\".",
"However, some sources argue that this interpretation is not definitive and that alternative explanations may exist.New Accrington, the southern part of the town, was historically part of the Forest of Blackburnshire.",
"The area's abundance of oak trees can be inferred from local place names such as Broad Oak and Oak Hill.",
"Acorns, a product of oak trees, were once a crucial food source for swine, which may have led to the naming of a farmstead after this resource.",
"In the Lancashire dialect, \"acorn\" is pronounced \"akran\", which might have influenced the name's development.No known Old English personal name corresponds to the first element in \"Accrington\".",
"Nevertheless, the Frisian names \"Akkrum\" and \"Akkeringa\", as well as the Dutch name \"Akkerghem\", are believed to derive from the personal name \"Akker\".",
"This finding suggests the possibility of a related Old English name from which \"Accrington\" could have originated.",
"It is also worth noting that \"Ingas\" is the Old Norse word for \"tribe\", which may be relevant to the name's origin.Overall, the etymology of \"Accrington\" is complex and there are several theories about its origin.",
"While the \"acorn farmstead\" interpretation is the most commonly accepted explanation, further research and analysis may be needed to confirm or refute this theory, or to identify alternative possibilities.===Early history===There appears to be no mention of Accrington from the Roman period.",
"The area typically appears to be heavily forested, with very few established settlements.",
"According to folklore, a tall Danish tribal leader named Wada invaded the area between 760 and 798; who seems to have founded Waddington, Paddington (Padiham) and Akeringastun (Accrington).",
"Descendants of the Wada held much of the lands until the sixteenth century.",
"In 1442, the Waddingtons' hold leases on Berefeld (Bellfield), and in 1517 it is recorded that Thomas Waddington transferred the lands Scaytcliff (Scaitcliffe) and Peneworth (Pennyworth) to Nicholas Rishton and to his Son Geoffrey.",
"Accrington covers two townships which were established in 1507 following disafforestation; those of Old Accrington and New Accrington; which were merged in 1878 with the incorporation of the borough council.",
"The William Yates map of The county Palatine of Lancaster printed in 1786 shows Old Accrington included the area of Oaklea and also the intersection of the Winburn River (now the River Hyndburn) and Warmden Brook.",
"New Accrington included the area of Green Haworth and Broadfield.",
"There have been settlements there since the medieval period, likely in the Grange Lane and Black Abbey area, and the King's Highway which passes above the town was at one time used by the kings and queens of England when they used the area for hunting when the Forest of Accrington was one of the four forests of the hundred of Blackburnshire.Robert de Lacy gave the manor of Accrington to the monks of Kirkstall in the 12th century.",
"The monks built a grange there; removing the inhabitants to make room for it.",
"The locals got their revenge by setting fire to the new building, destroying its contents and in the process killing the three lay brothers who occupied it.",
"An area of the town is named 'Black Abbey', a possible reference to the murders.",
"Regardless of whatever happened, Accrington did not remain under monastic control for long before reverting to the de Lacys.It is thought the monks of Kirkstall may have built a small chapel there during their tenure for the convenience of those in charge residing there and their tenants, but the records are uncertain.",
"What is known is that there was a chapel in Accrington prior to 1553 where the vicar of Whalley was responsible for the maintenance of divine worship.",
"However it did not have its own minister and it was served, when at all, by the curate of one of the adjacent chapels.",
"In 1717 Accrington was served by the curate of Church, who preached there only once a month.",
"St. James's Church was built in 1763, replacing the old chapel however it did not achieve parochial status until as late as 1870.===Industrial Revolution===Until around 1830, visitors considered Accrington to be just a \"considerable village\".",
"The Industrial Revolution, however, resulted in large changes and Accrington's location on the confluence of a number of streams made it attractive to industry and a number of mills were built in the town in the mid-18th century.",
"Further industrialisation then followed in the late-18th century and local landowners began building mansions in the area on the outskirts of the settlement where their mills were located while their employees lived in overcrowded unsanitary conditions in the centre.Industrialisation resulted in rapid population growth during the 19th century, as people moved from over North West England to Accrington, with the population increasing from 3,266 in 1811 to 10,376 in 1851 to 43,211 in 1901 to its peak in 1911 at 45,029.This fast population growth and slow response from the established church allowed non-conformism to flourish in the town.",
"By the mid-19th century, there were Wesleyan, Primitive Methodist, United Free Methodist, Congregationalist, Baptist, Swedenborgian, Unitarian, Roman Catholic and Catholic Apostolic churches in the town.",
"The Swedenborgian church was so grand that it was considered to be the ‘Cathedral' of that denomination.For many decades the textiles industry, the engineering industry and coal mining were the central activities of the town.",
"Cotton mills and dye works provided work for the inhabitants, but often in very difficult conditions.",
"There was a regular conflict with employers over wages and working conditions.",
"On 24 April 1826 over 1,000 men and women, many armed, gathered at Whinney Hill in Clayton-le-Moors to listen to a speaker from where they marched on Sykes's Mill at Higher Grange Lane, near the site of the modern police station and magistrates' courts, and smashed over 60 looms.",
"These riots spread from Accrington through Oswaldtwistle, Blackburn, Darwen, Rossendale, Bury and Chorley.",
"In the end, after three days of riots 1,139 looms were destroyed, 4 rioters and 2 bystanders shot dead by the authorities in Rossendale and 41 rioters sentenced to death (all of whose sentences were commuted).In 1842 'plug riots' a general strike spread from town to town due to conditions in the town.",
"In a population of 9,000 people as few as 100 were fully employed.",
"From 15 August 1842 the situation boiled over and bands of men entered the mills which were running and stopped the machinery by knocking out the boiler plugs.",
"This allowed the water and steam to escape shutting down the mill machinery.",
"Thousands of strikers walked over the hills from one town to another to persuade people to join the strike in civil disturbances that lasted about a week.",
"The strike was associated with the Chartist movement but eventually proved unsuccessful in its aims.In the early 1860s the Lancashire cotton famine badly affected Accrington, although less so than the wider area due to its more diverse economy, with as many as half of the town's mill employees out of work at one time.Conditions were such that a Local Board of Health was constituted in 1853 and the town itself incorporated in 1878 allowing the enforcement of local laws to improve the town.===Accrington Pals===One well-known association the town has is with the 'Accrington Pals', the nickname given to the smallest home town battalion of volunteers formed to fight in the First World War.",
"The Pals battalions were a peculiarity of the 1914-18 war: Lord Kitchener, the Secretary of State for War, believed that it would help recruitment if friends and work-mates from the same town were able to join up and fight together.",
"Strictly speaking, the 'Accrington Pals' battalion is properly known as the '11th East Lancashire Regiment': the nickname is a little misleading, since of the four 250-strong companies that made up the original battalion only one was composed of men from Accrington.",
"The rest volunteered from other east Lancashire towns such as Burnley, Blackburn and Chorley.The Pals' first day of action, 1 July 1916, took place in Serre, near Montauban in the north of France.",
"It was part of the 'Big Push' (later known as the Battle of the Somme) that was intended to force the German Army into a retreat from the Western Front, a line they had held since late 1914.The German defences in Serre were supposed to have been obliterated by sustained, heavy, British shelling during the preceding week; however, as the battalion advanced it met with fierce resistance.",
"235 men were killed and a further 350 wounded — more than half of the battalion — within half an hour.",
"Similarly, desperate losses were suffered elsewhere on the front, in a disastrous day for the British Army (approximately 19,000 British soldiers were killed in a single day).Later in the year, the East Lancashire Regiment was rebuilt with new volunteers — in all, 865 Accrington men were killed during World War I.",
"All of these names are recorded on a war memorial, an imposing white stone cenotaph, which stands in Oak Hill Park in the south of the town.",
"The cenotaph also lists the names of 173 local fatalities from World War II.",
"The trenches from which the Accrington Pals advanced on 1 July 1916 are still visible in John Copse west of the village of Serre, and there is a memorial there made of Accrington brick.After the war and until 1986, Accrington Corporation buses were painted in the regimental colours of red and blue with gold lining.",
"The mudguards were painted black as a sign of mourning."
],
[
"Demography",
"The 2001 census gave the population of Accrington town as 35,200.The figure for the urban area was 71,220, increased from 70,442 in 1991.This total includes Accrington, Church, Clayton-le-Moors, Great Harwood and Oswaldtwistle.The 2011 census gave a population of 35,456 for the Accrington built-up area subdivision (which includes Huncoat, Baxenden and Rising Bridge in Rossendale) and a population of 125,000 for the wider Accrington/Rossendale Built-up area.",
"The area in 2001 was listed as , whereas in 2011 it was .The borough of Hyndburn as a whole has a population of 80,734.This includes Accrington Urban Area and other outlying towns and villages such as; Altham, Rishton, part of Belthorn, and Knuzden and Whitebirk (considered suburbs of Blackburn)."
],
[
"Economy",
"Historically, cotton and textile machinery were important industries in Accrington, with many mills and factories operating in the town during the 19th and early 20th centuries.",
"The town was renowned for its production of cotton cloth, and several of its mills became famous for their high-quality fabrics, including the Victoria and Jubilee mills.",
"However, like many other towns in Lancashire, the decline of the cotton industry in the mid-20th century led to a significant reduction in manufacturing activity in Accrington.One notable industrial product associated with Accrington is NORI bricks, a type of iron-hard engineering brick that was produced in nearby Huncoat.",
"The NORI brickworks were established in the 1860s, and their products were widely used in the construction of mills, factories, and other industrial buildings throughout the north of England, as well as Blackpool Tower and the Empire State Building.",
"The brickworks closed in 2013 due to declining demand, but reopened in 2015 after being acquired by a local businessman.Today, the town's economy is more diverse, with a range of businesses and services operating in the area.",
"Many of the old mill and factory buildings have been repurposed as offices, workshops, and other facilities, providing space for a variety of enterprises.",
"The town also has a number of retail and commercial areas, including the Arndale Centre and the Peel Centre, which are home to a range of shops, restaurants, and other businesses.Accrington power station was a coal and refuse-fired electricity generating station that operated on Argyle Street adjacent to the gasworks between 1900 and 1958.The power station supplied electricity to Accrington, Haslingden, and the Altham and Clayton-le-Moors areas.",
"The site is now a residential area.Accrington remains a centre of business and industry in the region, with a rich history of manufacturing and innovation.",
"The area benefits from its location close to major transport links, including the M65 motorway and the East Lancashire railway line, which connect Accrington to other parts of the county and beyond.In recent years, the town has seen investment in new development projects, including the £60 million \"Civic Quarter\" regeneration scheme, which aims to revitalize the town center and create new jobs and opportunities for local people.",
"The project includes the construction of a new public square, a state-of-the-art leisure center, and new office and retail spaces, as well as the refurbishment of existing buildings.In addition to its commercial and industrial activities, Accrington is also home to a number of cultural and recreational amenities.",
"The town has a rich sporting heritage, with Accrington Stanley Football Club, founded in 1968, representing the town in the English Football League.",
"The town also has a strong tradition of brass band music, with several local bands competing at regional and national level.",
"Other cultural attractions in the town include the Haworth Art Gallery, which houses a collection of British art and decorative arts, and the Accrington Market Hall, which runs events and activities.===Poverty, regeneration and investment===Some areas of Accrington have high levels of poverty and deprivation.",
"In one area of the town in 2020, 77% of children were living in poverty.",
"Deprivation increased in Accrington from 2004 to 2010.The Accrington Town Centre Investment Plan 2022-2032 states \"Accrington has severe pockets of deprivation – particularly around employment, income and living environment - which has been getting worse during the last 20 years\".The council has a regeneration plan in place, which will, according to the council, boost the local economy.",
"The plan is to upgrade old shops and to build a bus station.",
"A memorial for the Accrington Pals may be built outside the town hall.The Hyndburn Borough Council plans to spend £10 million to refurbish the town centre, including:*Revitalising the town square to attract visitors.",
"*Building a new bus station.",
"Plans for the new bus station were put forward in January 2013 and approved in October 2014.The bus station was completed during and officially opened on 11 July 2016.The new station was criticised by traders as the old station was closer and easier to get to.Half of Blackburn Road is being refurbished and is now being made into a more attractive shopping street, upgrading shops, adding more trees, and repaving the pavements.As of 2014, two new phases were being built: the first one called the Acorn Park, where new houses were being built with balconies and greener spaces, and Project Phoenix, which will also include new housing."
],
[
"Geography",
"Accrington is a hill town located at between the Pennines and the West Pennine Moors, within a bowl and largely encircled by surrounding hills to rising to a height of in the case of Hameldon Hill to the east.",
"The River Hyndburn or Accrington Brook flows through the centre of the town.",
"Hill settlements origins were as the economic foci of the district engaging in the spinning and weaving of woollen cloth.",
"Wool, lead and coal were other local industries.Geographical coordinates: 53° 46' 0\" North, 2° 21' 0\" West.",
"Height above sea level: there is a spot height outside the Market Hall which is the benchmark on the side of the neighbouring Town Hall is .",
"The highest height in the town is which is in Baxenden and the lowest at the town hall which is at ."
],
[
"Transport",
"===Railway===Accrington railway station, located on the East Lancashire Line, provides strong local travel links.",
"The station runs trains locally and from Blackpool to York.",
"However, recent changes to the train timetables have increased the journey time to Preston by up to 1.5 hours, a vital link to London or Scotland.",
"In 2015, a train service to Manchester via the Todmorden Curve opened, providing a new rail link south to Manchester.===Roads===The town is served by junction seven of the M65 motorway and the A680 road, which runs from Rochdale to Whalley.",
"The town is also linked from the A56 dual carriageway which briefly merges with the A680, connecting to the M66 motorway heading towards Manchester.",
"The closest airports are Manchester Airport, Blackpool Airport, and Leeds Bradford Airport, all within 30 miles.===Bus===Several bus companies provide services in the town, including Pilkington Bus, Holmeswood Coaches, Rosso, and Transdev Blazefield subsidiaries Blackburn Bus Company and Burnley Bus Company.",
"Regular bus services connect Accrington to other towns in East Lancashire, including Blackburn, Oswaldtwistle, Rishton, Burnley, and Clitheroe.",
"M&M Coaches provided services in the area until the company ceased business suddenly on 21 September 2016.===Cycleways and Footpaths===The trackbed from Accrington to Baxenden, which was once a rail link south to Manchester, is now a linear treelined cycleway/footpath.",
"The cycleway/footpath is a popular route for cycling and walking, offering views"
],
[
"Public services",
"Entrance to Accrington LibraryAccrington Library, on St James Street was built in 1908 as a Carnegie library.",
"It has a stained glass window by Gustav Hiller and was a place of inspiration for the young Jeanette Winterson.Near the Tesco supermarket, there is Accrington Skate Park which is popular during the school holidays.",
"On Broadway, Accrington Police Station serves the Borough of Hyndburn.",
"In April 2003, Hyndburn Community Fire Station opened, also serving the Borough of Hyndburn."
],
[
"Police Services",
"The town is served by the Lancashire Constabulary Police station on Broadway after moving into town from its previous location on Manchester Road as an effort to save money due to rising expenses and decreasing funding by the government.",
"Crime is very low in Accrington compared to nearby towns.Policing of the Railway station and railway-owned properties are served by the British Transport Police, nearest post in Preston."
],
[
"Social",
"===Governance===Accrington is represented in parliament as a part of the constituency of Hyndburn.",
"The constituency boundaries do not align exactly with those of the district of the same name.Accrington was first represented nationally after the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885 after the 1885 general election by Accrington (UK Parliament constituency).",
"This seat was abolished in the 1983 general election and replaced with the present constituency of Hyndburn (UK Parliament constituency).Accrington became incorporated as a municipal borough in 1878.Under the Local Government Act 1972, since 1974, the town has formed part of the larger Borough of Hyndburn including the former Urban Districts of Oswaldtwistle, Church, Clayton-le-Moors, Great Harwood and Rishton.Hyndburn consists of 16 wards, electing a total of 35 councillors.",
"Due to its size Accrington is represented by a number of wards in the Borough of Hyndburn.",
"The town largely consists of the Milnshaw, Peel, Central, Barnfield and Spring Hill wards, although some parts of those wards are in other towns in the borough.===Health===Accrington Acorn PHCC under constructionThe local hospital is Accrington Victoria Hospital however, as it only deals with minor issues, Accident and Emergency is provided by the Royal Blackburn Hospital.",
"Other services are provided at the Accrington Pals Primary Health Care Centre and the Accrington Acorn Primary Health Care Centre."
],
[
"Accrington Dialect",
"The dialect spoken in Accrington is part of the broader Lancashire dialect, which belongs to the larger category of Northern English dialects.",
"This dialect has its roots in the Old English and Middle English languages, with influences from Old Norse due to the Viking invasions in the region.",
"Features of the Accrington dialect include pronunciations, vocabulary, and grammatical structures that distinguish it from other dialects in the Lancashire region.Vocabulary specific to the Accrington dialect may include words such as \"ginnel\" (a narrow passage between buildings) or \"snap\" (referring to a packed lunch or a meal taken to work).In terms of grammar, the Accrington dialect may exhibit features common to other Northern English dialects, such as the use of \"thee\" and \"thou\" for \"you\" and \"were\" instead of \"was\" in certain contexts.",
"Additionally, the Accrington dialect might display non-standard verb conjugations and a preference for certain sentence structures or word order.The Accrington dialect, like many local dialects, is subject to change and variation over time due to factors such as increased mobility, urbanization, and exposure to other dialects and languages.",
"This may lead to a gradual loss or modification of certain dialect features and an increased convergence with more standardised forms of English.===History of Accrington Dialect===The history of the Accrington dialect is intertwined with the broader history of the Lancashire dialect, as well as the linguistic influences that have shaped the region over time.",
"Although specific information about the Accrington dialect's history is limited, it is reasonable to assume that it has been impacted by similar historical events and linguistic developments as the wider Lancashire area.====Influence of Old English and Middle English====The Accrington dialect has its roots in the Old English and Middle English languages that were spoken in England during the early and late medieval periods, respectively.",
"These languages formed the basis for many dialects in the region, including those spoken in Accrington.",
"As the dialect evolved over time, it retained some elements of these early linguistic influences, which can be observed in the pronunciation, vocabulary, and grammar of the modern Accrington dialect.====Impact of Viking invasions and Old Norse====The Viking invasions during the late 8th to 11th centuries introduced the Old Norse language to the north of England, including the Lancashire region.",
"This contact between Old English and Old Norse speakers likely influenced the Accrington dialect and other Lancashire dialects, with some Old Norse words and grammatical features being incorporated into the local language.",
"As a result, the Accrington dialect shares some common linguistic traits with other Northern English dialects that have been similarly impacted by the Old Norse influence.====Development and changes over time====The Accrington dialect, like other regional dialects, has undergone various changes and developments throughout its history.",
"Factors contributing to these changes may include the expansion and decline of local industries, increased mobility and migration, and exposure to other dialects and languages.",
"Additionally, educational policies and the influence of mass media may have played a role in shaping the modern Accrington dialect, as people in the area increasingly adopt more standardized forms of English in formal settings.",
"Despite these changes, the Accrington dialect continues to exhibit unique features that distinguish it from other dialects in the Lancashire region and reflects the town's rich linguistic heritage.===Pronunciation and Phonetics===The pronunciation and phonetics of the Accrington dialect are characterized by a few distinctive features that set it apart from other dialects in the Lancashire region.",
"However, specific studies and resources focusing solely on the phonetics and pronunciation of the Accrington dialect are currently unavailable.",
"The limited information available is largely based on the broader Lancashire dialect, which may encompass some of the features present in the Accrington dialect.",
"The lack of specific studies or resources highlights a need for more research and documentation on the Accrington dialect to better understand its unique phonetic and pronunciation features.====Vowel shifts and variations====One example of a vowel shift in the Accrington dialect is the pronunciation of the word \"acorn\" as \"akran\".",
"This variation demonstrates a tendency in the Accrington dialect to alter vowel sounds compared to Standard English.",
"Other examples of vowel shifts specific to Accrington are not well-documented, but the \"akran\" example suggests that similar variations may exist in other words and phrases.====Consonant changes====Information on consonant changes specific to the Accrington dialect is scarce.",
"However, based on the broader tendencies of Lancashire dialects and the limited available evidence, it is possible that the Accrington dialect exhibits consonant changes such as the pronunciation of \"th\" as \"d\" or \"t\" (e.g., \"them\" pronounced as \"dem\" or \"tem\") or the elision of certain consonants in some words.",
"Further research is needed to identify and document specific consonant changes unique to the Accrington dialect.====Accent and stress patterns====The accent and stress patterns of the Accrington dialect have not been thoroughly documented in linguistic research.",
"It is difficult to provide specific examples or details about the stress patterns in the Accrington dialect without more comprehensive data.",
"Further study of the Accrington dialect's pronunciation and phonetics is necessary to fully understand its unique accent and stress patterns.In conclusion, while the Accrington dialect exhibits some unique features, such as the pronunciation of \"acorn\" as \"akran\", more research and documentation are needed to provide a comprehensive understanding of the dialect's specific vowel shifts, consonant changes, and accent and stress patterns.",
"The lack of specific studies on the Accrington dialect highlights an opportunity for linguists and researchers to further explore this unique dialect and its pronunciation and phonetics.=== Local and Regional Words === ''Ginnel'' - A local term for a narrow passage or alleyway between buildings, commonly found in Accrington and other Lancashire towns.",
"''Mither'' - A verb meaning to bother or annoy someone, or to be fussy or worried about something.=== Industry and Occupation-Related Terminology === ''Tackler'' - A term referring to a skilled worker responsible for setting up and maintaining looms in the textile industry, which was used in Accrington during the 19th and early 20th centuries.=== Landscape and Geography-Related Vocabulary === ''Clough'' - A term used in Accrington and other parts of Lancashire to describe a steep-sided, wooded valley or ravine, as in the case of Woodnook Clough.",
"''Brook'' - A small stream or watercourse, such as the Hyndburn Brook, which runs through Accrington."
],
[
"Ancient Customs and Traditions of Accrington",
"Accrington, as a historic town, has been home to several ancient customs and traditions that have shaped its local culture and identity.",
"While some of these customs may no longer be practiced, they offer valuable insights into the town's past.=== Rush-Bearing Festival ===One of the most notable ancient customs in Accrington was the '''rush-bearing festival'''.",
"This annual event involved the gathering of rushes from nearby marshlands and meadows to be used as fresh flooring material in local churches.",
"The rushes were then transported to the churches in decorative carts or wagons, accompanied by a festive procession, music, and dancing.",
"This event was once widespread across Lancashire and the North of England, but its prevalence in Accrington is particularly noteworthy.=== Wakes Week ===Another significant custom in Accrington was '''Wakes Week''', a holiday period that took place in the town and surrounding areas.",
"Typically, it occurred during the summer months and lasted for one week.",
"During this time, local mills and factories closed, allowing workers to enjoy a much-needed break from their labor-intensive occupations.",
"Wakes Week often featured various festivities, such as fairs, carnivals, and other communal events, which brought the community together in celebration.=== Local Sports and Games ===In the past, Accrington was known for hosting traditional sports and games, which were enjoyed by the local community.",
"Some of these sports included '''football''', '''cricket''', and '''quoits'''.",
"These games not only provided entertainment but also fostered a sense of community spirit and camaraderie."
],
[
"Sport",
"===Football team===Accrington Stanley F.C., entered the Football League in 1921 with the formation of the old Third Division (North); after haunting the lower reaches of English football for forty years, they eventually resigned from the League in 1962, due to financial problems, and folded in 1965.The club was reformed three years later and then worked its way through the non-league divisions to reach the Nationwide Conference in 2003.In the 2005–06 season, Stanley, after winning against Woking with three matches to spare, secured a place back in the Football League and the town celebrated with a small parade and honours placed on senior executives of the team.",
"One of the teams relegated— and thus being replaced by Stanley—were Oxford United, who was voted into the Football League to replace the previous Accrington Stanley.",
"The football stadium is called the Crown Ground.",
"Until the 2012–13 season, when Fleetwood Town entered the league, Accrington was the smallest town in England and Wales with a Football League club.Accrington Stanley Football Club has had its own pub in the town, the Crown, since July 2007.====Team history====An earlier club, Accrington F.C., was one of the twelve founder members of the Football League in 1888.However, their time in league football was even less successful and considerably briefer than that of Accrington Stanley: they dropped out of the league in 1893 and folded shortly afterwards due to financial problems.",
"The town of Accrington thus has the unique \"distinction\" of having lost two separate clubs from league football.",
"Accrington Stanley F.C.",
"are currently placed in EFL League Two after being relegated from EFL League One in the 2022/23 season, having finished 23rd.===Cricket===Accrington Cricket Club plays at Thorneyholme Road in the Lancashire League.",
"Cricket is also played in parks.",
"Schools nearby have shown major interest in cricket and have held cricket training and tournaments.===Other sports===There are two sports centres, the main one being the Hyndburn Sports Centre, which recently renovated its swimming pool area and is situated near Lidl."
],
[
"Media",
"Local news and television programmes are provided by BBC North West and ITV Granada.",
"Television signals are received from the Winter Hill TV transmitter and one of the three local relay transmitters (Woodnook, Pendle Forest and Haslingden ).",
"Local radio stations are BBC Radio Lancashire on 95.5 FM, Heart North West on 96.9 FM, Smooth North West on 100.4 FM, Greatest Hits Radio Lancashire on 96.5 FM, and Capital Manchester and Lancashire (formerly 2BR) on 99.8 FM.",
"The town is served by the local newspaper, ''Accrington Observer'' which publishes on Fridays."
],
[
"Education",
"Accrington has the following primary schools:* St Mary's RC Primary School, Clayton le Moors* Hyndburn Park Primary School,* Peel Park Primary School,* Sacred Heart Primary School,* Benjamin Hargreaves CE Primary School,* Springhill County Primary School,* Accrington Huncoat Primary School,* St Johns and St Augustines CE Primary School,* St Mary Magdalen's CE Primary School,* St Nicholas' CE Primary School,* Woodnook Primary School,* St James CE Primary School, Altham,* St Johns CE Primary School, Baxenden,* All Saints CE Primary School,* Mount Pleasant Primary School,* Green Haworth CE Primary School,* Stonefold CE Primary School,* St Peters CE Primary School.",
"* St Mary's RC Primary School, Oswaldtwistle.",
"* St Anne's and St Joseph's RC Primary School* St Oswald's RC Primary School * Hippings Methodist Primary School Oswaldtwistle * St Andrews CoE Primary School Oswaldtwistle * St Oswalds CoE Primary School Knuzden* West End Primary School Oswaldtwistle * Moor End Community Primary School Oswaldtwistle * St Paul's CoE Primary School Oswaldtwistle The secondary schools serving Accrington are:* Accrington Academy* Heathland School* The Hollins* The Hyndburn Academy* Mount Carmel Roman Catholic High School* Rhyddings* St Christopher's Church of England High SchoolThe college in the town centre is Accrington and Rossendale College; nearby universities include University Centre at Blackburn College, and the University of Central Lancashire in Preston."
],
[
"Landmarks",
"===Haworth Art Gallery===The '''Haworth Art Gallery''' is an art museum located in Accrington, Lancashire, England.",
"The gallery is housed in a Tudor-style mansion, originally known as Hollins Hill, which was built in 1909 by William Haworth, a local cotton manufacturer.",
"Upon his death in 1913, William Haworth bequeathed the mansion and its surrounding parkland to the people of Accrington.",
"The gallery opened in 1921.The Haworth Art Gallery holds the largest public collection of Tiffany glass in Europe, known as the Tiffany Glass Collection.",
"The collection was donated by Joseph Briggs, an Accrington native who worked for the famous American artist and designer Louis Comfort Tiffany.",
"In addition to the Tiffany Glass Collection, the gallery holds a range of artwork, including 19th and 20th-century oil paintings, watercolours, prints, and sculptures.The Haworth Art Gallery also holds temporary exhibitions showing contemporary art by local and national artists.===The Viaduct===The Viaduct is a bridge which has a railway line on it, it goes through the town and has many storage units and shop on sale by National Rail.",
"The Viaduct ends at the Accrington Eco Station.===Town Hall===Accrington Town Hall was built in memory of Sir Robert Peel and opened as the Peel Institute in 1858; it is also listed.===The Arcade===The Arcade is a Victorian shopping centre with about 10-15 shops and restaurants.===Oakhill Park===Oakhill Park is a large and old park with a view of Accrington.",
"It has won awards such as the best park in Lancashire.",
"It has also been awarded an Eco Award.",
"It is on Manchester Road.===Haworth Park===Haworth Park can be accessed from Manchester Road and is off Hollins Lane at the top of Harcourt Road.",
"The Park was originally William Haworth's private residence.",
"The Haworth Art Gallery holds the Tiffany Glass collection."
],
[
"The Coppice and Peel Park",
"Peel Park is a green space in the centre of Accrington.",
"The park was opened by William Peel on 29 September 1909 and was originally called the Corporation Park.",
"The park was renamed in honour of William Peel, the grandson of Sir Robert Peel, in recognition of his service as a Liberal MP for the town.",
"The park covers an area of approximately 18 acres and includes a wide range of features, including a lake, flower gardens, a bandstand, and a bowling green.The Coppice is a hill in the park, and provides a 2.2-mile scenic walk around the park, offering visitors views of the surrounding area.",
"The Coppice has been part of the park since it was first opened, and there have been refurbishments to the paths and monuments at the top of the hill over the years.In 2009, the people of Accrington celebrated the centenary of the Coppice being handed over to the town.",
"The occasion was marked with a series of events and activities, including a refurbishment of the paths and monument at the top of the hill.",
"Since then, there have been several revamps to the playground area of the park.Events and festivals are held in the park throughout the year, including the annual Accrington Food and Drink Festival, which takes place in the summer."
],
[
"Early landowners",
"This section outlines the contributions of landowning families, including the de Lacy, Walmsley, Peel, Hargreaves and Haworth families, to the development of Accrington.=== De Lacy family ===The '''de Lacy family''' were the first recorded landowners in Accrington, instrumental in the town's establishment as a regional center for agriculture and trade.=== Walmsley family ===The '''Walmsley family''' acquired the manor of Accrington in the 16th century and owned several mills, contributing to the expansion of Accrington's textile industry.=== Peel family ===The '''Peel family''' were key figures in the 18th and 19th centuries, with Sir Robert Peel, 1st Baronet, establishing textile mills in the area, significantly boosting Accrington's economy.=== Hargreaves family ===The '''Hargreaves family''' built the Broad Oak Print Works in 1778, which became one of the largest textile printing establishments in the region.=== Haworth family ===The '''Haworth family''' were prominent landowners in Accrington, with James Haworth establishing Haworth Mill in the early 1800s.",
"The family's investments in local industry contributed to the town's economic development.=== Peel, Yates and Co. ==='''Peel, Yates and Co.''' was a partnership between the Peel family and the '''Yates family'''.",
"The Peel family, led by Robert Peel (1750-1830), and the Yates family, led by William Yates (1769-1849), established Peel, Yates and Co. in 1795.The company owned and operated several cotton mills in Accrington, including the Woodnook Mill, which employed around 800 people during its peak operation.=== Duckworth Family ===The '''Duckworth family''' were landowners and industrialists in Accrington during the 19th century.",
"They invested in the local textile industry, owning several mills, such as the Broad Oak Mill and the Spring Hill Mill.",
"The Duckworth family's mills employed hundreds of workers.=== Birtwistle family ===The '''Birtwistle family''' were involved in the cotton industry in Accrington, owning and operating cotton mills during the 19th century.",
"Members of the family, including John Birtwistle (1807-1884), owned mills like the Church Bank Mill and the Wellington Mill, employing over 1,000 workers between the two establishments.=== Holden family ===The '''Holden family''' contributed to Accrington's development through their involvement in various industries, such as coal mining and brick manufacturing.",
"The family-owned Accrington Brick and Tile Company, established by Joseph Holden"
],
[
"Notable residents",
"*Alan Ramsbottom, professional cyclist*Andy Hargreaves, academic*Andy Kanavan, rock drummer with Dire Straits and Level 9 was born in the town*Jenny (Jane) Kenney, sister of suffragette Annie Kenney who taught at Montessori school in the 1900s*Anthony Rushton, tech entrepreneur*Barry Stanton (actor), actor for RSC and films such as The Madness of King George*David Lloyd, cricketer, now a pundit for Sky Sports*Diana Vickers, singer-songwriter, stage actress and fashion designer*Edward Ormerod, mining engineer and inventor of the Ormerod safety link for use in coal mines*Frederick Higginbottom, journalist and newspaper editor*Graeme Fowler, cricketer, former England batsman, cricket coach and occasional pundit on BBC Radio's Test Match Special*Harrison Birtwistle, composer*Hollie Steel, ''Britain's Got Talent'' finalist of 2009*Jeanette Winterson, author; ''Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit'' is an account of her childhood in the town*John Rex Whinfield, chemist, inventor of Terylene (polyester), the first completely synthetic fibre invented in UK*John Virtue, artist*Jon Anderson, singer with rock band Yes, was born in the town*Jonathan Slinger, RADA trained actor*Julie Hesmondhalgh, actor, Hayley Cropper in the TV Soap ''Coronation Street''*Mick O'Shea, author and scriptwriter*Mike Duxbury, footballer, was born in the town*Mystic Meg, astrologer, was born in the town as Margaret Anne Lake in 1942*Netherwood Hughes, World War I veteran, died in 2009, aged 108*Nicholas Freeston (1907-1978), Award-winning Lancashire poet*Pauline Aitken, artist*Paul Manning, undercover police officer and whistleblower*Reece Bibby, member of Stereo Kicks and 2014 finalist of ''The X Factor''.",
"Now a member of the band New Hope Club*Ron Hill, long-distance and marathon runner*Thomas Birtwistle, trade unionist*Vicky Entwistle, actor, Janice Battersby in the TV Soap ''Coronation Street''*William Macrorie bishop of Maritzburg*Stephen Heys, footballer*Val Robinson, footballer and field hockey player"
],
[
"See also",
"* Listed buildings in Accrington* Howard & Bullough"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"*William Turner.",
"''Pals: the 11th (Service) Battalion (Accrington), East Lancashire Regiment''.",
"Barnsley, South Yorkshire: Pen & Sword, 1998."
],
[
"External links",
"* Hyndburn Borough Council"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Armageddon"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Tel Megiddo with archaeological remains from the Bronze and Iron AgesRuins atop Tel MegiddoAccording to the Book of Revelation in the New Testament of the Christian Bible, '''Armageddon''' (; ; Late Latin: ; from Hebrew: ''Har Məgīddō'') is the prophesied location of a gathering of armies for a battle during the end times, which is variously interpreted as either a literal or a symbolic location.",
"The term is also used in a generic sense to refer to any end-of-the-world scenario.",
"In Islamic theology, Armageddon is also mentioned in Hadith as the Greatest Armageddon or Al-Malhama Al-Kubra (the great battle).The \"mount\" of Megiddo in northern Israel is not actually a mountain, but a tell (a mound or hill created by many generations of people living and rebuilding at the same spot) on which ancient forts were built to guard the Via Maris, an ancient trade route linking Egypt with the northern empires of Syria, Anatolia and Mesopotamia.",
"Megiddo was the location of various ancient battles, including one in the 15th century BC and one in 609 BC.",
"The nearby modern Megiddo is a kibbutz in the Kishon River area."
],
[
"Etymology",
"The word ''Armageddon'' appears only once in the Greek New Testament, in Revelation 16:16.The word is a Greek transliteration of the Hebrew ''har məgiddô'' ().",
"''Har'' means \"a mountain or range of hills\".",
"This is a shortened form of ''harar'' meaning \"to loom up; a mountain\".",
"''Megiddo'' refers to a fortification made by King Ahab that dominated the Plain of Jezreel.",
"Its name means \"place of crowds\".Adam Clarke wrote in his Bible commentary (1817) on Revelation 16:16:Armageddon - The original of this word has been variously formed, and variously translated.",
"It is הר־מגדון har-megiddon, \"the mount of the assembly;\" or חרמה גדהון chormah gedehon, \"the destruction of their army;\" or it is הר־מגדו har-megiddo, \"Mount Megiddo,\""
],
[
"Christianity",
"''Saint John the Evangelist on Patmos''.",
"Painting by Hieronymus Bosch (1505).Megiddo is mentioned twelve times in the Old Testament, ten times in reference to the ancient city of Megiddo, and twice with reference to \"the plain of Megiddo\", most probably simply meaning \"the plain next to the city\".",
"None of these Old Testament passages describes the city of Megiddo as being associated with any particular prophetic beliefs.",
"The one New Testament reference to the city of Armageddon found in makes no specific mention of any armies being predicted to one day gather in this city, either, but instead seems to predict only that \"they (will gather) the kings together to ... Armageddon\".",
"The text does however seem to imply, based on the text from the earlier passage of Revelation 16:14, that the purpose of this gathering of kings in the \"place called Armageddon\" is \"for the war of the great day of God, the Almighty\".",
"Because of the seemingly highly symbolic and even cryptic language of this one New Testament passage, some Christian scholars conclude that Mount Armageddon must be an idealized location.",
"R. J. Rushdoony says, \"There are no mountains of Megiddo, only the Plains of Megiddo.",
"This is a deliberate destruction of the vision of any literal reference to the place.\"",
"Other scholars, including C. C. Torrey, Kline and Jordan, argue that the word is derived from the Hebrew ''moed'' (), meaning \"assembly\".",
"Thus, \"Armageddon\" would mean \"Mountain of Assembly\", which Jordan says is \"a reference to the assembly at Mount Sinai, and to its replacement, Mount Zion\".Most traditions interpret this Bible prophecy to be symbolic of the progression of the world toward the \"great day of God, the Almighty\" in which God pours out his just and holy wrath against unrepentant sinners led by Satan, in a literal end-of-the-world final confrontation.",
"'Armageddon' is the symbolic name given to this event based on scripture references regarding divine obliteration of God's enemies.",
"The hermeneutical method supports this position by referencing Judges 4 and 5 where God miraculously destroys the enemy of their elect, Israel, at Megiddo.Christian scholar William Hendriksen writes:===Dispensationalism===In his discussion of Armageddon, J. Dwight Pentecost has devoted a chapter to the subject, \"The Campaign of Armageddon\", in which he discusses it as a campaign and not a specific battle, which will be fought in the Middle East.",
"Pentecost writes:Pentecost then discusses the location of this campaign, and mentions the \"hill of Megiddo\" and other geographic locations such as \"the valley of Jehoshaphat\" and \"the valley of the passengers\", \"Lord coming from Edom or Idumea, south of Jerusalem, when he returns from the judgment\"; and Jerusalem itself.Pentecost further describes the area involved:Pentecost then outlines the biblical time period for this campaign to occur and with further arguments concludes that it must take place with the 70th week of Daniel.",
"The invasion of Israel by the Northern Confederacy \"will bring the Beast and his armies to the defense of Israel as her protector\".",
"He then uses Daniel to further clarify his thinking.Again, events are listed by Pentecost in his book:# \"The movement of the campaign begins when the King of the South moves against the Beast–False Prophet coalition, which takes place 'at the time of the end'.",
"\"# The King of the South gets in battle with the North King and the Northern Confederacy.",
"Jerusalem is destroyed as a result of this attack, and, in turn, the armies of the Northern Confederacy are destroyed.# \"The full armies of the Beast move into Israel and shall conquer all that territory.",
"Edom, Moab, and Ammon alone escape.",
"\"# \"... a report that causes alarm is brought to the Beast\"# \"The Beast moves his headquarters into the land of Israel and assembles his armies there.",
"\"# \"It is there that his destruction will come.",
"\"After the destruction of the Beast at the Second Coming of Jesus, the promised Kingdom is set up, in which Jesus and the saints will rule for a thousand years.",
"Satan is then loosed \"for a season\" and goes out to deceive the nations, specifically Gog and Magog.",
"The army mentioned attacks the saints in the New Jerusalem, they are defeated by a judgment of fire coming down from heaven, and then comes the Great White Throne judgment, which includes all of those through the ages and these are cast into the Lake of Fire, which event is also known as the \"second death\" and Gehenna, not to be confused with Hell, which is Satan's domain.",
"Pentecost describes this as follows:===Jehovah's Witnesses===Jehovah's Witnesses believe that Armageddon is the means by which God will fulfill his purpose for the Earth to be populated with happy healthy humans who will be free from sin and death.",
"They teach that the armies of heaven will eradicate all who oppose the Kingdom of God, wiping out all wicked humans on Earth, only leaving righteous mankind.They believe that the gathering of all of the nations of the earth refers to the uniting of the world's political powers, as a gradual process which began in 1914 and was later seen in manifestations such as the League of Nations and the United Nations following the First and Second World Wars.",
"These political powers are said to be influenced by Satan and his demons in opposition to God's kingdom.",
"Babylon the Great is interpreted as being the world empire of false religions, and it will be destroyed by the beast just prior to Armageddon.",
"Witnesses believe that after all other religions have been destroyed, the governments of the world will begin persecuting Witnesses, and God will then intervene, precipitating Armageddon.Jehovah's Witnesses teach that the armies of heaven, led by Jesus, will then destroy all forms of human government and then Jesus, along with a selected 144,000 humans, will rule Earth for 1,000 years.",
"They believe that Satan and his demons will be bound for that period, unable to influence mankind.",
"After the 1,000 years are ended, and the second resurrection has taken place, Satan is released and allowed to tempt the perfect human race one last time.",
"Those who follow Satan will be destroyed, along with him, leaving the earth, and humankind at peace with God forever, free from sin and death.The religion's current teaching on Armageddon originated in 1925 with former Watch Tower Society president J. F. Rutherford, who based his interpretations on passages that are found in the books of Exodus, Jeremiah, Ezekiel and Psalms as well as additional passages that are found in the books of Samuel, Kings and Chronicles.",
"The doctrine marked a further break from the teachings of the Watch Tower Society's founder Charles Taze Russell, who for decades had taught that the final war would be an anarchistic struggle for domination on earth.",
"Tony Wills, the author of a historical study of Jehovah's Witnesses, wrote that Rutherford seemed to relish his descriptions of how completely the wicked would be destroyed at Armageddon, dwelling at great length on prophecies of destruction.",
"He stated that towards the close of his ministry, Rutherford allocated about half the space that was available in ''The Watchtower'' magazines to discussions about Armageddon.===Seventh-day Adventist===Seventh-day Adventist understanding of Revelation 13–22The teachings of the Seventh-day Adventist Church state that the terms \"Armageddon\", \"Day of the Lord\" and \"The Second Coming of Christ\" all describe the same event.",
"Seventh-day Adventists further teach that the current religious movements taking place in the world are setting the stage for Armageddon, and they are concerned by an anticipated unity between spiritualism, American Protestantism and Roman Catholicism.",
"A further teaching in Seventh-day Adventist theology is that the events of Armageddon will leave the earth desolate for the duration of the millennium.",
"They teach that the righteous will be taken to heaven while the rest of humanity will be destroyed, leaving Satan with no one to tempt and effectively \"bound\".",
"The final re-creation of a \"new heaven and a new earth\"; then follows the millennium.===Christadelphians===For Christadelphians, Armageddon marks the \"great climax of history when the nations would be gathered together 'into a place called in the Hebrew tongue Armageddon', and the judgment on them would herald the setting up of the Kingdom of God.\""
],
[
"Baháʼí Faith",
"From Baháʼí literature, a number of interpretations of the expectations surrounding the Battle of Armageddon may be inferred, three of them being associated with events surrounding the World Wars.The first interpretation deals with a series of tablets written by Bahá'u'lláh, founder of the Baháʼí Faith, to be sent to various kings and rulers.",
"The second, and best-known one, relates to events near the end of World War I involving General Allenby and the Battle of Megiddo (1918) wherein World Powers are said to have drawn soldiers from many parts of the world to engage in battle at Megiddo.",
"In winning this battle Allenby also prevented the Ottomans from killing 'Abdu'l-Baha, then head of the Baháʼí Faith, whom they had intended to crucify.",
"A third interpretation reviews the overall progress of the World Wars, and the situation in the world before and after."
],
[
"See also",
"* 1 Maccabees* ''Al-Malhama Al-Kubra''* Amik Valley* Antiochus Epiphanes* Apocalyptic literature* ''Armageddon'' (novel)* Futurist view of the Book of Revelation* Historicist interpretations of the Book of Revelation* List of dates predicted for apocalyptic events* ''Megiddo: The Omega Code 2''* Millenarianism* Millennialism* Preterist interpretation of the Book of Revelation* Ragnarök* Siege of Jerusalem (70)* ''Waiting for Armageddon''* World War III* Dagor Dagorath"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* * * * Armageddon, in James Crossley and Alastair Lockhart (eds.)",
"''Critical Dictionary of Apocalyptic and Millenarian Movements''.",
"2021"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Athlon"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Original Athlon logo used in 1999Logo used since 2018 for Zen-based Athlon processors'''Athlon''' is the brand name applied to a series of x86-compatible microprocessors designed and manufactured by AMD.",
"The original Athlon (now called Athlon Classic) was the first seventh-generation x86 processor and the first desktop processor to reach speeds of one gigahertz (GHz).",
"It made its debut as AMD's high-end processor brand on June 23, 1999.Over the years AMD has used the Athlon name with the 64-bit Athlon 64 architecture, the Athlon II, and Accelerated Processing Unit (APU) chips targeting the Socket AM1 desktop SoC architecture, and Socket AM4 Zen microarchitecture.",
"The modern Zen-based Athlon with a Radeon Graphics processor was introduced in 2019 as AMD's highest-performance entry-level processor.Athlon comes from the Ancient Greek (''athlon''), meaning \"(sport) contest\", or \"prize of a contest\", or \"place of a contest; arena\".",
"With the Athlon name originally used for AMD's high-end processors, AMD currently uses Athlon for budget APUs with integrated graphics.",
"AMD positions the Athlon against its rival, the Intel Pentium."
],
[
"Brand history",
"=== K7 design and development===The first Athlon processor was a result of AMD's development of K7 processors in the 1990s.",
"AMD founder and then-CEO Jerry Sanders aggressively pursued strategic partnerships and engineering talent in the late 1990s, working to build on earlier successes in the PC market with the AMD K6 processor line.",
"One major partnership announced in 1998 paired AMD with semiconductor giant Motorola to co-develop copper-based semiconductor technology, resulting in the K7 project being the first commercial processor to utilize copper fabrication technology.",
"In the announcement, Sanders referred to the partnership as creating a \"virtual gorilla\" that would enable AMD to compete with Intel on fabrication capacity while limiting AMD's financial outlay for new facilities.",
"The K7 design team was led by Dirk Meyer, who had previously worked as a lead engineer at DEC on multiple Alpha microprocessors.",
"When DEC was sold to Compaq in 1998 and discontinued Alpha processor development, Sanders brought most of the Alpha design team to the K7 project.",
"This added to the previously acquired NexGen K6 team, which already included engineers such as Vinod Dham.=== Original release===The AMD Athlon processor launched on June 23, 1999, with general availability by August 1999.Subsequently, from August 1999 until January 2002, this initial K7 processor was the fastest x86 chip in the world.",
"Wrote the ''Los Angeles Times'' on October 5, 1999: \"AMD has historically trailed Intel’s fastest processors, but has overtaken the industry leader with the new Athlon.",
"Analysts say the Athlon, which will be used by Compaq, IBM and other manufacturers in their most powerful PCs, is significantly faster than Intel’s flagship Pentium III, which runs at a top speed of 600MHz.\"",
"A number of features helped the chips compete with Intel.",
"By working with Motorola, AMD had been able to refine copper interconnect manufacturing about one year before Intel, with the revised process permitting 180-nanometer processor production.",
"The accompanying die-shrink resulted in lower power consumption, permitting AMD to increase Athlon clock speeds to the 1 GHz range.",
"The Athlon architecture also used the EV6 bus licensed from DEC as its main system bus, allowing AMD to develop its own products without needing to license Intel's GTL+ bus.",
"By the summer of 2000, AMD was shipping Athlons at high volume, and the chips were being used in systems by Gateway, Hewlett-Packard, and Fujitsu Siemens Computers among others.===Later Athlon iterations===The second-generation Athlon, the Thunderbird, debuted in 2000.AMD released the Athlon XP the following year, and the Athlon XP's immediate successor, the Athlon 64, was an AMD64-architecture microprocessor released in 2003.After the 2007 launch of the Phenom processors, the Athlon name was also used for mid-range processors, positioned above brands such as Sempron.",
"The Athlon 64 X2 was released in 2005 as the first native dual-core desktop CPU designed by AMD, and the Athlon X2 was a subsequent family based on the Athlon 64 X2.Introduced in 2009, Athlon II was a dual-core family of Athlon chips.A USD$55 low-power Athlon 200GE with a Radeon graphics processor was introduced in September 2018, sitting under the Ryzen 3 2200G.",
"This iteration of Athlon used AMD's Zen-based ''Raven Ridge'' core, which in turn had debuted in Ryzen with Radeon graphics processors.",
"With the release, AMD began using the Athlon brand name to refer to \"low-cost, high-volume products\", in a situation similar to both Intel's Celeron and Pentium Gold.",
"The modern Athlon 3000G was introduced in 2019 and was positioned as AMD's highest-performance entry-level processor.",
"AMD positions the Athlon against its rival, the Intel Pentium.",
"While CPU processing performance is in the same ballpark, the Athlon 3000G uses Radeon Vega graphics, which are rated as more powerful than the Pentium's Intel UHD Graphics."
],
[
"Generations",
"===Athlon Classic (1999)===The AMD Athlon processor launched on June 23, 1999, with general availability by August 1999.Subsequently, from August 1999 until January 2002, this initial K7 processor was the fastest x86 chip in the world.",
"At launch it was, on average, 10% faster than the Pentium III at the same clock for business applications and 20% faster for gaming workloads.",
"In commercial terms, the Athlon \"Classic\" was an enormous success.",
";FeaturesLogo on Slot A Athlon cartridgeThe Athlon Classic is a cartridge-based processor, named Slot A and similar to Intel's cartridge Slot 1 used for Pentium II and Pentium III.",
"It used the same, commonly available, physical 242-pin connector used by Intel Slot 1 processors but rotated by 180 degrees to connect the processor to the motherboard.",
"The cartridge assembly allowed the use of higher-speed cache memory modules than could be put on (or reasonably bundled with) motherboards at the time.",
"Similar to the Pentium II and the Katmai-based Pentium III, the Athlon Classic contained 512 KB of L2 cache.",
"This high-speed SRAM cache was run at a divisor of the processor clock and was accessed via its own 64-bit back-side bus, allowing the processor to service both front-side bus requests and cache accesses simultaneously, as compared to pushing everything through the front-side bus.The Argon-based Athlon contained 22 million transistors and measured 184 mm2.It was fabricated by AMD in a version of their CS44E process, a 250 nm complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) process with six levels of aluminium interconnect.",
"\"Pluto\" and \"Orion\" Athlons were fabricated in a 180 nm process.Athlon architectureAn open Slot A cartridge.",
"MPU die is in the center.Athlon Slot A cartridge.",
"Note heat sink and cooling fan assembly on rear side.The Athlon's CPU cache consisted of the typical two levels.",
"Athlon was the first x86 processor with a 128 KB split level-1 cache; a 2-way associative cache separated into 2×64 KB for data and instructions (a concept from Harvard architecture).",
"SRAM cache designs at the time were incapable of keeping up with the Athlon's clock scalability, resulting in compromised CPU performance in some computers.",
"With later Athlon models, AMD would integrate the L2 cache onto the processor itself, removing dependence on external cache chips.",
"The Slot-A Athlons were the first multiplier-locked CPUs from AMD, preventing users from setting their own desired clock speed.",
"This was done by AMD in part to hinder CPU remarking and overclocking by resellers, which could result in inconsistent performance.",
"Eventually a product called the \"Goldfingers device\" was created that could unlock the CPU.AMD designed the CPU with more robust x86 instruction decoding capabilities than that of K6, to enhance its ability to keep more data in-flight at once.",
"The critical branch-predictor unit was enhanced compared to the K6.Deeper pipelining with more stages allowed higher clock speeds to be attained.",
"Like the AMD K5 and K6, the Athlon dynamically buffered internal micro-instructions at runtime resulting from parallel x86 instruction decoding.",
"The CPU is an out-of-order design, again like previous post-5x86 AMD CPUs.",
"The Athlon utilizes the Alpha 21264's EV6 bus architecture with double data rate (DDR) technology.AMD ended its long-time handicap with floating point x87 performance by designing a super-pipelined, out-of-order, triple-issue floating-point unit (FPU).",
"Each of its three units could independently calculate an optimal type of instructions with some redundancy, making it possible to operate on more than one floating-point instruction at once.",
"This FPU was a huge step forward for AMD, helping compete with Intel's P6 FPU.",
"The 3DNow!",
"floating-point SIMD technology, again present, received some revisions and was renamed \"Enhanced 3DNow!\"",
"Additions included DSP instructions and the extended MMX subset of Intel SSE.",
";Specifications* L1-cache: 64 + 64 KB (data + instructions)* L2-cache: 512 KB, external chips on CPU module with 50%, 40% or 33% of CPU speed* MMX, 3DNow!",
"* Slot A (EV6)* Front-side bus: 200 MT/s (100 MHz double-pumped)* Vcore: 1.6 V (K7), 1.6–1.8 V (K75)* First release: June 23, 1999 (K7), November 29, 1999 (K75)* Clock-rate: 500–700 MHz (K7), 550–1000 MHz (K75)===Athlon Thunderbird (2000–2001)===Athlon \"Thunderbird\"The second-generation Athlon, the '''Thunderbird''' or '''T-Bird''', debuted on June 4, 2000.This version of the Athlon was available in a traditional pin-grid array (PGA) format that plugged into a socket (\"Socket A\") on the motherboard, or packaged as a Slot A cartridge.",
"The major difference between it and the Athlon Classic was cache design, with AMD adding in 256 KB of on-chip, full-speed exclusive cache.",
"In moving to an exclusive cache design, the L1 cache's contents were not duplicated in the L2, increasing total cache size and functionally creating a large L1 cache with a slower region (the L2) and a fast region (the L1), making the L2 cache into basically a victim cache.",
"With the new cache design, need for high L2 performance and size was lessened, and the simpler L2 cache was less likely to cause clock scaling and yield issues.",
"Thunderbird also moved to a 16-way associative layout.The Thunderbird was \"cherished by many for its overclockability\" and proved commercially successful, as AMD's most successful product since the Am386DX-40 ten years earlier.",
"AMD's new fab facility in Dresden increased production for AMD overall and put out Thunderbirds at a fast rate, with the process technology improved by a switch to copper interconnects.",
"After several versions were released in 2000 and 2001 of the Thunderbird, the last Athlon processor using the Thunderbird core was released in 2001 in the summer, at which point speeds were at 1.4 GHz.The locked multipliers of Socket A Thunderbirds could often be disabled through adding conductive bridges on the surface on the chip, a practice widely known as \"the pencil trick\".Open Athlon Thunderbird Slot A cartridge;Specifications* L1-cache: 64 + 64 KB (data + instructions)* L2-cache: 256 KB, full speed* MMX, 3DNow!",
"* Slot A & Socket A (EV6)* Front-side bus: 100 MHz (Slot-A, B-models), 133 MHz (C-models) (200 MT/s, 266 MT/s)* Vcore: 1.70–1.75 V* First release: June 4, 2000* Transistor count: 37 million* Manufacturing process: /180 nm* Clock rate:** Slot A: 650–1000 MHz** Socket A, 100 MHz FSB (B-models): 600–1400 MHz** Socket A, 133 MHz FSB (C-models): 1000–1400 MHz===Athlon XP (2001–2003)===Overall, there are four main variants of the Athlon XP desktop CPU: the ''Palomino'', the ''Thoroughbred'', the ''Thorton'', and the ''Barton''.",
"A number of mobile processors were also released, including the ''Corvette'' models, and the ''Dublin'' model among others.====''Palomino''==== Athlon XP \"Palomino\" 2000+On May 14, 2001, AMD released the '''Athlon XP''' processor.",
"It debuted as the '''Mobile Athlon 4''', a mobile version codenamed ''Corvette'', with the desktop Athlon XP released in the fall.",
"The third-generation Athlon, code-named ''Palomino'', came out on October 9, 2001, as the Athlon XP, with the suffix signifying ''extreme performance'' and unofficially referencing Windows XP.",
"''Palomino's'' design used 180 nm fabrication process size.",
"The Athlon XP was marketed using a performance rating (PR) system comparing it to the Thunderbird predecessor core.",
"Among other changes, ''Palomino'' consumed 20% less power than the Thunderbird, comparatively reducing heat output, and was roughly 10% faster than Thunderbird.",
"''Palomino'' also had enhanced K7's TLB architecture and included a hardware data prefetch mechanism to take better advantage of memory bandwidth.",
"''Palomino'' was the first K7 core to include the full SSE instruction set from the Intel Pentium III, as well as AMD's 3DNow!",
"Professional.",
"''Palomino'' was also the first socketed Athlon officially supporting dual processing, with chips certified for that purpose branded as the '''Athlon MP''' (multi processing), which had different specifications.",
"According to HardwareZone, it was possible to modify the Athlon XP to function as an MP.",
";Specifications* L1-cache: 64 + 64 KB (data + instructions)* L2-cache: 256 KB, full speed* MMX, 3DNow!, SSE* Socket A (EV6)* Front-side bus: 133 MHz (266 MT/s)* Vcore: 1.50 to 1.75 V* Power consumption: 68 W* First release: October 9, 2001* Clock-rate:** Athlon 4: 850–1400 MHz** Athlon XP: 1333–1733 MHz (1500+ to 2100+)** Athlon MP: 1000–1733 MHz====''Thoroughbred''====Athlon XP \"Thoroughbred B\" 2400+The fourth-generation of Athlon was introduced with the ''Thoroughbred'' core, or ''T-Bred'', on April 17, 2002.The ''Thoroughbred'' core marked AMD's first production 130 nm silicon, with smaller die size than its predecessor.",
"There came to be two steppings (revisions) of this core commonly referred to as ''Tbred-A'' and ''Tbred-B''.",
"Introduced in June 2002, the initial A version was mostly a direct die shrink of the preceding ''Palomino'' core, but did not significantly increase clock speeds over the ''Palomino''.",
"A revised ''Thoroughbred'' core, ''Thoroughbred-B'', added a ninth \"metal layer\" to the eight-layered ''Thoroughbred-A'', offering improvement in headroom over the A and making it popular for overclocking.",
";Specifications* L1-cache: 64 + 64 KB (data + instructions)* L2-cache: 256 KB, full speed* MMX, 3DNow!, SSE* Socket A (EV6)* Front-side bus: 133/166 MHz (266/333 MT/s)* Vcore: 1.50–1.65 V* First release: June 10, 2002 (A), August 21, 2002 (B)* Clock-rate:** Thoroughbred \"A\": 1400–1800 MHz (1600+ to 2200+)** Thoroughbred \"B\": 1400–2250 MHz (1600+ to 2800+)** 133 MHz FSB: 1400–2133 MHz (1600+ to 2600+)** 166 MHz FSB: 2083–2250 MHz (2600+ to 2800+)====''Barton'' / ''Thorton''====Athlon XP \"Barton\" 2500+Fifth-generation Athlon ''Barton''-core processors were released in early 2003.While not operating at higher clock rates than ''Thoroughbred''-core processors, they featured an increased L2 cache, and later models had an increased 200 MHz (400 MT/s) front side bus.",
"The ''Thorton'' core, a blend of ''thoroughbred'' and ''Barton'', was a later variant of the ''Barton'' with half of the L2 cache disabled.",
"The ''Barton'' was used to officially introduce a higher 400 MT/s bus clock for the Socket A platform, which was used to gain some ''Barton'' models more efficiency.",
"By this point with the ''Barton'', the four-year-old Athlon EV6 bus architecture had scaled to its limit and required a redesign to exceed the performance of newer Intel processors.",
"By 2003, the Pentium 4 had become more than competitive with AMD's processors, and ''Barton'' only saw a small performance increase over the ''Thoroughbred-B'' it derived from, insufficient to outperform the Pentium 4.The K7-derived Athlons such as ''Barton'' were replaced in September 2003 by the Athlon 64 family, which featured an on-chip memory controller and a new HyperTransport bus.Notably, the 2500+ Barton with 11× multiplier was effectively identical to the 3200+ part other than the FSB speed it was binned for, meaning that seamless overclocking was possible more often than not.",
"Early Thortons could be restored to the full Barton specification with the enabling of the other half of the L2 cache from a slight CPU surface modification, but the result was not always reliable.",
";Specifications:''Barton (130 nm)''* L1-cache: 64 + 64 KB (data + instructions)* L2-cache: 512 KB, full speed* MMX, 3DNow!, SSE* Socket A (EV6)* Front-side bus: 166/200 MHz (333/400 MT/s)* Vcore: 1.65 V* First release: February 10, 2003* Clock rate: 1833–2333 MHz (2500+ to 3200+)** 133 MHz FSB: 1867–2133 MHz (2500+ to 2800+); uncommon** 166 MHz FSB: 1833–2333 MHz (2500+ to 3200+)** 200 MHz FSB: 2100, 2200 MHz (3000+, 3200+)''Thorton (130 nm)''* L1-cache: 64 + 64 KB (Data + Instructions)* L2-cache: 256 KB, full speed* MMX, 3DNow!, SSE* Socket A (EV6)* Front-side bus: 133/166/200 MHz (266/333/400 MT/s)* Vcore: 1.50–1.65 V* First release: September 2003* Clock rate: 1667–2200 MHz (2000+ to 3100+)** 133 MHz FSB: 1600–2133 MHz (2000+ to 2600+)** 166 MHz FSB: 2083 MHz (2600+)** 200 MHz FSB: 2200 MHz (3100+)====Mobile Athlon XP==== Athlon XP Mobile \"Barton\" 2400+The ''Palomino'' core debuted in the mobile market before the PC market in May 2001, where it was branded as '''Mobile Athlon 4''' with the codename \"Corvette\".",
"It distinctively used a ceramic interposer much like the ''Thunderbird'' instead of the organic pin grid array package used on all later ''Palomino'' processors.",
"In November 2001, AMD released a 1.2 GHz Athlon 4 and a 950 MHz Duron.",
"The Mobile Athlon 4 processors included the PowerNow!",
"function, which controlled a laptop's \"level of processor performance by dynamically adjusting its operating frequency and voltage according to the task at hand\", thus extending \"battery life by reducing processor power when it isn't needed by applications\".",
"Duron chips also included PowerNow!",
"In 2002, AMD released a version of PowerNow!",
"called Cool'n'Quiet, implemented on the Athlon XP but only adjusting clock speed instead of voltage.In 2002 the '''Athlon XP-M''' (Mobile Athlon XP) replaced the Mobile Athlon 4 using the newer ''Thoroughbred'' core, with ''Barton'' cores for full-size notebooks.",
"The Athlon XP-M was also offered in a compact microPGA socket 563 version.",
"Mobile XPs were not multiplier-locked, making them popular with desktop overclockers.===Athlon 64 (2003–2009)===The immediate successor to the Athlon XP, the Athlon 64 is an AMD64-architecture microprocessor produced by AMD, released on September 23, 2003.A number of variations, all named after cities, were released with 90 nm architecture in 2004 and 2005.Versions released in 2007 and 2009 utilized 65 nm architecture.===Athlon 64 X2 (2005–2009)===The Athlon 64 X2 was released in 2005 as the first native dual-core desktop CPU designed by AMD using an Athlon 64.The Athlon X2 was a subsequent family of microprocessors based on the Athlon 64 X2.The original ''Brisbane'' Athlon X2 models used 65 nm architecture and were released in 2007.===Athlon II (2009–2012) ===Athlon II is a family of central processing units.",
"Initially a dual-core version of the Athlon II, the K-10-based ''Regor'' was released in June 2009 with 45-nanometer architecture.",
"This was followed by a single-core version ''Sargas'', followed by the quad-core ''Propus'', the triple-core ''Rana'' in November 2009, and the ''Llano'' 32 nm version released in 2011.=== Bristol-Ridge-based Athlon X4 (2017) ===The Bristol Ridge Athlon X4 lineup was released in 2017.It was based on the Excavator microarchitecture and used 2 Excavator modules tolalling 4 \"cores\".",
"It had a dual-channel DDR4-2400 memory controller with clockspeeds up to 4.0GHz.",
"It ran on the new Socket AM4 platform that was being used for Zen1-3 CPU's.===Zen-based Athlon (2018–present)===The Zen-based Athlon with Radeon graphics processors was launched in September 2018 with the Athlon 200GE.",
"Based on AMD's ''Raven Ridge'' core previously used in variants of the Ryzen 3 and Ryzen 5, the Athlon 200GE had half of the cores but left SMT enabled.",
"It also kept the same 4 MiB L3 cache, but the L2 cache was halved to 1 MiB.In addition, the number of graphics compute units was limited to 3 in the Athlon 200GE, and the chip was multiplier-locked.",
"Despite its limitations, the Athlon 200GE performed competitively against the 5000-series Intel Pentium-G, displaying similar CPU performance but an advantage in GPU performance.On November 19, 2019, AMD released the Athlon 3000G, with a higher 3.5 GHz core clock and 1100 MHz graphics clock compared to the Athlon 200GE, also with two cores.",
"The main functional difference between the 200GE was the Athlon 3000G's unlocked multiplier, allowing the latter to be overclocked on B450 and X470 motherboards.",
";Specifications''Raven Ridge'' (14 nm), ''Picasso'' (12 nm) ''(see the list article for more details)''* L1 cache: 192 KiB (2×64 KiB + 2×32 KiB)* L2 cache: 1 MiB (2×512 KiB)* L3 cache: 4 MiB* Memory: dual-channel DDR4-2666, 64 GiB max.",
"* Socket AM4* TDP: 35 W* First release: September 6, 2018* CPU clock rate: 3.2 to 3.5 GHz* GPU clock rate: 1000 to 1100 MHz"
],
[
"Supercomputers",
"A number of supercomputers have been built using Athlon chips, largely at universities.",
"Among them:* In 2000, several American students claimed to have built the world's least expensive supercomputer by clustering 64 AMD Athlon chips together, also marking the first time Athlons had been clustered in a supercomputer.",
"* The PRESTO III, a Beowulf cluster of 78 AMD Athlon processors, was built in 2001 by the Tokyo Institute of Technology.",
"That year it ranked 439 on the TOP500 list of supercomputers.",
"* In 2002, a \"128-Node 256-Processor AMD Athlon Supercomputer Cluster\" was installed at the Ohio Supercomputer Center at the University of Toledo.",
"* Rutgers University, Department of Physics & Astronomy.",
"Machine: NOW Cluster—AMD Athlon.",
"CPU: 512 AthlonMP (1.65 GHz).",
"Rmax: 794 GFLOPS."
],
[
"See also",
"* List of AMD Athlon processors* List of AMD Duron processors* List of AMD Phenom processors* List of AMD Opteron processors* List of AMD Sempron processors"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* Website"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Amnon"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Amnon''' ( ''’Amnōn'', \"faithful\") was, in the Hebrew Bible, the oldest son of King David and his second wife, Ahinoam of Jezreel.",
"He was born in Hebron during his father's reign in Judah.",
"He was the heir apparent to the throne of Israel until he was assassinated by his half-brother Absalom to avenge the rape of Absalom's sister Tamar."
],
[
"Biblical account",
"===Amnon's background===Amnon was born in Hebron to Ahinoam and King David.",
"As the presumptive heir to the throne of Israel, Amnon enjoyed a life of power and privilege.===Rape of Tamar===Although he was the heir-apparent to David's throne, Amnon is best remembered for the rape of his half-sister Tamar, daughter of David and Maachah.",
"Despite the biblical prohibition on sexual relations between half siblings, Amnon had an overwhelming desire for her.",
"He acted on advice from his cousin, Jonadab son of Shimeah, David's brother, to lure Tamar into his quarters by pretending to be sick and desiring her to cook a special meal for him.",
"While in his quarters, and over her protests, he raped her, then had her expelled from his house.",
"While King David was angry about the incident, he could not bring himself to punish his eldest son, while Absalom, Amnon's half-brother and Tamar's full brother, nursed a bitter grudge against Amnon for the rape of his sister.According to the Babylonian Talmud: \"And Thou should not associate with a sinner:.... And so we find with Amnon, who associated with Jonadab, the son of Shim'ah, David's brother; and Jonadab was a very sensible man—sensible in wickedness, as it is written Jer.",
"Iv .22: Wise are they to do evil.\"",
"According to others, it is meant that one shall not associate with the wicked, even to study the Torah.",
"\"According to Rav, Tamar was not, by Biblical law, David's daughter, nor Amnon's sister.",
"Tamar, was the earlier born daughter of David's wife, and thus not biologically related to David, nor Amnon.",
"According to Michael D. Coogan's claims, however, it would have been perfectly all right for Amnon to have married his sister (he claims that the Bible was incoherent about prohibiting incest).",
"According to the Torah, per Leviticus 18, \"the children of Israel\"—Israelite men and women alike—are forbidden from sexual relations between people who are \"near of kin\" (cf.",
"verse 6).",
"Siblings and half siblings (cf.",
"verses 9 and 11).",
"Relationships between these are particularly singled out for a curse in Deuteronomy 27, and they are of the only two kinds incestuous relationships that are among the particularly-singled-out relationships—with the other particularly-singled-out relationships, being ones of non-incestuous family betrayal (cf.",
"verse 20) and bestiality (cf.",
"verse 21).",
"Incestuous relationships are considered so severe among c''hillul hashem'', acts which bring shame to the name of God, as to be, along with the other forbidden relationships that are mentioned in Leviticus 18, punishable by death as specified in Leviticus 20.Those who committed incest were subject to two curses—one for committing incest and the second for breaking the Torah law.",
"27 Deuteronomy 22 and 26 and also the punishment of kareth.",
"''The Banquet of Absalom'', attributed to Niccolò De Simone.Two years later, to avenge Tamar, Absalom invited all of David's sons to a feast at sheep-shearing time, then had his servants kill Amnon after he had become drunk with wine.",
"As a result, Absalom fled to Geshur.",
"records that in time David came to terms with the death of Amnon, his first-born.",
"Methodist founder John Wesley is critical of David: \"He can almost find in his heart to receive into favour the murderer of his brother.",
"How can we excuse David from the sin of Eli, who honoured his sons more than God?\""
],
[
"In rabbinic literature",
"The sages of the Mishnah point out that Amnon's love for Tamar, his half-sister, did not arise from true affection, but from passion and lust, on which account, after having attained his desire, he immediately \"hated her exceedingly.\"",
"\"All love which depends upon some particular thing ceases when that thing ceases; thus was the love of Amnon for Tamar\" (Ab.",
"v. 16).",
"Amnon's love for Tamar was not, however, such a transgression as is usually supposed: for, although she was a daughter of David, her mother was a prisoner of war, who had not yet become a Jewess; consequently, Tamar also had not entered the Jewish community (Sanh.",
"21a).",
"The incident of Amnon and Tamar was utilized by the sages as affording justification for their rule that a man must on no account remain alone in the company of a woman, not even of an unmarried one (Sanh.",
"l.c.",
"et seq.",
").According to the Babylonian Talmud, Amnon hated Tamar because, as he raped her, Tamar tied one of her hairs around Amnon's penis and used it to castrate him.",
"The Babylonian Talmud also asserts that Amnon's death was a punishment from the Lord for Amnon's \"lewdness\".and for his actions.As noted above those who committed incest are subject to two curses in the Torah and kareth; Amnon was said to be possibly consigned to the 2nd circle of Gehenna.",
"For reasons of propriety, the Mishnah excludes the story from public reading in synagogue, whether in the original or in Aramaic translation (Meg.",
"4:10)."
],
[
"Literary references",
"* The Spanish poet Federico García Lorca wrote a poem about Amnon's rape of his sister Tamar, included in Lorca's 1928 poetry collection ''Romancero Gitano'' (translated as ''Gypsy Ballads'').",
"Lorca's version is considerably different from the Biblical original – Amnon is depicted as being overcome by a sudden uncontrollable passion, with none of the cynical planning and premeditation of the original story.",
"He assaults and rapes Tamar and then flees into the night on his horse, with archers shooting at him from the walls – whereupon King David cuts the strings of his harp.",
"*''The Rape of Tamar'', novel by Dan Jacobson ()*The Death of Amnon poem by Elizabeth Hands"
],
[
"References"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Amu Darya"
],
[
"Introduction",
"The '''Amu Darya''', also called the '''Amu''', the '''Amo''', and historically the '''Oxus''' (Latin: ''''; Greek: , ''Ôxos''), is a major river in Central Asia and Afghanistan.",
"Rising in the Pamir Mountains, north of the Hindu Kush, the Amu Darya is formed by the confluence of the Vakhsh and Panj rivers, in the Tigrovaya Balka Nature Reserve on the border between Afghanistan and Tajikistan, and flows from there north-westwards into the southern remnants of the Aral Sea.",
"In its upper course, the river forms part of Afghanistan's northern border with Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan.",
"In ancient history, the river was regarded as the boundary of Greater Iran with Turan, which roughly corresponded to present-day Central Asia.",
"The Amu Darya has a flow of about 70 cubic kilometres per year on average."
],
[
"Names",
"Amu Darya delta from spaceIn classical antiquity, the river was known as the in Latin and () in Greek — a clear derivative of Vakhsh, the name of the largest tributary of the river.",
"In Sanskrit texts, the river is also referred to as ().",
"The Brahmanda Purana refers to the river as which means an eye.",
"The Avestan texts too refer to the River as Yakhsha/Vakhsha (and Yakhsha Arta (\"upper Yakhsha\") referring to the Jaxartes/Syr Darya twin river to Amu Darya).",
"In Middle Persian sources of the Sasanian period the river is known as (lit.",
"'good river').",
"The name ''Amu'' is said to have come from the medieval city of ''Āmul'', (later, Chahar Joy/Charjunow, and now known as Türkmenabat), in modern Turkmenistan, with ''Darya'' being the Persian word for \"lake\".",
"Medieval Arabic and Islamic sources call the river ''Jayhoun'' (; also ''Jaihun'', ''Jayhoon'', or ''Dzhaykhun'') which is derived from ''Gihon'', the biblical name for one of the four rivers of the Garden of Eden.",
"River Amu Darya passes through one of the world's highest deserts.===As the river Gozan===Western travelers in the 19th century mentioned that one of the names by which the river was known in Afghanistan was ''Gozan'', and that this name was used by Greek, Mongol, Chinese, Persian, Jewish, and Afghan historians.",
"However, this name is no longer used.",
":\"Hara (Bokhara) and to the river of Gozan (that is to say, the Amu, (called the Oxus by Europeans )) ...\":\"the Gozan River is the River Balkh, i.e.",
"the Oxus or the Amu Darya ...\":\"... and were brought into Halah (modern day Balkh), and Habor (which is Pesh Habor or Peshawar), and Hara (which is Herat), and to the river Gozan (which is the Ammoo, also called Jehoon) ...\""
],
[
"Description",
"Map of the Amu Darya watershedThe river's total length is and its drainage basin totals in area, providing a mean discharge of around of water per year.",
"The river is navigable for over .",
"All of the water comes from the high mountains in the south where annual precipitation can be over .",
"Even before large-scale irrigation began, high summer evaporation meant that not all of this discharge reached the Aral Sea – though there is some evidence the large Pamir glaciers provided enough meltwater for the Aral to overflow during the 13th and 14th centuries.Since the end of the 19th century, there have been four different claimants as the true source of the Oxus:* The Pamir River, which emerges from Lake Zorkul (once also known as Lake Victoria) in the Pamir Mountains (ancient Mount Imeon), and flows west to Qila-e Panja, where it joins the Wakhan River to form the Panj River.",
"* The Sarhad or Little Pamir River flowing down the Little Pamir in the High Wakhan* Lake Chamaktin, which discharges to the east into the Aksu River, which in turn becomes the Murghab and then Bartang rivers, and which eventually joins the Panj Oxus branch 350 kilometres downstream at Roshan Vomar in Tajikistan.",
"* An ice cave at the end of the Wakhjir valley, in the Wakhan Corridor, in the Pamir Mountains, near the border with Pakistan.Afghanistan-Tajikistan bridge over the DaryaA glacier turns into the Wakhan River and joins the Pamir River about downstream.",
"Bill Colegrave's expedition to Wakhan in 2007 found that both claimants 2 and 3 had the same source, the Chelab stream, which bifurcates on the watershed of the Little Pamir, half flowing into Lake Chamaktin and half into the parent stream of the Little Pamir/Sarhad River.",
"Therefore, the Chelab stream may be properly considered the true source or parent stream of the Oxus.",
"The Panj River forms the border of Afghanistan and Tajikistan.",
"It flows west to Ishkashim where it turns north and then north-west through the Pamirs passing the Tajikistan–Afghanistan Friendship Bridge.",
"It subsequently forms the border of Afghanistan and Uzbekistan for about , passing Termez and the Afghanistan–Uzbekistan Friendship Bridge.",
"It delineates the border of Afghanistan and Turkmenistan for another before it flows into Turkmenistan at Atamurat.",
"It flows across Turkmenistan south to north, passing Türkmenabat, and forms the border of Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan from Halkabat.",
"It is then split by the Tuyamuyun Hydro Complex into many waterways that used to form the river delta joining the Aral Sea, passing Urgench, Daşoguz, and other cities, but it does not reach what is left of the sea any more and is lost in the desert.",
"Use of water from the Amu Darya for irrigation has been a major contributing factor to the shrinking of the Aral Sea since the late 1950s.",
"Historical records state that in different periods, the river flowed into the Aral Sea (from the south), into the Caspian Sea (from the east), or both, similar to the Syr Darya (Jaxartes, in Ancient Greek)."
],
[
"Watershed",
"Pontoon Bridge on the Amu River near Urgench, in 2014 it was replaced by the stationary bridge.The of the Amu Darya drainage basin include most of Tajikistan, the southwest corner of Kyrgyzstan, the northeast corner of Afghanistan, a narrow portion of eastern Turkmenistan and the western half of Uzbekistan.",
"Part of the Amu Darya basin divide in Tajikistan forms that country's border with China (in the east) and Pakistan (to the south).",
"About 61% of the drainage lies within Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan, while 39% is in Afghanistan.The abundant water flowing in the Amu Darya comes almost entirely from glaciers in the Pamir Mountains and Tian Shan,which, standing above the surrounding arid plain, collect atmospheric moisture which otherwise would probably escape elsewhere.",
"Without its mountain water sources, the Amu Darya would not exist—because it rarely rains in the lowlands through which most of the river flows.",
"Of the total drainage area, only about actively contribute water to the river.This is because many of the river's major tributaries (especially the Zeravshan River) have been diverted, and much of the river's drainage is arid.",
"Throughout most of the steppe, the annual rainfall is about ."
],
[
"History",
"Ancient BactriaBāqī Chaghānyānī pays homage to Babur beside the Amu Darya river, AD 1504The ancient Greeks called the Amu Darya the ''Oxus''.",
"In ancient times, the river was regarded as the boundary between Greater Iran and Ṫūrān ().",
"The river's drainage lies in the area between the former empires of Genghis Khan and Alexander the Great, although they occurred at very different times.",
"When the Mongols came to the area, they used the water of the Amu Darya to flood Konye-Urgench.",
"One southern route of the Silk Road ran along part of the Amu Darya northwestward from Termez before going westwards to the Caspian Sea.According to the Quaternary International, it is possible that the Amu Darya's course across the Karakum Desert has gone through several major shifts in the past few thousand years.",
"Much of the time – most recently from the 13th century to the late 16th century – the Amu Darya emptied into both the Aral and the Caspian Seas, reaching the latter via a large distributary called the Uzboy River.",
"The Uzboy splits off from the main channel just south of the river's delta.",
"Sometimes the flow through the two branches was more or less equal, but often most of the Amu Darya's flow split to the west and flowed into the Caspian.People began to settle along the lower Amu Darya and the Uzboy in the 5th century, establishing a thriving chain of agricultural lands, towns, and cities.",
"In about AD 985, the massive Gurganj Dam at the bifurcation of the forks started to divert water to the Aral.",
"Genghis Khan's troops destroyed the dam in 1221, and the Amu Darya shifted to distributing its flow more or less equally between the main stem and the Uzboy.",
"But in the 18th century, the river again turned north, flowing into the Aral Sea, a path it has taken since.",
"Less and less water flowed down the Uzboy.",
"When Russian explorer Bekovich-Cherkasski surveyed the region in 1720, the Amu Darya did not flow into the Caspian Sea anymore.c.",
"1873By the 1800s, the ethnographic makeup of the region was described by Peter Kropotkin as the communities of \"the vassal Khanates of Maimene, Khulm, Kunduz, and even the Badakshan and Wahkran.\"",
"An Englishman, William Moorcroft, visited the Oxus around 1824 during the Great Game period.",
"Another Englishman, a naval officer called John Wood, came with an expedition to find the source of the river in 1839.He found modern-day Lake Zorkul, called it Lake Victoria, and proclaimed he had found the source.",
"Then, the French explorer and geographer Thibaut Viné collected a lot of information about this area during five expeditions between 1856 and 1862.The question of finding a route between the Oxus valley and India has been of concern historically.",
"A direct route crosses extremely high mountain passes in the Hindu Kush and isolated areas like Kafiristan.",
"Some in Britain feared that the Empire of Russia, which at the time wielded great influence over the Oxus area, would overcome these obstacles and find a suitable route through which to invade British India – but this never came to pass.",
"The area was taken over by Russia during the Russian conquest of Turkestan.The Soviet Union became the ruling power in the early 1920s and expelled Mohammed Alim Khan.",
"It later put down the Basmachi movement and killed Ibrahim Bek.",
"A large refugee population of Central Asians, including Turkmen, Tajiks, and Uzbeks, fled to northern Afghanistan.",
"In the 1960s and 1970s the Soviets started using the Amu Darya and the Syr Darya to irrigate extensive cotton fields in the Central Asian plain.",
"Before this time, water from the rivers was already being used for agriculture, but not on this massive scale.",
"The Qaraqum Canal, Karshi Canal, and Bukhara Canal were among the largest of the irrigation diversions built.",
"However, the Main Turkmen Canal, which would have diverted water along the dry Uzboy River bed into central Turkmenistan, was never built.",
"The 1970s, in the course of the Soviet–Afghan War, Soviet forces used the valley to invade Afghanistan through Termez.",
"The Soviet Union fell in the 1990s and Central Asia split up into the many smaller countries that lie within or partially within the Amu Darya basin.During the Soviet era, a resource-sharing system was instated in which Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan shared water originating from the Amu and Syr Daryas with Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan in summer.",
"In return, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan received Kazakh, Turkmen, and Uzbek coal, gas, and electricity in winter.",
"After the fall of the Soviet Union this system disintegrated and the Central Asian nations have failed to reinstate it.",
"Inadequate infrastructure, poor water-management, and outdated irrigation methods all exacerbate the issue.===Siberian Tiger Introduction Project===The Caspian tiger used to occur along the river's banks.",
"After its extirpation, the Darya's delta was suggested as a potential site for the introduction of its closest surviving relative, the Siberian tiger.",
"A feasibility study was initiated to investigate if the area is suitable and if such an initiative would receive support from relevant decision makers.",
"A viable tiger population of about 100 animals would require at least of large tracts of contiguous habitat with rich prey populations.",
"Such habitat is not available at this stage and cannot be provided in the short term.",
"The proposed region is therefore unsuitable for the reintroduction, at least at this stage.===Resource extraction===Since March 2022, the building of the 285km Qosh Tepa Canal has been underway in northern Afghanistan to divert water from the Amu Darya.",
"Uzbekistan has expressed concern that the canal will have an adverse effect on its agriculture.",
"The canal is also expected to make the Aral Sea disaster worse, and in 2023 Uzbek officials held talks on the canal with the Taliban.",
"The Taliban has made the canal a priority, with images supplied by Planet Labs demonstrate that from April 2022 to February 2023, more than 100 km of canal was excavated.",
"According to the Taliban, the initiative is expected to convert 550,000 hectares of desert into farmland.In January 2023 the Xinjiang Central Asia Petroleum and Gas Company (aka CAPEIC) signed a $720 million four-year investment deal with the Taliban government of Afghanistan for extraction on its side of the Amu Darya basin.",
"The deal will see a 15% royalty given to the Afghan government over the course of its 25-year term.",
"The Chinese see this basin as the third-largest potential gas field in the world."
],
[
"Literature",
"The Oxus river, and Arnold's poem, fire the imaginations of the children who adventure with ponies over the moors of the West Country in the 1930s children's book ''The Far-Distant Oxus''.",
"There were two sequels, ''Escape to Persia'' and ''Oxus in Summer''.Robert Byron's 1937 travelogue, ''The Road to Oxiana'', describes its author's journey from the Levant through Persia to Afghanistan, with the Oxus as his stated goal, \"to see certain famous monuments, chiefly the Gonbad-e Qabus, a tower built as a mausoleum for an ancient king.",
"\"George MacDonald Fraser's ''Flashman at the Charge'', (1973), places Flashman on the Amu Darya and the Aral Sea during the (fictitious) Russian advance on India during The Great Game period."
],
[
"See also",
"* Oxus Treasure* Vankhsh River* Mount Imeon* Sherabad River* Surkhan Darya* Transoxiana* Zeravshan River* Extreme points of Afghanistan* List of rivers of Afghanistan"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* Curzon, George Nathaniel.",
"1896.",
"''The Pamirs and the Source of the Oxus''.",
"Royal Geographical Society, London.",
"Reprint: Elibron Classics Series, Adamant Media Corporation.",
"2005.",
"(pbk; (hbk).",
"* Gordon, T. E.",
"1876.",
"''The Roof of the World: Being the Narrative of a Journey over the high plateau of Tibet to the Russian Frontier and the Oxus sources on Pamir''.",
"Edinburgh.",
"Edmonston and Douglas.",
"Reprint by Ch'eng Wen Publishing Company.",
"Taipei.",
"1971.",
"* Toynbee, Arnold J.",
"1961.",
"''Between Oxus and Jumna''.",
"London.",
"Oxford University Press.",
"* Wood, John, 1872.",
"''A Journey to the Source of the River Oxus''.",
"With an essay on the Geography of the Valley of the Oxus by Colonel Henry Yule.",
"London: John Murray."
],
[
"External links",
"* * The Amu Darya Basin Network"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Muslim conquests of Afghanistan"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Minaret of Jam built by the Ghurid dynastyThe '''Muslim conquests of Afghanistan''' began during the Muslim conquest of Persia as the Arab Muslims migrated eastwards to Khorasan, Sistan and Transoxiana.",
"Fifteen years after the battle of Nahāvand in 642 AD, they controlled all Sasanian domains except in Afghanistan.",
"Fuller Islamization was not achieved until the period between 10th and 12th centuries under Ghaznavid and Ghurid dynasties who patronized Muslim religious institutions.Khorasan and Sistan, where Zoroastrianism was well-established, were conquered.",
"The Arabs had begun to move towards the lands east of Persia in the 7th century.",
"The Muslim frontier in modern Afghanistan had become stabilized after the first century of the Lunar Hijri calendar as the relative importance of the Afghan areas diminished.",
"From historical evidence, it appears Tokharistan (Bactria) was the only area conquered by Arabs where Buddhism heavily flourished.",
"Balkh's final conquest was undertaken by Qutayba ibn Muslim in 705.The eastern regions of Afghanistan were at times considered politically as parts of India.",
"Buddhism and Hinduism held sway over the region until the Muslim conquest.",
"Kabul and Zabulistan which housed Buddhism and other Indian religions, offered stiff resistance to the early Muslim advance.",
"Nevertheless, the Arab Umayyads regularly claimed nominal overlordship over the Zunbils and Kabul ShahisThe expeditions of Caliph Al-Ma'mun (r. 813–833 AD) were the last by the Arabs on Kabul and Zabul.",
"The king of Kabul was captured by him and converted to Islam.",
"The last Zunbil was killed by Ya'qub bin al-Layth along with his former overlord Salih b. al-Nadr in 865.Meanwhile, the Hindu Shahi of Kabul were defeated under Mahmud of Ghazni.",
"Indian soldiers were a part of the Ghaznavid army and the 14th-century Muslim scholar Ibn Battuta described the Hindu Kush as meaning \"slayer of Indians\", because large numbers of slaves brought from India died from its treacherous weather.The geographer Ya'qubi states that the rulers of Bamiyan, called the ''Sher'', converted in the late 8th century.",
"Ya'qub is recorded as having plundered its pagan idols in 870 while a much later historian Shabankara'i claims that Alp-Tegin obtained conversion of its ruler in 962.No permanent Arab control was established in Ghur and it became Islamised after Ghaznavid raids.",
"By the time of Bahram-Shah, Ghur was converted and politically united.The Pashtun habitat during their conquest by Mahmud was located in the Sulaiman Mountains in the south of Afghanistan.",
"Prior to Pashtun migration to the Kabul River valley, Tajiks formed the dominant population of Kabul, Nangarhar, Logar Valley and Laghman in east Afghanistan.",
"The Pashtuns later began migrating westward from Sulaiman Mountains in the south, and displaced or subjugated the indigenous populations such as Tajiks, Hazaras, the Farsiwanis, Nuristanis and Pashayi people before or during 16th and 17th centuries.Before their conversion, the Nuristanis or ''Kafir'' people of Kafiristan practiced a form of ancient Hinduism infused with locally developed accretions.",
"The region from Nuristan to Kashmir was host to a vast number of \"Kafir\" cultures.",
"They remained politically independent until being conquered and converted under Afghan Amir Abdul Rahman Khan in 1895–1896."
],
[
"Arab conquests and rule",
"Names of territories during the CaliphateDuring the Muslim conquest of Persia, the Arabs were drawn eastwards from the Iraqi plains to central and eastern Persia, then to Media, into Khorasan, Sistan and Transoxania.",
"15 years after the Battle of Nahāvand, the Arabs controlled all Sasanian domains except the parts of Afghanistan and Makran.",
"Nancy Dupree states that advancing Arabs carrying the religion of Islam easily took over Herat and Sistan, but the other areas often revolted and converted back to their old faiths whenever the Arab armies withdrew.",
"The harshness of the Arab rule caused the native dynasties to revolt after the Arab power weakened like the Saffarids founded by the zealous Yaqub who conquered many cities of the region.",
"Historian Cameron A. Petrie states that while the Arab expansion had both social and religious motives, it was their extraction of taxes from the subjugated people that invited the numerous local rebellions.Medieval Islamic scholars divided modern-day Afghanistan into two regions - the provinces of Khorasan and Sistan.",
"Khorasan was the eastern satrapy of the Sasanian Empire, containing Balkh and Herat.",
"Sistan included a number of Afghan cities and regions including Ghazni, Zarang, Bost, Qandahar (also called al-Rukhkhaj or Zamindawar), Kabul, Kabulistan and Zabulistan.Before Muslim rule, the regions of Balkh (Bactria or ''Tokharistan''), Herat and Sistan were under Sasanian rule.",
"Further south in Balkh region, in Bamiyan, indication of Sasanian authority diminishes, with a local dynasty apparently ruling from the late antiquity, probably Hepthalites subject to the Yabgu of Western Turks.",
"While Herat was controlled by Sasanians, its hinterlands were controlled by northern Hepthalites who continued to rule the Ghurid mountains and river valleys.",
"The Arab Umayyads regularly claimed nominal overlordship over the Zunbils and Kabul Shahis, and in 711 Qutayba ibn Muslim managed to force them to pay tribute.",
"They would also be conquered by the Saffarids and Ghaznavids.In Afghanistan, the frontier of the Islamic conquest had become more or less stationary by the end of the first century of Hijri calendar.",
"One reason was that the relative importance of Sistan and Baluchistan had begun to diminish by the time of Mu'awiya I, when the conquests of Bactria and Transoxania were undertaken.",
"In addition, the conquest in the eastern direction was extended to Makran and Sind, with Muslim colonies becoming established there in 711–12.===Sistan===Map of Sakastan under the Sasanian Empire.The earlier Arabs called Sistan as ''Sijistan'', from the Persian word ''Sagestan''.",
"It is a lowland region, lying round and eastwards from the Zarah lake, which includes deltas of Helmand and other rivers which drain into it.",
"The Muslim conquest of Sistan began in 23 AH (643-644 AD) when Asim bin Amr and Abdallah ibn Amir invaded the region and besieged Zaranj.",
"The Sistanis concluded a treaty with Muslims, mandating them to pay the kharaj.The cash-strapped Sasanian king Yazdegerd III who had a large retinue, had fled to Kerman in 650.He had to flee from Kerman to Sistan after his arrogance angered the marzban of the place, eluding an Arab force from Basra which defeated and killed the marzban.",
"Yazdegerd lost the support of governor of Sistan after demanding taxes from him and had to leave for Merv.",
"It is not known whether this governor was a Sasanian prince or a local ruler at that time.",
"The Arabs had campaigned in Sistan a few years earlier and Abdallah b. Amir had now gone in pursuit of Yazdegerd.",
"He arrived in Kirman in 651 and sent a force under Rabi ibn Ziyad al-Harithi to Sistan.Rabi crossed the desert between Kirman and Sistan, reaching the fortress of Zilaq which was within five farsangs of the Sistan frontier.",
"The fort was surrendered by its dihqan.",
"The fortress of Karkuya, whose fire temple is mentioned in the anonymously authored ''Tarikh-e-Sistan'', along with Haysun and Nashrudh, surrendered to Rabi.",
"Rabi then encamped in Zaliq and projected the seizure of Zarang, which though had earlier submitted to Arabs, needed to be subdued again.",
"Although its marzban Aparviz put up a strong resistance, he was forced to surrender.The Zaranj forces had received heavy casualties during the battle with Arab forces and were driven back to the city.",
"According to sources, when Aparviz appeared before Rabi to discuss the terms, he found the Arab general was sitting on a chair made out of two dead soldiers and his entourage had been instructed to make seats and bolsters in the same fashion.",
"Aparviz was terrified into submission and wished to spare his people of this fate.",
"A peace treaty was concluded with payment of heavy dues.",
"The treaty mandated one million dirhams as annual tribute, in addition to 1,000 slave boys bearing 1,000 gold vessels.",
"The city was also garrisoned by Rabi.Rabi thus succeeded in gaining Zarang with considerable difficulty and remained at the place for several years.",
"Two years later, the people of Zarang rebelled and expelled Rabi's lieutenant and garrison.",
"Abdallah b. Amir sent 'Abd ar-Rahman b. Samura to take back the city, who also added Bust and Zabul to Arab gains.",
"'Abd ar-Rahman besieged Zaranj and after the marzban surrendered, the tribute was doubled.",
"The tribute imposed on Zarang was 2 million dirhams and 2,000 slaves.During the period of the first civil war in the Arab caliphate (656-661), rebels in Zarang imprisoned their governor while Arab bandits started raiding remote towns in Sistan to enslave people.",
"They gave in to the new governor Rib'i, who took control of the city and restored law and order.",
"'Abdallah b. Amir was made the governor of Basra and its eastern dependencies again from 661 to 664.Samura was sent back to Sistan in 661.An expedition to Khorasan was sent under him that included reputed leaders like Umar b.",
"'Ubaydillah b. Ma'mar, 'Abdullah b. Khazim, Qatariyy b. al-Fuja'a and Al-Muhallab ibn Abi Sufra.",
"Samura reconquered Zarang, while also conquering the region between Zarang and Kisht, Arachosia, Zamindawar, Bust and Zabul.Ziyad ibn Abihi was appointed governor of Basra in 664 and was also made governor of Kufa and its dependencies in 670, making him the viceroy of the entire eastern half of the Islamic empire.",
"He sent his kinsman Ubaydallah b. Abi Bakra to destroy the Zoroastrian fire temples in Fars and Sistan, confiscate their property and kill their priests.",
"While the fire temple of Kariyan was destroyed, the one at Karkuya survived along with its herbad.",
"Ziyad's son Abbad was appointed governor of Sijistan by Mu'awiya I in 673 and served until 681.During the course of his governorship, the province apparently remained stable and Abbad led an eastward expedition which brought Kandahar to the caliphate.",
"Caliph Yazid I replaced Abbad with his brother Salm, who was already governor of Khurasan.===Khorasan===Khorasan, Transoxiana and Tokharistan in the 8th centuryThere is general agreement among Arabic sources that Khorasan's conquest began in the reign of Uthman under Abdallah b. Amir, who had been appointed the governor of Basra (r. 649–655).",
"Sayf's tradition however disagrees with this, dating it to 639 under the reign of Umar with Ahnaf ibn Qais leading the expedition.",
"Al-Tabari meanwhile relates that Ahnaf's conquests occurred in 643.This could be because of confusion of Ahnaf's later activities under Ibn Amir and an attempt to magnify his role in Khorasan's conquest.The conquest of southern Persia was completed by 23 AH with Khorasan remaining the only region remaining unconquered.",
"Since the Muslims did not want any Persian land to remain under Persian rule, Umar ordered Ahnaf b. Qais to march upon it.",
"After capturing the towns of Tabas and Tun, he attacked the region's easternmost city Herat.",
"The Persians put up stiff resistance but were defeated and surrendered.",
"A garrison was deployed in the city, while a column was detached which subjugated Nishapur and Tus.",
"Umar had dispatched Ahnaf with 12,000 men from Kufa and Basra after Yazdegerd who had fled to Merv.",
"After the Arabs arrived there, Yazdegerd fled to Marw al-Rudh from where he sent ambassadors to the Khakan of the Turks, the ruler of Soghd and the Chinese emperor, asking for their assistance.",
"Yazdegerd later fled to Balkh, where he was defeated by the Arabs and fled across Oxus River.Umar forbade Ahnaf from crossing the river as the land beyond it was unknown to Arabs and was very far for them.",
"Yazdegerd proceeded to Soghd whose ruler supplied him with a large army.",
"The Khaqan of Turks after assembling the troops from Ferghana, crossed the Oxus along with Yazdegerd and marched to Balkh.",
"Ribi' b. Amir meanwhile retired with Kufan troops to Marw al-Rudh where he joined al-Ahnaf.",
"The Sasanian king and the Khakan leading an army of 50,000 cavalry composed of men from Soghd, Turkestan, Balkh and Tokharistan, arrived at Marw al-Rudh.",
"Ahnaf had an army of 20,000 men.",
"The two sides fought each other from morning till evening for two months at a place called Deir al-Ahnaf.The fighting at Deir al-Ahnaf went on until Ahnaf, after being informed of a Turkic chief inspecting the outposts, went there during a particular night and successively killed three Turkic chiefs during their inspection.",
"After learning of their deaths, the Khakan became afflicted by it and withdrew to Balkh, then he withdrew across the river to Turkestan.",
"Yazdegerd meanwhile left from Marw al-Rudh to Merv, from where he took his empire's wealth and proceeded to Balkh to join the Khakan.",
"He told his officials that he wanted to hand himself to the protection of the Turks, but they advised him against it and asked him to seek protection from the Arabs which he refused.",
"He left for Turkestan while his officials took away his treasures and gave them to Ahnaf, submitting to the Arabs and being allowed to go back to their respective homes.Abdullah b. Amir went to Khorasan from Kerman in 650 and set out along with a vanguard of Tamimi Arabs and 1,000 asawira via Quhistan.",
"The people of Tabasayn had broken their peace treaty and had allied with the Hepthalites of Herat.",
"al-Ahnaf reconquered Quhistan and defeated Herat's Hepthalites at Nishapur.",
"The kanarang or marzban of Tus asked the Arabs for assistance against the raiding Hepthalites of Herat and Badghis.",
"He agreed to a peace agreement for 600,000 dinars.The Hepthalite action prompted the Muslims undertaking military operation to secure their positions in Khorasan.",
"After the fall of Tus, Ibn Amir sent out an army against Herat.",
"The ruler (marzaban or ''azim'') of the place agreed to a peace treaty for Herat, Badghis and Pushang for a tribute of 1 million dirhams.",
"The ruler who was known as ''azim'' or the \"mighty one\" in ''Futuh al-Buldan'', may have been a Hepthalite chief.",
"The Rashidun Caliphs followed the earlier rule of Muhammad of imposing ''jizya'' on several bodies jointly and in some cases also imposed the condition that they host Muslims.",
"This rule was followed in most Iranian towns, with the jizya not specified on per capita basis, but being left to the local rulers, though some Muslim commanders stressed the amount on the ability of the ruler to pay.",
"The same wording can be seen in Ibn Amir's treaty.In 652, Ibn Amir sent al-Ahnaf to invade Tokharistan with 4,000 Arabs and 1,000 Iranian Muslims (evidently the Tamimis and asawira), probably because of assistance of its ruler to Yazdegerd's son Peroz.",
"While Marw al-Rudh's garrison agreed to a peace term for the entire district under 300,000 dirhams, the town itself remained besieged.",
"It was the last major stronghold of Sasanians and fell to al-Ahnaf after a fierce battle.",
"After bloody fighting, its marzaban agreed to a peace treaty for 60,000 or 600,000 dirhams as well as a mutual defence pact.",
"He was also allowed to keep his ancestral lands, for the office of marzaban to be hereditary in his family, and to be exempt from taxes along with his whole family.",
"Baladhuri quotes Abu Ubayda as stating that the Turks were supporting the inhabitants of the town.",
"These Turks were Hepthalites, probably from Guzgan, which may explain the reason behind the Arabs next attacking Guzgan, Faryab and Talqan.Al-Mada'ini specifically states that Ahnaf while leading the next expedition, did not want to ask for assistance from the non-Muslims of Marw al-Rudh, probably as he did not trust them.",
"The Arabs camped at Qasr al-Ahnaf, a day's march to the north of Marw al-Rudh.",
"The 30,000-strong army comprising troops of Guzgan, Faryab and Talqan, supported by the Chaghanian troops, advanced to meet them.",
"The battle was inconclusive, but the opposing side dispersed with some remaining at Guzgan while the Arabs withdrew to Marw al-Rudh.",
"Ahnaf sent an expedition, led by al-Aqra' b. Habis and apparently consisting exclusively of Tamimis, to Guzgan.",
"The Arabs defeated Guzgan and entered it by force.",
"Ahnaf meanwhile advanced towards Balkh, making peace treaties with Faryab and Taloqan along the way.The permanent pacification of Khorasan was a protracted affair with the local potentates often rebelling and appealing to outside powers like the Hepthalites, Western Turks or Turgesh, Sogdians and the imperial Chinese who claimed a degree of suzerainty over Central Asia, for help.",
"Within a year after Yazdegerd's death, a local Iranian notable named Qarin started a revolt against the Arabs in Quhistan.",
"He gathered his supporters from Tabasayn, Herat and Badghis, assembling a reported army of 40,000 insurgents against Arabs in Khorasan.",
"The Arabs made a surprise attack however, killing him and many of his people while many others were taken captive.",
"It was expected that the recently subjugated people would revolt.",
"However, in Khorasan, no all-out effort seems to have been undertaken to the expel the Arabs after Qarin's rebellion.",
"Chinese sources state that there was an attempt to restore Peroz by Tokharistan's army, however this episode is not confirmed by Arab sources.Peroz had settled among the Turks, took a local wife and had received troops from the king of Tokharistan.",
"In 661, he established himself as king of Po-szu (Persia) with Chinese help in a place the Chinese called Ja-ling (Chi-ling), which is assumed to be Zarang.",
"His campaigns are reflected in Muslim sources, which mention revolts in Zarang, Balkh, Badghis, Herat, Bushanj and also in Khorasan during the First Fitna period in reigns of Ali and Mu'awiya I.",
"Though they do not mention Peroz, they do state that Ali's newly appointed governor of Khorasan had heard in Nishapur that governors of the Sasanian king had come back from Kabul and Khorasan had rebelled.",
"However, the region was reconquered under Mu'awiya.",
"Piroz went back to the Tang Empire's capital and was given a grandiose title as well as permission to build a fire temple in 677.Yazid ibn al-Muhallab succeeded his father as governor of Khorasan in 702 and campaigned in Central Asia, but achieved little success apart from Nezak Tarkhan's submission at Badghis.===Tokharistan===Tokharistan, roughly ancient Bactria, is today divided between Afghanistan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.",
"According to the most general usage of the name, Tokharistan is the wide valley around the upper Oxus river surrounded by mountains on three sides before the river moves into open plains.",
"The major city was Balkh, one of the greatest urban centers of northeastern Iran.",
"It was located upon crossroads and conduits of trade in many directions, enabling control of these routes if it was conquered.",
"During the governorship of Abu 'l Abbas 'Abdallah b. Tahir (r. 828–845), a list of districts (''kuwar'') of the region exists, including as far as Saghaniyan in the north and Kabul in the south.",
"Other places listed are Tirmidh, Juzjan, Bamiyan, Rūb and Samanjan.",
"Some Arab geographers used the name only for the southern part of Oxus valley.Balkh was also a part of Khorasan along with other areas through varying extensions of time.",
"Per al-Tabari, Yazdegerd fled from Marw-al Rudh to Balkh during Ahnaf's conquest of Khorasan in 643.He fortified himself but was defeated by the Arabs and fled across the Oxus River.",
"Yazdegerd proceeded to Soghd, whose ruler supplied him a large army.",
"The Khaqan of Turks after assembling the troops from Ferghana, crossed the Oxus along with Yazdegerd and marched to Balkh.In 652, Ibn Amir sent al-Ahnaf to invade Tokharistan with 4,000 Arabs and 1,000 Iranian Muslims (evidently the Tamimis and asawira), probably because of assistance of its ruler to Yazdegerd's son Peroz.",
"He approached Balkh after conquering Marw al-Rudh and fighting an inconclusive battle with a 30,000-strong force from Guzgan, Faryab and Talqan.",
"After arriving at Balkh, he besieged the city, with its inhabitants offering a tribute of 400,000 or 700,000 dirhams.",
"He deputed his cousin to collect the tribute and advanced to Khwarezm but returned to Balkh as winter approached.",
"It was in Balkh in fall of 652 when the local people introduced his cousin Asid to gifting gold and silver to their governor during Mihrijan.Ziyad b. Abi Sufyan reorganised Basra and Kufa, excluding many from the ''diwan'' and inspiring him to settle 50,000 families in Khorasan.",
"Both Baladhuri and Mad'aini agree upon the number, though the latter states each half were from Basra and Kufa.",
"Al-'Ali disagrees, stating the Kufans were 10,000.Ghalib had been unsuccessful in his expedition, and Rabi b. Ziyad al-Harithi, who was appointed governor of Khorasan in 671, led the settlement expedition.",
"He advanced to Balkh and made a peace treaty with the locals who had revolted after al-Ahnaf's earlier treaty.Qutayba ibn Muslim led the final conquest of Balkh.",
"He was tasked with subduing the revolt in Lower Tokharistan.",
"His army was assembled in the spring of 705 and marched through Marw al-Rudh and Talqan to Balkh.",
"Per one version in Tarikh al-Tabari, the city was surrendered peacefully.",
"Another version, probably to promote a Bahilite claim on the Barmakids, speaks of a revolt among the residents.",
"The latter may be the correct version as Tabari describes the city as ruined four years later.",
"The wife of Barmak, a physician of Balkh, was taken captive during the war and given to 'Abdullah, Qutayba's brother.",
"She was later restored to her lawful husband after spending a period in 'Abdullah's harem.",
"Khalid was thus born in 706 and Abdallah accepted the implications of paternity without disturbing Barmak's conventional responsibilities or affecting Khalid's upbringing.In 708–709, the Ispahbadh, who was a local ruler, received a letter from the Hepthalite rebel Nezak Tarkhan, who was trying to unite the aristocracy of Tokharistan against Qutayba.",
"The Arabs built a new military encampment called ''Baruqan'' two farsangs away from the city.",
"In 725, the governor Asad ibn Abdallah al-Qasri had the city restored after a feud among Arab troops, with Barmak being employed as his agent for the task.Early Arabs tended to treat Iran as a single cultural unit, however it was a land of many countries with distinct populations and cultures.",
"From historical evidence, it appears that Tokharistan was the only area heavily colonized by Arabs where Buddhism flourished, and the only area incorporated into the Arab empire where Sanskrit studies were pursued up to the conquest.",
"The grandson of Barmak was the ''vizier'' of the Arab empire and took personal interest in Sanskrit works and Indian religions.",
"The eighth-century Korean traveller Hui'Chao records Hinayanists in Balkh under Arab rule.",
"He visited the area around 726, mentioning that the true king of Balkh was still alive and in exile.",
"He also describes all the inhabitants of the regions as Buddhists under Arab rule.",
"Other sources indicate however that the Bactrians practiced many different religions.Among Balkh's Buddhist monasteries, the largest was ''Nava Vihara'', later Persianized to ''Naw Bahara'' after the Islamic conquest of Balkh.",
"It is not known how long it continued to serve as a place of worship after the conquest.",
"Accounts of early Arabs offer contradictory narratives.",
"Per al-Baladhuri, its stupa-vihara complex was destroyed under Mu'awiya in 650s.",
"Tabari while reporting about the expedition in 650s, does not mention any tension around the temple, stating that Balkh was conquered by Rabi peacefully.",
"He also states that Nizak went to pray at the site during his revolt against Qutayba in 709, implying it may not have been destroyed.",
"Also, the tenth-century geographical treatise ''Hudud al-'Alam'' describes remaining royal buildings and Naw Bahara's decorations including painted image and wonderful works, probably secco or fresco murals and carvings on the temple's walls that survived into the author's time.Sanskrit, Greek, Latin and Chinese sources from the 2nd century BC to the 7th century AD, identify a people called \"Tukharas\", in the country later called Tukharistan.",
"Badakhshan was earlier the seat of the Tukharas.",
"There is no precise date for the Arab conquest of Badakhshan nor any record of how Islam was introduced there.",
"Al-Tabari too mentions this region only once.",
"In 736, Asad ibn Abdallah al-Qasri sent an expedition into Upper Tokharistan and Badakhshan against the rebel Al-Harith ibn Surayj who had occupied the fortress of Tabushkhan.",
"Juday' b.",
"'Ali al-Kirmani, who was sent on the expedition against al-Harith, captured Tabushkhan.",
"Juday also had its captive defenders killed while its women and children were enslaved and sold in Balkh despite being of Arab origin.",
"al-Harith later allied with the Turgesh and continued his rebellion until being pardoned by Caliph Yazid b. Walid in 744.Taking advantage of the factional fighting among the Arabs, Transoxania started rebelling and Asad b.",
"'Abdallah in response attacked Khuttal in 737.Armed forces of Soghd, Chach and many Turks, led by the Turkish Khagan Sulu, arrived to assist them.",
"Asad fled leaving behind the baggage of plunder from Khuttal.",
"When he returned with the main body of his troops, the Turks retired to Tokharistan and he returned to Balkh.",
"In December 737, the Turgesh attacked Khulm but were repelled by the Arabs.",
"Bypassing Balkh, they captured Guzgan's capital and sent out raiding parties.",
"Asad mounted a surprise attack on the Turks at Kharistan, who only had 4,000 troops.",
"The Turgesh suffered a devastating defeat and lost almost whole of their army.",
"Sulu and al-Harith fled to the territory of Tokharistan's Yabghu, with Sulu returning to his territory in winter of 737–738.===The Zunbils===The Zunbils were affected by Muslim conquests in the Indian subcontinent.The Zunbils in the pre-Saffarid period ruled in Zabulistan and Zamindawar, stretching between Ghazni and Bost, and had acted as a barrier against Muslim expansion for a long time.",
"Zamindawar is known to have a shrine dedicated to the god Zun.",
"It has been linked with the Hindu god Aditya at Multan, pre-Buddhist religious and kingship practices of Tibet, as well as Shaivism.",
"The followers of the Zunbils were called Turks by the Arabic sources, however they applied the name to all their enemies in eastern fringes of Iran.",
"They are described as having Turkish troops in their service by sources like Tabari and ''Tarikh-e-Sistan''.The first time the title of Zunbil appears in Arabic sources, it does so along with that of the Kabul Shah and according to Tabari was the title of the brother of Kabul's king (either Barha Tegin or Tegin Shah).",
"The Zunbil apparently broke away from the overlordship of Kabul around 680 AD and established his own kingdom in Zabulistan and al-Rukhkhaj.The kingdom of Zabulistan (ar-Rukhkhaj) with its capital at Ghazni, where the king Zunbil or Rutbil resided, is mentioned by Chinese sources under the suzerainty of Jabghu of Turkestan.",
"The significance for Arabs of the realm of Zun and its rulers was them preventing their early campaigns from invading the Indus Valley through eastern and southern Afghanistan.",
"It was only under the early Saffarids that mass-Islamization took place unlike the plunder-raids or tribute levies of Arab rule.",
"The expeditions under Caliph al-Ma'mun against Kabul and Zabul were the last ones and the long conflict ended with the dissolution of the Arab empire following soon thereafter.Sakawand in Zabulistan was a major centre of Hindu pilgrimage.====7th century====After appearing at Zarang, Abd al-Rahman ibn Samura and his force of 6,000 Arabs penetrated to the shrine of Zun in 653–654.He broke off a hand from the idol of Zun and plucked out the rubies used as its eyes to demonstrate to the marzban of Sistan that the idol could neither hurt nor benefit anyone.",
"He also took Zabul by treaty by 656.In the shrine of Zoon in Zamindawar, it is reported that Samura \"broke off a hand of the idol and plucked out the rubies which were its eyes in order to persuade the marzbān of Sīstān of the god's worthlessness.\"",
"Samura explained to the marzbān: \"my intention was to show you that this idol can do neither any harm nor good.\"",
"Bost and Zabul submitted to the Arab invader by treaty in 656 CE.",
"The Muslims soon lost these territories during the First Civil War (656-661).In 665 CE, after being reappointed to Sistan under Mu'awiya, Samura defeated Zabulistan whose people had broken the earlier agreement.",
"Samura was replaced as governor by Rabi b. Ziyad and died in 50 AH (670 AD), while the king of Zabul rebelled along with the Kabul Shah and the two together reconquered Zabulistan and Rukhkhaj according to al-Baladhuri.Ar-Rabi, the Arab governor, however attacked the Zunbil at Bust and made him flee.",
"He then pursued him to Rukhkhaj, where he attacked him and then subdued the city of ad-Dawar.",
"Ziyad b. Abi Sufyan was appointed governor of Basra in 665, with Khorasan and Sistan coming under his mandate as well.",
"He had first appointed Rabi to Sistan but replaced him later with 'Ubaydallah b. Abi Bakra.",
"During this period, Zunbil's fierce resistance continued until he finally agreed to pay one million dirhams per Baladhuri and ''Tarikh-e-Sistan''.",
"The Zunbil also negotiated for a peace treaty for both Zabul and Kabul.Al-Baladhuri records that under Mu'awiya, Sistan's governor 'Abbad b. Ziyad b. Abihi raided and captured the city of Qandahar after bitter fighting.",
"He also mentions the characteristic high caps of the people of the city.",
"Though his text is somewhat ambiguous, it seems that 'Abbad had renamed the town as '''Abbadiya'' after himself.",
"The Muslim rule was probably toppled and the name is never heard after his governorship ended in 680–1, by 698 there was no Muslim-controlled region east of Bost.",
"The city was ruled by Arab Muslims and Zunbils, and then later Saffarids and Ghaznavids.",
"It is infrequently mentioned in the early Islamic sources.In 681, Salm b. Ziyad was appointed the governor of Khorasan and Sistan by Yazid I.",
"He appointed his brother Yazid b. Ziyad, apparently to lead a military expedition against the Zunbil of Zabulistan.",
"The expedition however was disastrous, with Yazid being killed, his brother Abu-'Ubayda captured, while Arabs received heavy casualties.",
"Salm sent an expedition by Talha b.",
"'Abdillah al-Khuzai to rescue his brother and pacify the region.",
"The Arab captives were ransomed for half million dirhams and the region was pacified more through diplomacy than force.After Talha's death in 683–684, a virtual anarchy was unleashed amongst Sistan's Arabs.",
"His army refused allegiance to Yazid or Mu'awiya II and his son 'Abadallah had to abandon Zarang, which was left without any in charge.",
"Many Arabs took over various quarters of Zarang and areas of Sistan.",
"This prompted the Zunbil and his allies, who had already inflicted a humiliating defeat on the Arabs earlier, to intervene in the Arab affairs at Sistan and Bust.",
"Baladhuri says of this period:During the Second Fitna period, the Zunbil attacked Sistan in 685 but was defeated and killed by the Arabs.Abdalmalik appointed Umayya ibn Abdallah ibn Khalid ibn Asid as governor of Khorasan in 74 AH (693-4 AD), with Sistan included under his governorship.",
"Umayya sent his son Abdullah as head of the expedition in Sistan.",
"Though initially successful, the new Zunbil was able to defeat them.",
"Per some accounts, Abdullah himself was killed.",
"Umayya was dismissed and Sistan was added to the governorship of al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf.====Under Al-Hajjaj====Al-Hajjaj, who had become governor of Iraq and the East in 78 AH (697–98 AD), had appointed Ubaidallah, who was a ''mawla'' of mixed Abyssinian and Iraqi-Persian origins, as his deputy in Sistan.",
"The Zunbils, who had been left unchecked, had completely stopped paying the tribute.",
"This provided a pretext to terminate the peace treaty between the two sides.",
"Ubaidallah was appointed for an expedition against them in 698 and was ordered by Al-Hajjaj to \"attack until he laid waste to Zunbil's territories, destroyed his strongholds, killed all his fighting men and enslaved his progeny\".",
"The ensuing campaign was called the \"Army of Destruction\" (''Jaish al-Fana''').",
"However, it ended disastrously for the Arabs.Al-Baladhuri's account on the authority of Al-Mada'ini in ''Futuh al-Buldan'' and ''Ansab al-Ashraf'', is the fullest documentation of the campaign.",
"Tabari's account runs parallel but is based on Abu Mikhnaf and does not include the poem of A'sha Hamdan included in ''Ansab al-Ashraf''.",
"Ibn Qutaybah's ''Kitab al-Ma'arif'' only makes a bare mention.",
"''Ta'rikh al-khulafa''' has a more detailed account and epitomises accounts of Tabari and Baladhuri.",
"''Tarikh-e-Sistan'' confuses the campaign with another one against the Khwarij of Zarang.",
"The army consisted of Iraqis from Basra and Kufa, though Baladhuri mentions presence of some Syrians.",
"Ubaidallah himself led the Basrans while the Tabi Shuraih b. Hani' al-Harithi ad-Dabbi led the Kufans.They marched to Zamindawar or al-Rukhkhaj (the classical Arachosia) but found it barren and foodless.",
"Their advance probably happened in summer of 698, as A'sha Hamdan's poem refers to the scorching heat they had to endure.",
"In Zabulistan's regions of Ghazni and Gardiz, they plundered a significant amount of cattle and other animals, in addition to destroying various strongholds.",
"The Zunbils, who were devastating the countryside whilst retreating, were luring the Arabs into a trap to an inhospitable and foodless terrain.",
"''Futuh al-Buldan'' states that the Muslims almost penetrated Kabul.",
"Tabari meanwhile says that they came within 18 farsakhs of the summer capital of Zunbils in the Qandahar region.The plan of the Zunbils worked and they trapped the Arabs into a valley.",
"Ubaidallah realizing the gravity of the situation, offered 500,000 or 700,000 dirhams as well as his three sons along with some Arab leaders as hostages while promising not to raid again during his tenure as Sistan's governor.",
"Shuraih, who had earlier advised retreat, felt a withdrawal would be dishonorable.",
"He was joined by a group of people into the battle, and all but a handful of them were killed.",
"The remnant of the Arab army withdrew back to Bust and Sistan, suffering from starvation and thirst.",
"Many died in the \"Desert of Bust\", presumably the Registan Desert, with only 5,000 making it back to Bust.",
"Many of those who survived died by gorging themselves on the food sent to them according to Tabari.",
"Ubaidallah had arranged food for them after seeing their suffering and himself died, either from grief or an ear affliction.Al-Hajjaj prepared another expedition in 699, reportedly of 40,000 troops from Kufa and Basra under Abdurrahman b. Muhammad b. al-Ash'ath.",
"Though disguised as a military expedition, it was actually a forced migration of the elements from the two Iraqi cities troublesome to Hajjaj.",
"It was equipped to the best standards and was called the \"Army of Peacocks\" because of the men included in its ranks.",
"It included the proudest and most distinguished leaders of Iraq led by Ibn al-Ash'ath, grandson of Al-Ash'ath ibn Qays.",
"It also included distinguished elders who served in the first armies of conquest as well as those who fought at Battle of Siffin.",
"This Arab army arrived in Sistan in the spring of 699.The Arabs advanced east into Zabulistan and won several victories.",
"However the troops did not want to fight in this inhospitable region and started becoming restive.",
"Al-Hajjaj instructed them to continue the advance into Zabulistan's heart no matter what it took, making it clear to them he wanted them to return to their homes.",
"Ibn al-Ash'ath also made an agreement with the Zunbils, that no tribute would be demanded if he won and in case he lost, he would be sheltered to protect him from Al-Hajjaj.",
"The troops mutinied against Hajjaj's enforced emigration and returned to Iraq but were crushed by the Syrian troops.",
"They fled back to the east while Ibn al-Ash'ath fled to Sistan where he died in 704 AD.When Ibn al-Ash'ath returned to Sistan in 702-703 AD, he wasn't allowed into Zarang and fled to Bust where he was abducted by Iyad b. Himyan al-Bakri as-Sadusi, whom he had appointed as the deputy over Bust, so Iyad could resecure favor of al-Hajjaj.",
"The Zunbil however attacked the town and threatened to slaughter or enslave everyone there unless Ibn al-Ash'ath was handed over to him.",
"Iyad set him free and he went to the Zunbil's territory along with his army.",
"The Zunbil was however persuaded by Al-Hajjaj's representative to surrender him.",
"His fate is however unclear.",
"Per some accounts, he committed suicide, while according to others he was killed by the Zunbil, who sent his head to the Umayyads in Sistan.",
"Following this, a truce was declared between Al-Hajjaj and the Zunbil, in return for the latter paying tribute in kind and in return, Al-Hajjaj promised not to attack him.====From 8th century====Qutayba b. Muslim, the conqueror of Transoxiana, called Sijistan an \"ill-omened front\", and forced the Zunbils to pay tribute.",
"Khalid al-Qasri in Iraq appointed Yazid b. al Ghurayf al-Hamdani as Sistan's governor, a Syrian from Jund al-Urdunn, in 725.Yazid resumed the campaign by sending an army under the command of Balal b. Abi Kabsha.",
"They however did not obtain anything from the Zunbils.The new governor of Sistan, al-Asfah b.",
"'Abd Allah al-Kalbi, a Syrian, embarked on an ambitious policy of campaigning against the Zunbils.",
"The first one was carried out in 726.During the second one in late 727–728, he was warned by the Sijistanis who were with him to not campaign in winter, especially in the mountain defiles.",
"Per Ya'qubi, his army was completely annihilated by the Zunbils.",
"Per ''Tarikh al-Sistani'', al-Asfah managed to get back to Sistan where he died.",
"The next two governors did not undertake any campaigns.",
"The Zunbil was unable to take advantage of the annihilation of al-Asfah's army, but the defeat was a heavy one.",
"It would become one in a series of blows for the caliphate.The Sistan front remained quiet in the latter part of Abd al-Malik's reign except perhaps the Kharjite activity, with long tenures and blank records of 'Abd Allah b. Abi Baruda and Ibrahim b.",
"'Asim al-'Uqayli suggesting that the instability in the region had been controlled to an extent.",
"It appears this was only possible because no more campaigns were undertaken against the Zunbils.Al-Mansur sent Ma'n b. Zaida ash-Shabani to Sistan in response to the disturbances there.",
"Ma'n along with his nephew Yazid b. Ziyad undertook an expedition against the Zunbil for making him obedient and restoring the tribute not paid since the time of al-Hajjaj.",
"It is especially well-documented by al-Baladhuri.",
"He ordered the Zunbil to pay the tribute and was offered camels, Turkish tents and slaves, but this did not placate him.",
"Per al-Baldahuri, under the reign of al-Mansur, Hisham b.",
"'Amr al-Taghlibi after conquering Kandahar, destroyed its idol-temple and built a mosque in its place.Ma'n and Yazid advanced into Zamindawar but the Zunbil had fled to Zabulistan.",
"They nonetheless pursued and defeated him, taking 30,000 as captives, including Faraj al-Rukhkhaji, who would later become a secretary of the department of private estates of the Caliph under al-Ma'mun.",
"Zunbil's deputy Mawand (who is recorded as his son-in-law Mawld in ''Tarikh-e-Sistan'') offered submission, which was requested, and was sent with 5,000 of their soldiers to Baghdad, where he was treated kindly and given pensions along with his chieftains per Baladhuri.The tribute was paid by the Zunbils to ''amils'' of caliphs al-Mahdi and ar-Rashid, though rather irregularly.",
"When the Caliph Al-Ma'mun (r. 813–833 AD) visited Khorasan, he was paid double the tribute by Rutbil, but was evidently left unmolested and the Arabs later subdued Kabul.===Kabulistan===The Turk Shahi kingdom of Kabul in 700 ADThe area of Kabul was initially ruled by the Nezak Huns.",
"Sometime after the defeat of their last king Ghar-ilchi at the hands of Samura, the Turkic Barha Tegin rebelled and assaulted Kabul.",
"Ghar-ilchi was killed and Barha Tegin proceeded to proclaim himself as the king of Kabul, before taking Zabulistan in the south.",
"The \"Turk Shahi\" dynasty established by him however split into two around 680 AD.",
"The dynasty was Buddhist and were followed by a Hindu dynasty shortly before the Saffarid conquest in 870 AD.Al-Ma'mun's expeditions were the last Arab conflict against Kabul and Zabul and the long-drawn conflict ended with the dissolution of the empire.",
"Muslim missionaries converted many people to Islam; however, the entire population did not convert, with repetitive revolts from the mountain tribes in the Afghan area taking place.",
"The Hindu Shahi dynasty was defeated by Mahmud of Ghazni (r. 998–1030), who expelled them from Gandhara and also encouraged mass-conversions in Afghanistan and India.During the caliphate of Uthman, new popular uprisings had broken out in Persia and continued for five years from 644 to 649.The revolts were suppressed and Abdullah b. Amir, who was appointed governor of Basra, had captured many cities including Balkh, Herat and Kabul.After Mu'awiya became the Caliph, he prepared an expedition under 'Abd ar-Rahman b. Samura to Khorasan.",
"Per Baladhuri, after recapturing Zarang as well as conquering other cities, the Arabs besieged Kabul for a few months and finally entered it.",
"Samura concluded a treaty and proceeded to attack Bost, al-Rukhkhaj and Zabulistan.",
"The people of Kabul however rebelled and Samura was forced to recapture the city.",
"The account of ''Tarjuma-i Futuhat'' however differs and states that Samura besieged the city for a year.",
"After capturing it, he had all the soldiers massacred and their wives and children taken as captives.",
"He also ordered the captured king Ghar-ilchi to be beheaded, but spared him when he converted.",
"Around the same time according to al-Baladhuri, Al-Muhallab ibn Abi Sufra launched an attack on the Indian frontier, reaching up to Bannu and \"al-Ahwaz\" (Waihind).",
"The historian Firishta states that while capturing Kabul in 664 AD, Samura had made converts of some 12,000 people.The new king of Kabul Barha Tegin and the Zunbil campaigned against the Arabs after Samura's departure, recapturing Kabul, Zabulistan and al-Rukhkhaj.",
"Rabi b. Ziyad attacked the Zunbil after becoming governor in 671 AD.",
"His successor Ubayd Allah b. Abi Bakra continued the campaign in 673 AD, with the Zunbil negotiating for both Zabul and Kabul soon afterwards.",
"About the time of death of Yazid I however, \"the people of Kabul treacherously broke the compact\".",
"The Arab army sent to reimpose it was routed.In about 680–683, the kingdom split into two with the Zunbil fleeing from his brother, the king of Kabul, and approaching Salm b. Ziyad at Amul in Khorasan.",
"In return for him agreeing to acknowledge Salm as his overlord, the Zunbil was allowed to settle down in Amul.",
"Soon he drove his brother out and established himself in Amul.",
"The location of Amul mentioned by Tabari is not certain, Josef Markwart identified it with Zabul.",
"Tabari however claims the Kabul Shah fled instead from the Zunbil and established himself as an independent king during the reign of Mu'awiya.Abdur Rehman, who studied the descriptions of Tabari however stated that these events should be seen as having happened in Yazid's time since Salm was governor under his reign.",
"In 152 AH (769 AD), Humayd ibn Qahtaba, the governor of Khorasan, raided Kabul.",
"According to Ibn al-Athir, al-'Abbas b. Ja'far led an expedition against Kabul sent by his father Ja'far b. Muhamamad in 787–78, which Bosworth claims is the one attributed to Ibrahim b. Jibril by Al-Ya'qubi.The only record of an event in early Abbasid period obviously related to the area south of the Hindu Kush, is the expedition against Kabul in 792-793 ordered by Al-Fadl ibn Yahya and led by Ibrahim b. Jibril.",
"It is mentioned by al-Tabari's chronicle, the tenth century ''Kitāb al-Wuzarā'wa al-Kuttāb'' of al-Jahshiyari and by al-Ya'qubi.",
"Per al-Jahshiyari, he conquered Kabul and acquired a lot of wealth.",
"Al-Ya'qubi states that rulers and landlords of Tukharistan, including Bamiyan's king, joined this army, implying it crossed the Hindu Kush from the north.",
"It also mentions the subjugation of \"Ghurwand\" (present-day Ghorband).",
"He also mentions the \"Pass of Ghurwand\", which judging by the itinerary of the expedition from Tukharistan to Bamiyan to Ghorband valley, is identical to Shibar Pass.",
"They then marched to Shah Bahar where an idol venerated by the locals was destroyed.",
"The inhabitants of various towns then concluded peace treaties with Fadl, one of which was identified by Josef Markwart as Kapisa.Al-Ma'mun (r. 813–833 AD) while visiting Khorasan, launched an attack on Kabul, whose ruler submitted to taxation.",
"The king of Kabul was captured and he then converted to Islam.",
"Per sources, when the Shah submitted to al-Ma'mun, he sent his crown and bejeweled throne, later seen by the Meccan historian al-Azraqi, to the Caliph who praised Fadl for \"curbing polytheists, breaking idols, killing the refractory\" and refers to his successes against Kabul's king and ''ispahabad''.",
"Other near-contemporary sources however refer to the artifacts as a golden jewel-encrusted idol sitting on a silver throne by the Hindu Shahi ruler or by an unnamed ruler of \"Tibet\" as a sign of his conversion to Islam.===Qutayba's campaigns===Qutayba b. Muslim was appointed the governor of Khorasan in 705 by al-Hajjaj b. Yusuf, the governor of Iraq and the East.",
"He began his rule with the reconquest of western Tokharistan in the same year.",
"Qutayba, who was tasked with subduing the revolt in Lower Tokharistan, led the final conquest of Balkh.",
"His army was assembled in spring of 705 and marched to Balkh.",
"Per one version of al-Tabari, the city was surrendered peacefully.",
"Another version, speaks of a revolt among the residents.",
"In 706, he received the submission of Nizak, the leader of Badghis.",
"In 707, he marched on Bukhara oasis along with Nizak in his army but the campaign did not achieve any major objective.According to Baldhuri, when Qutayba became the governor of Khorasan and Sistan, he appointed his brother 'Amr to Sistan.",
"'Amr asked the Zunbil to pay tribute in cash but he refused, prompting Qutayba to march against him.",
"The campaign was also partially encouraged by his desire to eliminate the support of the southern Hepthalites, the Zabulites, for their northern brethren to revolt.",
"Zunbil, who was surprised by this unexpected move and scared of Qutayba's reputation, quickly capitulated.",
"Qutayba, realizing the real strength of the Zunbils, accepted it and returned to Merv, leaving only an Arab representative in Sistan.Per Al-Mada'ini, Qutayba returned to Merv after conquering Bukhara in 709.The rebellion of the Hepthalite principalities from the region of Guzgan, including Taloqan and Faryab, led Qutayba to dispatch 12,000 men from Merv to Balkh in winter of 709.The rebellion was led and organized by Nezak Tarkhan and was supported by Balkh and Marw al-Rudh's dihqan Bādām.",
"Nizak had realised that independence would not be possible if Arab rule was strengthened in Khorasan, and perhaps was also encouraged by Qutayba's attempts to achieve his objectives through diplomacy.",
"The success of Zunbils may also have encouraged him.Nizak wrote to the Zunblis asking for help.",
"In addition, he also forced the weak Jābghū of Tokharistan to join his cause to persuade all princes of the Principalities of Tukharistan to do the same.",
"His plan to stage the revolt in spring of 710 was however spoilt by Qutayba.",
"Bādām fled when Qutayba advanced on Marw al-Rudh but his two sons were caught and crucified by him.",
"Qutayba next marched to Taloqan, which was the only place in his campaign where the inhabitants were not given a complete amnesty, concerning which H.A.R.",
"Gibb states the \"traditions are hopelessly confused\".",
"Per one account, he executed and crucified a band of bandits there, though it is possible it was selected for this severity as it was the only place where there was an open revolt.Faryab and Guzgan both submitted and their inhabitants were not harmed.",
"From there, Qutayba went on to receive the submission of people of Balkh.",
"Almost all of Nizak's princely allies had reconciled themselves with Qutayba and there were Arab governors in all towns of Tokharistan, spoiling his plans.",
"He fled south to the Hindu Kush, hoping to reach Kabul and entrenched himself in an inaccessible mountain pass guarded by a fortress.",
"The Arabs succeeded in gaining the fort with help of Ru'b Khan, ruler of Ru'b and Siminjan.",
"Nizak fled along the modern road that leads from the Oxus valley to Salang Pass and holed up in an unidentified mountain refuge in a site of Baghlan Province.",
"Qutayba caught up with him and besieged him for two months.Sulaym al-Nasih (the counsellor), a ''mawla'' of Khorasan, helped in obtaining Nizak's surrender to Qutayba who promised a pardon.",
"Nonetheless, he was executed along with 700 of his followers after orders from al-Hajjaj.",
"The Jabghu of Tokharistan was sent as a valuable hostage to Damascus.",
"Qutayba then went in pursuit of Juzjan's king, who requested amnesty and called for exchange of hostages as a precautionary measure.",
"This was agreed upon and Habib b.",
"'Abd Allah, a Bahilite, was sent as prisoner by Qutayba while the king sent some of his family members in return.",
"The peace treaty was agreed but the king died in Taloqan on his return journey.",
"His subjects accused the Muslims of poisoning him and killed Habib, with Qutayba retaliating by executing Juzjan's hostages.===Other regions=======Ghur====Tabari records that in 667 AD, Ziyad b. Abihi had sent Hakam b.",
"'Amr al-Ghafri to Khorasan as Amir.",
"Hakam raided Ghur and Farawanda, bringing them to submission through force of arms and conquered them.",
"He obtained captives and a large amount of plunder from them.",
"A larger expedition was undertaken under Asad ibn Abdallah al-Qasri, the governor of Khorasan, who raided Gharchistan in 725, receiving its submission as well as the conversion of its king to Islam.",
"He next attacked Ghur whose residents hid their valuables in an inaccessible cave, but he was able to plunder the wealth by lowering his men in crates.Asad's success prompted him to undertake a second expedition in 108-109 AH against Ghur.",
"The poet Thabit Qutna's eulogical poem of Asad recorded by Tabari called it a campaign against the Turks saying, \"Groups of the Turks who live between Kabul and Ghur came to you, since there was no place in which they might find refuge from you.\"",
"Bosworth states that this campaign may have actually taken place in Guzgan or Bamiyan rather than the purely-Iranian Ghur.",
"He also states that no doubt further sporadic raids continued throughout the Umayyad rule, though not noted by historians.",
"It is known that Nasr ibn Sayyar's commander Sulaiman b. Sul had raided Gharchistan and Ghur some time before 739 AD.The early history of Ghor is unclear.",
"Minhaj-i-Siraj in Tabaqat-i-Nasiri states that Shansab, who established the Ghurid dynasty, was converted by the Arab Caliph Ali which Mohammad Habib and K. A. Nizami dismissed as unlikely.",
"He further adds that the Ghurid Amir Faulad assisted Abu Muslim in overthrowing the Umayyads during the Abbasid Revolution.",
"He also recounts a legend about a dispute between two prominent families of the area.",
"They sought the intercession of the Abbasids and the ancestor of the Shansabi family, Amir Banji, was subsequently confirmed as the ruler by Harun al-Rashid.No permanent control was ever established on Ghur.",
"According to Bosworth, its value was only for its slaves which could best be obtained in occasional temporary raids.",
"Arab and Persian geographers never considered it important.",
"In all sources it is cited as supplying slaves to slave markets in Khorasan, indicating it had a mostly \"infidel\" population.",
"Istakhari called it a land of infidels (''dar al-kufr'') annexed to Islamic domain because of its Muslim minority.",
"However ''Hudud al-'Alam'' stated it had a mostly-Muslim population.====Ghazni====The pre-Ghaznavid royal dynasty of Ghazni were the Lawiks.",
"Afghan historian 'Abd al-Hayy Habibi Qandahari, who in 1957 examined a manuscript containing tales about miracles (''karamat'') of ''Shaikh'' Sakhi Surur of Multan, who lived in the 12th century, concluded it dated to 1500.He recorded one of its anecdotes which records the history of Ghazni by the Indian traditionalist and lexicographer Radi ad-Din Hasan b. Muhammad al-Saghani (died 1252) from Abu Hamid az-Zawuli.",
"According to it, a great mosque at Ghazni was earlier a great idol-temple built in honor of the Rutbils and Kabul-Shahs by Wujwir Lawik.",
"His son Khanan converted to Islam and was sent a poem by the Kabul-Shah saying, \"Alas!",
"The idol of Lawik has been interred beneath the earth of Ghazni, and the Lawiyan family have given away the embodiment of their kingly power.",
"I am going to send my own army; do not yourself follow the same way of the Arabs ie., Islam.",
"\"Habibi continues stating that Khanan later reconverted to the faith of the Hindu-Shahis.",
"His grandson Aflah however upon assuming power demolished the idol-temple and built a mosque in its place.",
"When the saint Surur arrived at the mosque, he is said to have found the idol of Lawik and destroyed it.",
"The ''Siyasatnama'' of Nizam al-Mulk, the ''Tabaqat-i Nasiri'' of Juzjani and the ''Majma' al-ansāb fī't-tawārīkh'' of Muhammad Shabankara'i (14th century) mention Lawik.",
"Juzjani gives the Lawik who was defeated by Alp-tegin the Islamic ''kunya'' of ''Abu Bakr'', though Shabankara'i claims he was a pagan.",
"A variant of his name appears as Anuk in ''Tabaqat-i Nasiri''.====Bamyan====Ya'qubi states that the lord of Bamyan called the ''Shēr'', was converted to Islam under Caliph Al-Mansur (d.775) by Muzahim b. Bistam, who married his son Abu Harb Muhammad to his daughter.",
"However, in his history he changes it to the rule of Al-Mahdi (r. 775–785).",
"Ya'qubi also states that Al-Fadl ibn Yahya made Hasn, Abu Harb Muhammad's son, as the new ''Shēr'' after his successful campaign in Ghorband.",
"Ya'qubi states that the ruler of Bamiyan had accompanied an expedition dispatched by Al-Fadl ibn Yahya in 792–793 against the Kabul Shahi.Later Shers remained Muslim and were influential at the Abbasid court.",
"However, Muslim sources describe the Saffarid ruler Ya'qub ibn al-Layth al-Saffar looting Bamiyan's pagan idols.",
"A much later historian Shabankara'i claims that Alp-Tegin obtained conversion of the Sher to Islam in 962.It seems there were lapses to Buddhism among some of the rulers as the Muslim influence grew weak.",
"However, there is no evidence about the role of Buddhism during these periods or whether Buddhist monasteries remained the center of religious life and teaching."
],
[
"Post-Arab rule",
"Area controlled by the Samanids in 943 under Nasr II===Tahirids===Khurasan was the base for early recruitment of Abbasid armies, especially the Abbasid takeover received support from Arab settlers aiming to undermine the important sections of non-Muslim aristocracy.",
"The Abbasids succeeded in integrating Khorasan and the East into the central Islamic lands.",
"The state was gradually Persianized through political influence and financial support of the ''dihqans''.",
"Al-Ma'mun emerged as the victor in the Fourth Fitna with the help of Khorasani forces and appointed Tahir ibn Husayn as the governor.",
"Later, he appointed Talha as the governor in 822 and Abdallah in 828.But after the Abbasid decline, Khorasan ended up turning into a virtually independent state under a Persian ''mawla'' who rose to favour under Al-Ma'mun.According to Ibn Khordadbeh, the Shah of Kabul had to send 2,000 Oghuz slaves worth 600,000 dirhams as annual tribute to the governor of Khorasan Abdallah ibn Tahir (r. 828-845).",
"In addition to the Oghuz slaves, he also had to pay an annual tribute of 1.5 million dirhams.",
"Mid-9th century, one of their tributaries Abu Da'udid or the Banijurid Amir Da'ud b. Abu Da'ud Abbas, undertook an obscure campaign into eastern Afghanistan and Zabulistan that was profitable.",
"It is recorded that in 864 Muhammad ibn Tahir sent two elephants captured at Kabul, idols and aromatic substances to the caliph.===Saffarids===Saffarid rule at its greatest extent under Ya'qub b. al-Layth al-Saffar====Ya'qub b. al-Layth====The Tahirid rule was overthrown by Ya'qub ibn al-Layth al-Saffar of Sistan, the first independent Iranian ruler in the post-Islamic era.",
"He also fought against the Abbasid Caliphate.",
"He joined the 'ayyar band of Salih b. al-Nadr/Nasr, who was recognised as Bust's amir in 852.al-Nasr aimed at taking over whole of Sistan and drove out the Tahirid governor in 854, with Sistan ceasing to be under the direct control of the Caliphate.",
"al-Nasr himself was overthrown by Dirham b. Nasr who was overthrown by Ya'qub in 861.Ya'qub and his brother Amr advanced as far as Baghdad and to Kabul itself in eastern Afghanistan with their dynamism, advancing along the historic route taken by the modern Lashkargah-Qandahar-Ghazni-Kabul road.",
"Their eastern campaigns are documented by Arabic sources of Al-Masudi's ''Murūj adh-dhahab'', Ibn al-Athir's ''al-Kāmil fi't-tā'rīkh'' and ''Tarikh-e-Sistan''.",
"The Persian historian Gardizi's ''Zain al-akhbār'' also mentions the Saffarid campaigns.Salih fled to ar-Rukhkhaj or Arachosia, where he received the help of the Zunbil.",
"Both Salih and the Zunbil were killed by Ya'qub in 865.Abu Sa'id Gardezi mentions that Ya'qub advanced from Sistan to Bust and occupied the city.",
"From here he advanced to Panjway and Tiginabad (two of the chief towns of Arachosia), defeating and killing the Zunbil, though the date is not given.",
"This account matches with that of ''Tarikh-e-Sistan''.",
"Satish Chandra states that, \"We are told that it was only in 870 AD that Zabulistan was finally conquered by one Yakub who was the virtual ruler of the neighbouring Iranian province of Siestan.",
"The king was killed and his subjects were made Muslims.",
"\"Muhammad Aufi's ''Jawami ul-Hikayat'' meanwhile states that during his invasion of Zabul, Yaqub employed a ruse to surrender after being allowed to pay homage to the ruler along with his troops, lest they disperse and become dangerous to both sides.",
"Yaqub's troops \"carried their lances concealed behind their horses and were wearing coats of mail under their garments.",
"The Almighty made the army of Rusal (probably Rutbil), blind, so that they did not see the lances.",
"When Yaqub drew near Rusal, he bowed his head as if to do homage, but raised a lance and thrust it in the back of Rusal so that he died on the spot.",
"His people also fell like lightning upon the enemy, cutting them down with their swords and staining the earth with the blood of the enemies of the religion.",
"The infidels when they saw the head of Rusal upon the point of a spear took to flight and great bloodshed ensued.",
"This victory, which he achieved, was the result of treachery and deception, such as no one had ever committed.",
"\"Ashirbadi Lal Srivastava states that after this victory by Yaqub over Zabul, the position of Lallya alias Kallar, the Brahmin minister who had overthrown the last Kshatriya king of Kabul Lagaturman, seems to have become untenable.",
"He shifted his capital to Udhaband in 870 AD.",
"Lallya, credited as an able and strong ruler by Kalhana in ''Rajatarangini'', was driven out by Ya'qub from Kabul within a year of his usurpation according to Srivastava.Gardezi states that after defeating the Zunbil, Yaqub then advanced into Zabulistan and then Ghazni, whose citadel he destroyed and forced Abu Mansur Aflah b. Muhammad b. Khaqan, the local ruler of nearby Gardez, to tributary status.",
"''Tarikh-e-Sistan'' however in contrast states that he returned to Zarang after killing Salih.",
"This campaign may be related to Gardizi's account of a later expedition in 870 where he advanced as far as Bamiyan and Kabul.",
"Salih b. al-Hujr, described as a cousin of the Zunbil, was appointed as the Saffarid governor of ar-Rukhkhaj, but rebelled two years after Zunbil's death and committed suicide to avoid capture.Ya'qub had captured several relatives of the Zunbil's family after defeating Salih b. al-Nasr.",
"Zunbil's son escaped from captivity in 869 and quickly raised an army in al-Rukhkhaj, later seeking refuge with the Kabul-Shah.",
"Per Gardizi, Ya'qub undertook another expedition in 870 which advanced as far as Kabul and Bamiyan.",
"According to ''Tarikh-e-Sistan'', Bamiyan was captured in 871 and its idol-temple was plundered.",
"Ya'qub defeated Kabul in 870 and again had to march there in 872 when the Zunbil's son took possession of Zabulistan.",
"Ya'qub captured him from the fortress of Nay-Laman where he had fled.",
"In 871, Ya'qub sent 50 gold and silver idols he gained by campaigning from Kabul to Caliph Al-Mu'tamid, who sent them to Mecca.According to Tabaqat-i-Nasiri, Ghor, which was ruled by Amir Suri in the 9th century, entered into a war against Ya'qub, but escaped conquest due to its difficult and mountainous terrain.====Amr b. al-Layth====After Ya'qub's death in 879, Al-Mu'tamid recognised his brother and successor 'Amr b. al-Layth (r. 879–902), as governor of Khorasan, Isfahan, Fars, Sistan and Sindh.",
"The caliph however announced divesting him of all his governorships in 885 and reappointed Muhammad b. Tahir as the governor of Khorasan.",
"He was reappointed governor of Khorasan in 892 by Al-Mu'tadid.Amr led an expedition as far as Sakawand in the Logar Valley, between Ghazni and Kabul, described as a Hindu pilgrimage-centre.",
"In 896, he sent idols captured from Zamindawar and the Indian frontier, including a female copper idol with four arms and two girdles of silver set with jewels and pulled on a trolley by camels, to Baghdad.",
"Al-Baihaki mentions Sakawand as a pass from Kabul to India.",
"It was situated at or near Jalalabad.",
"The idol taken from somewhere in eastern Afghanistan by Amr was displayed for three days in Basra and then for three days in Baghdad.",
"Jamal J. Elias states that it may have been of Lakshmi or Sukhavati at Sakawand.",
"Al-Masudi emphasises the attention it received as a spectacle, with crowds gathering to gawk at it.Aufi states that Amr had sent Fardaghan as the prefect over Ghazni and he launched the raid on Sakawand, which was a part of the territory of Kabul Shahi and had a temple frequented by Hindus.",
"The Shah of Kabul at this time was Kamaluka, called \"Kamalu\" in Persian literature.",
"Fardaghan entered it and succeeded in surprising Sakawand.",
"Sakawand was plundered, and its temple destroyed.Kamalu counter-attacked Fardaghan, who realising his forces were no match for his, resorted to spreading a false rumour that he knew his intentions and had organised a formidable army against him with 'Amr on the way to join him.",
"The rumour had the desired effect and the opposing army slowed its advance, knowing that they could be ambushed and slaughtered if they advanced impetuously into the narrow defiles.",
"Meanwhile, Fardaghan received reinforcements from Khorasan according to Aufi.",
"According to Aufi, he cleverly averted the danger.",
"''Tarikh-e-Sistan'' does not mention any attack by Fardaghan on Sakawand however, instead beginning with the attack by Kamalu.",
"Per it, when Amr was in Gurgan, he heard that ''Nasad Hindi'' and ''Alaman Hindi'' had allied and invaded Ghazni.",
"The Saffarid governor 'Fard 'Ali was defeated and fled.===Samanids===Khorasan and Iran at the beginning of 11th centuryThe Samanids came to rule over areas including Khorasan, Sistan, Tokharistan and Kabulistan after Ismail (r. 892–907) in 900 AD had defeated the Saffarids, who had taken over Zabulistan and the Kabul region.",
"The Turks were highly noted for their martial prowess by the Muslim sources and were in high demand as slave-soldiers (''ghulam'', ''mamluk'') by the Caliphate in Baghdad and the provincial emirs.",
"The slaves were acquired either in military campaigns or through trade.",
"The Samanids were heavily involved in this trade of Turkish slaves from lands to the north and east of their state.",
"As the enslavement was limited to non-Muslims and with the Turks increasingly adopting Islam beyond Samanid borders, they also entered Transoxiana as free men due to various causes.The Ghaznavids arose indirectly from the atmosphere of disintegration, palace revolutions and succession putsches of the Samanid Empire.",
"Abu-Mansur Sabuktigin was one of the Samanid slave guards who rose from the ranks to come under the patronage of the Chief ''Hajib'' Alp-Tegin.",
"After the death of the Samanid Amir 'Abd al-Malik b. Nuh, the commander of forces in Khorasan Alp-Tegin along with the ''vizier'' Muhammad Bal'ami attempted to place a ruler of their choice on the throne.",
"The attempt failed however and Alp-Tegin decided to withdraw to the eastern fringes of the empire.",
"Per the sources, he wanted to flee to India to avoid his enemies and earn divine merit by raiding the Hindus.",
"He did not intend to capture Ghazni, but was forced to take it when he was denied transit by its ruler.Alp-Tegin proceeded with his small force of ''ghulams'' and ''ghazis'' (200 ghulams and 800 ghazis according to ''Siyasatnama'', while ''Majma al-ansab'' of Muhammad b. Ali al-Shabankara'i (d. 1358) states 700 ghulams and 2,500 Tajiks).",
"En route, he subdued the Iranian ''Sher'' of Bamiyan and the Hindu-Shahi king of Kabul.",
"He then came to Ghazni, whose citadel he besieged for four months and wrested the town from its ruler, Abu 'Ali or Abu Bakr Lawik or Anuk.",
"The origin of this chief was Turkic, though it is not known if he was a Samanid vassal or an independent ruler.",
"Josef Markwart suggests he was a late representative of the Zunbils.",
"The Lawik dynasty of Ghazni was linked to the Hindu Shahi dynasty through marriage.",
"Alp-Tegin was accompanied by Sabuktigin during the conquest of Ghazni.Minhaj al-Siraj Juzjani states that Alp-Tegin had his position regularised by Amir Mansur b. Nuh through an investiture, however ''Siyasatnama'' mentions an expedition against Alp-Tegin from Bukhara which was defeated outside Ghazni.",
"His ambiguous, semi-rebel status seems to be reflected in his coins, with two of his coins minted at Parwan mentioning his authority from the Samanids to mint coins only in an indirect way.",
"He was succeeded by his son Abu Ishaq Ibrahim, who lost Ghazni to Abu Ali Lawik, the son of its expelled ruler.",
"He recovered it however with Samanid help in 964–65.Alp-Tegin's ghulams were reconciled with the Samanids in 965 but maintained their autonomy.",
"After Ibrahim's death in 966, Bilge-Tigin was made the successor and he acknowledged the Samanids as his overlords.",
"He died in 364 AH (974–975 AD) while besieging Gardez and was succeeded by Böritigin or Piri.Piri's misrule led to resentment among the people who invited Abu Ali to take back the throne.",
"The Kabul Shahis allied with him and the king, most likely Jayapala, sent his son to assist Lawik in the invasion.",
"According to the ''Majba al-Ansab'', Sabuktigin managed to convince the Muslim Turks living in Ghazni, Gardez and Bamyan to participate in a jihad against the Hindus.",
"When the allied forces reached near Charkh on Logar River, they were attacked by Sabuktigin who killed and captured many of them, while also capturing ten elephants.",
"Lawik as well his ally were both killed in the battle.",
"Piri was expelled and Sabuktigin became governor in 977 AD.",
"The accession was endorsed by the Samanid ruler Nuh II.Hudud al-‘Alam states that Ghor was under the overlordship of Farighunids.",
"Both Gardezi and Baihaqi state that in 379 AH (979–980 AD), the Samanid Amir Nuh b. Mansur dispatched an expedition under Abu Ja'far Zubaidi to conquer Ghur, but he had to return after capturing several forts.",
"As the Samanid governor of Zabulistan and Ghazni, Sabuktigin attacked it several times.",
"He was able to conquer eastern Ghur after initial set-backs and was acknowledged as a sovereign by Muhammad ibn Suri.===Ghaznavids===Ghzanavid Empire in 1030 AD====Sabuktigin=========First war against Jayapala=====The Ghaznavid campaigns from the time of Sabuktigin are recorded as ''jihad'' against the people of ''al-Hind'' to destroy idolatry and replace it by expanding Islam.",
"The Kabul Shahis only retained Lamghan in the Kabul-Gandhara area by the time of Alp-Tegin.",
"According to Firishta, Sabuktigin had already begun raiding Multan and Lamghan under Alp-Tegin for slaves.",
"This precipitated an alliance between the Shahi ruler Jayapala, Bhatiya and Sheikh Hamid Khan Lodi.",
"He crossed the Khyber Pass many times and raided the territory of Jaipala.Jayapala appointed Sheikh Hamid Khan Lodi as ruler over Multan and Lamghan, but Sabuktigin broke up this alliance after his accession through diplomatic means, convincing Lodi to acknowledge him as an overlord.",
"Although Ferishta had identified Lodi and his family as Afghans, historian Yogendra Mishra pointed out that this was an error, since they were descended from the Qurayshite Usama ibn Lawi ibn Ghalib.Sabuktigin plundered the forts in the outlying provinces of the Kabul Shahi and captured many cities, acquiring huge booty.",
"He also established Islam at many places.",
"Jaipal in retaliation marched with a large force into the valley of Lamghan (Jalalabad) where he clashed with Sabuktigin and his son.",
"The battle stretched on several days until a snow storm affected Jaipala's strategies, forcing him to plead for peace.",
"Sabuktigin was inclined to grant peace to Jayapala but his son Mahmud wanted total victory.Jaypala upon hearing Mahmud's plans warned Sabuktigin, \"You have seen the impetuosity of the Hindus and their indifference to death...",
"If therefore, you refuse to grant peace in the hope of obtaining plunder, tribute, elephants and prisoners, then there is no alternative for us but to mount the horse of stern determination, destroy our property, take out the eyes of our elephants, cast our children into fire, and rush out on each other with sword and spear, so that all that will be left to you to conquer and seize is stones and dirt, dead bodies, and scattered bones.\"",
"Knowing Jaipala could carry out his threat, Sabuktigin granted him peace in return for his promise of paying tribute and ceding some of his territory.=====Second war against Jayapala=====After making peace with Sabuktigin, Jayapala returned to Waihind but broke the treaty and mistreated the amirs sent to collect the tribute.",
"Sabuktigin launched another invasion in retaliation.",
"While the mamluks remained the core of his army, he also hired the ''Afghans'', especially the Ghilji tribe, in his dominion.",
"According to al-Utbi, Sabuktigin attacked Lamghan, conquering it and burning the residences of the \"infidels\", while also demolishing its idol-temples and establishing Islam.",
"He proceeded to slaughter the non-Muslims, destroyed their temples and plundered their shrines.",
"It is said that his forces even risked frostbite on their hands while counting the large booty.To avenge the savage attack of Sabuktigin, Jayapala, who had earlier taken his envoys as hostage, decided to go to war again in revenge.",
"According to al-Utbi, he assembled an army of 100,000 against Sabuktigin.",
"The much later account of Ferishta states that it included troops from Kanauj, Ajmer, Delhi and Kalinjar.",
"The two sides fought on an open battlefield in Laghman.",
"Sabuktigin divided his army into packs of 500 who attacked the Indians in succession.",
"After sensing that they were weakened, his forces mounted a concerted attack.",
"The forces of Kabul Shahi were routed and those still alive were killed in the forest or drowned in the river.The second battle that took place between Sabuktigin and Jayapala in 988 AD, resulted in the former capturing territory between Lamghan and Peshawar.",
"Al-Utbi also states that the Afghans and Khaljis, living there as nomads, took the oath of allegiance to him and were recruited into his army.",
"He helped Nuh II in expelling the rebel and heretic Abu Ali Simjur from Khorasan, resulting in its governorship being given to Sabuktigin who appointed Mahmud as his deputy there.",
"He also appointed Ismail as the successor to his kingdom and died in 997.A succession war erupted between Ismail and Mahmud, with the latter gaining the throne in 998.====Mahmud====Mahmud receives a robe from Caliph Al-Qadir; painting by Rashid-al-Din HamadaniThe Samanid amir Mansur II appointed Bektuzun as Khorasan's governor after Sabuktigin's death.",
"Mahmud however wished to reacquire the governorship after defeating his brother Ismail and his allies.",
"Bektuzun and Fa'iq, the ''de facto'' power behind the Samanid throne, toppled Mansur II as they did not trust him, and replaced him with Abu'l Fawaris 'Abd al-Malik.",
"Their forces were however defeated in 999 by Mahmud, who acquired all the lands south of Oxus, with even those to the north of the river submitting to him.",
"The Samanid dynasty was later ended by the Karakhanids.",
"In 1002, Mahmud also defeated the Saffarid Amir Khalaf ibn Ahmad and annexed Sistan.=====Wars against Kabul Shahi=====Mahmud systemized plunder raids into India as a long-term policy of the Ghaznavids.",
"The first raid was undertaken in September 1000, but was meant for reconnaissance and identifying the possible terrain and roads that could be used for future raids.",
"He reached Peshawar by September 1001 and was attacked by Jayapala.",
"The two sides clashed on 27–28 November 1001 and Jayapala was captured.",
"Anandapala who was at Waihind, had to pay a heavy ransom to have his father and others released.",
"Jayapala later self-immolated out of shame and Anandpala succeeded him.",
"Mahmud attacked Anandpala later over his refusal to allow him passage during his attack on Multan, which was controlled by Fateh Daud.",
"The two sides clashed in 1009 in the eastern side of Indus at Chhachh, with Mahmud defeating Anandapala and capturing the fort of Bhimnagar.",
"He was allowed to rule as a feudatory in Punjab for some time.An alliance between Anandpala's son, Trilochanpala, and Kashmiri troops was later defeated.",
"During the warfare from 990–91 to 1015, Afghanistan, and later Punjab and Multan were lost to the Ghaznavids.",
"Trilochanpala's rule was limited to eastern Punjab and he gained respite from the Muslim invasions with retreat to Sirhind.",
"He allied with the Chandellas and in 1020-21 was defeated at a river called Rahib by Al-Utbi, while Firishta and Nizamuddin Ahmad identify it as Yamuna.",
"He was killed in 1021 AD by his mutinous troops and succeeded by Bhimapala, who became the last ruler of the Kabul Shahi and was killed fighting the Ghaznavids in 1026 AD.",
"The remnants of the royal family sought refuge with the Lohara dynasty of Kashmir and Punjab passed under the control of Muslim conquerors.Mahmud used his plundered wealth to finance his armies which included mercenaries.",
"The Indian soldiers, presumably Hindus, who were one of the components of the army, with their commander called ''sipahsalar-i-Hinduwan'', lived in their quarter of Ghazni while practicing their own religion.",
"Indian soldiers under their commander Suvendhray remained loyal to Mahmud.",
"They were also used against a Turkic rebel, with the command given to a Hindu named Tilak according to Baihaki.The renowned 14th-century Moroccan Muslim scholar Ibn Battuta remarked that the Hindu Kush meant the \"slayer of Indians\", because the slaves brought from India who had to pass through there died in large numbers due to the extreme cold and quantity of snow.",
"He states:=====Invasions of Ghur=====Painting of Muhammad ibn Suri (white-haired) with his men by Rashid-al-Din HamadaniThe conversion of Ghur occurred over a long period and it was mostly pagan until the 10th century, which Mohammad Habib and Khaliq Ahmad Nizami say was probably a result of the missionary activities by the Karramiyya movement established in the region in 10th–11th centuries.",
"Its imperfect conversion is visible by the fact that while the people of Ghur had Muslim names, they led the life of pagans.",
"Muhammad b. Suri, who had acknowledged Sabuktigin as his sovereign, withheld tribute after his death, started plundering caravans and harassed the subjects of Mahmud.",
"Rawżat aṣ-ṣafāʾ called him a pagan, and al-Utbi stated that he was a Hindu.In 1011, Mahmud dispatched an expedition to conquer Ghur under Altuntash, governor of Herat, and Arslan Hajib, governor of Tus.",
"Muhammad b. Suri, the king, placed himself in inaccessible hills and ravines.",
"The Ghurids were however defeated and Suri was captured along with his son Shith.",
"Abu Ali, who had remained on good terms with the Sultan, was made the ruler of Ghur by him.",
"Eastern Ghur was brought under Ghaznavid control.",
"In 1015, Mahmud attacked Ghur's southwestern district of Khwabin and captured some forts.In 1020, Mahmud's son Ma'sud was dispatched to take Ghur's northwestern part called Tab.",
"He was helped by Abul Hasan Khalaf and Shirwan, chieftains of the south-western and north-eastern regions respectively.",
"He captured many forts, bringing the entire region of Ghur, except maybe the inaccessible interior, under Ghaznavid control.",
"He also captured the stronghold of the chieftain Warmesh-Pat of Jurwas, levying a tribute of arms.",
"Minhaj al-Siraj Juzjani praises Abu Ali for firmly establishing Islamic institutions in Ghur.",
"The progress of Islam in this divided region after his death is however unknown.Ghur remained a pagan enclave until the 11th century.",
"Mahmud who raided it, left Muslim precepts to teach Islam to the local population.",
"The region became Muslim by 12th century, though the historian Satish Chandra states that Mahayana Buddhism is believed to have existed until the end of the century.",
"Neither Mahmud nor Ma'sud conquered the interior.",
"Habib and Nizami say that the Ghurids were gradually converted by propagandists of new mystic movements.",
"The Shansabani eventually succeeded in establishing their seniority in Ghor, if not its unification.",
"By the time of Sultan Bahram, Ghur was converted and politically unified.",
"According to Minhaj, both Ghiyasuddin and Mu'izzuddin were Karamis who later converted to Shafi‘i and Hanafi Islam respectively.",
"''Tarikh-i guzida'' however says that the Ghorids were only converted to Islam by Mahmud."
],
[
"Conversion of Pashtun-Afghan people",
"The name ''Afghanistan'' was first used in a political sense by Saifi Herawi in the 14th century.",
"It was even used during the height of the Durrani Empire.",
"Only after the Durand line was fixed, did its modern usage for the land between it and the Oxus river became usual.",
"The people who were mostly responsible for establishing the Afghan kingdom are referred to as ''Pashtun'', who were also called \"Afghans\".",
"The name ''Pashtun'' (or ''Pakthun'') is the original and oldest name.The tenth-century Persian geography ''Hudud al-'Alam'' is the earliest known mention of the Afghans.",
"In ''Discourse on the Country of Hindistan and Its Towns'', he states that, \"Saul, a pleasant village on a mountain.",
"In it live Afghans.\"",
"Ibn Battuta described Saul as being situated between Gardez and Husaynan along a common trade route, the exact location of Husaynan is unknown.",
"Akhund Darweza states that their original homeland was Qandahar from where they migrated in 11th century upon the request of Mahmud of Ghazni to assist him in his conquests.",
"Afghan tradition considers \"Kase Ghar\" in Sulayman range as the homeland.",
"''Hudud al-'Alam'' also mentions that the king of Ninhar (Nangarhar) had many wives including \"Moslem, Afghan and Hindu\".The Pashtun traditions speak of Islamization during Muhammad's time through Khalid ibn al-Walid.",
"Qais Abdur Rashid, the presumed ancestor of the Afghans, is said to have led a delegation to Mecca from Ghor after being summoned by Khalid b. Walid and converted to Islam while also distinguishing himself in the service of Muhammad.",
"He adopted the name Abdul Rashid, and his three sons – Saraban, Ghurghust, Karlani, and a foundling Karlanri linked to Saban, are considered to be the progenitors of the major Afghan divisions.Ni'matullah's ''Makhzan-i-Afghani'' traces their history to an Israelite called Afghana who constructed the al-Aqsa mosque.",
"Per it, under the time of King Suleiman, a figure named Bokhtnasser was responsible for \"carrying away the Israelites, whom he settled in the mountainous districts of Ghor, Ghazneen, Kabul, Candahar, Koh Firozeh, and the parts lying within the fifth and sixth climates; where they, especially those descended of Asif and Afghana, fixed their habitations, continually increasing in number, and incessantly making war on the infidels around them.\"",
"Qais traveled to Medina to receive Mohammed's blessings and fought against the Meccans.",
"Muhammad himself conferred the title of ''Pashtun'' upon Qais and his people according to the tradition.",
"They returned to Ghor to spread Islam and pledged loyalty to Mahmud.",
"Per Ni'matullah, the Ghurid ruler Mu'izz al-Din had initiated their eastward migration into present-day north-west Pakistan, in course of his military campaigns.The Arabs, at war with the Kabul Shah, had directed their campaigns in direction of Gandhara.",
"By the time of Mu'awiya, Sistan's governorship was separated from Khorasan, with the governor looking after the region and keeping a check on Kabul Shah.",
"Ahmed Hassan Dani considered that the Arab activities may have led to conversion of Aghans as well, and it may have been wholesale because of their tribal nature, i.e., all the Afghan tribes adopted Islam at once.Quoting ''Matla-al-Anwar'', Ferishta states that a man named Khalid, son of Abdullah, stated by some to be a descendant of Khalid bin Walid or Abu Jahl, was for some time governor of Herat, Ghor, Gharjistan and Kabul.",
"After being relieved of the charge, he settled in Koh Sulaiman, with the Lodis and Suris being the descendant of his daughter who married a converted Afghan.Al-Utbi in ''Tarikh-i-Yamini'' states that the Afghans were enlisted by Sabuktigin and also Mahmud.",
"During this period, the Afghan habitat was in the Sulaiman Mountains.",
"After defeating Jayapala in 988 AD, Sabuktigin had acquired the territory between Laghman and Peshawar.",
"Al-Utbi states that the Afghans and Khaljis, living there as nomads, took the oath of allegiance to him and were recruited into his army.",
"Iqtidar Husain Siddiqui citing a 13th-century Persian translation, claims he mentions the \"Afghans\" were pagans given to rapine and rapacity, they were defeated and converted to Islam.Writing in the 11th century AD, Al-Biruni in his ''Tarikh al Hind'' stated that the Afghan tribes lived in mountains west of India.",
"He notes, \"In the western frontier mountains of India there live various tribes of the Afghans and extend up to the neighbourhood of the Sindu valley.\"",
"He earlier also noted about the mountains, \"In marching from our country to Sindh we start from the country of Nimroz, i.e.",
"the country of Sijistan, whilst marching to Hind or India proper we start from the side of Kabul...",
"In the mountains which form the frontier of India towards the west there are tribes of the Hindus, or of people near akin to them — rebellious savage races — which extend as far as the farthermost frontiers of the Hindu race.",
"\"Mahmud had gone to war against pagan Afghans while campaigning in the Sulayman mountains.",
"Firishta states that Afghans fought on both sides during the war between Mu'izz al-Din and Pithorai in 1192 AD, which Encyclopaedia of Islam says probably indicates that they were not completely converted yet.In 1519, Babur mounted an attack on the fort of Bajaur and sent a Dilazak Afghan as an ambassador to the Gibri Sultan of Bajaur, Mir Haidar 'Ali, to surrender and enter his services.",
"Gibri, a Dardic language of Bajaur, was also spoken by the royal family and nobility of the Swat Valley.",
"The Gibris decided to resist and Babur's forces stormed it in two days.",
"He ordered a general massacre of its inhabitants on the pretext that they had rebelled against Kabul's regime and were infidels who had forsaken Islam.The westward migration of Pashtuns from Sulaiman mountains to Qandahar and Herat is thought to have begun in the 15th century.",
"In the 16th century, the area around Qandahar formed a bone of contention between the Ghilzais and Abdalis.",
"The latter gave in and migrated to Herat during the reign of Safavid Shah Abbas I.",
"Their migration displaced or subjugated the indigenous populations, especially the Tajiks who were also the dominant population in Kabul, Nangarhar and Laghman in east Afghanistan.",
"Before the advent of Ghilzais of the Ahmadzai division in the late 16th century, Logar River was also a Tajik stronghold.",
"The Pashtuns also displaced the original Kafirs and Pashayi people in Kunar Valley and Laghman Valley, located south of Kabul in east Afghanistan, to the infertile mountains.",
"Regions to the south and east of Ghazni were the strongholds of Hazaras before the 16th century.",
"They also lost Wardak to the tribe of the same name when the latter invaded in the 17th century.",
"In Qandahar, the Farsiwanis, Hazaras, Kakars and Baloch people were subjugated."
],
[
"Conquests of Kafiristan",
"Nuristan province, renamed from Kafiristan in 1896Kafiristan is a mountainous region of the Hindu Kush that was isolated and politically independent until the Afghan conquest of 1896.Before their conversion to Islam, the Nuristanis or Kafir people practiced a form of ancient Hinduism infused with locally developed accretions.Kafiristan proper from west to east comprises basins of Alishang, Alingar, Pech or Prasun, Waigal and Bashgal.",
"The region became a refuge of an old group of Indo-European people, probably mixed with an older substratum, as well as a refuge of a distinct Kafiri group of Indo-Iranian languages, forming part of the wider Dardic languages.",
"The inhabitants were known as \"kafirs\" due to their enduring paganism, while other regions around them became Muslim.",
"However, the influence from district names in Kafiristan of Katwar or Kator and the ethnic name Kati has also been suggested.",
"The Kafirs were divided into Siyah-Posh, comprising five sub-tribes who spoke the Kamkata-vari language; while the others were called Safed-Posh, comprising Prasungeli, Waigeli, Wamai and Ashkun.The Kafirs called themselves \"Balor\", a term that appeared in Chinese sources as early as the fifth century AD.",
"In both the Chinese sources and Muslim sources like the 16th-century work of Kashmir's conqueror Mirza Muhammad Haidar Dughlat, the terms \"Bolor\" and \"Boloristan\" denote the area from the Kabul valley to Kashmir, Yarkand and Kashgar.",
"The country is the most inaccessible part of Hindu Kush.",
"The Muslim conquerors could not achieve a lasting success here.The vast area extending from modern Nuristan to Kashmir contained a host of \"Kafir\" cultures and Indo-European languages that became Islamized over a long period.",
"Earlier, it was surrounded by Buddhist areas.",
"The Islamization of the nearby Badakhshan began in the 8th century and Peristan was completely surrounded by Muslim states in the 16th century with the Islamization of Baltistan.",
"The Buddhist states temporarily brought literacy and state rule into the region.",
"The decline of Buddhism resulted in it becoming heavily isolated.There have been varying theories about the origins of the Kafirs.",
"Oral traditions of some Nuristanis place themselves to be at confluence of Kabul and Kunar River a millennium ago, being driven off from Kandahar to Kabul to Kapisa to Kama with the Muslim invasion.",
"They identify themselves as late arrivals here, being driven by Mahmud of Ghazni, who after establishing his empire, forced the unsubmissive population to flee.",
"George Scott Robertson considered them to be part of the old Indian population of Eastern Afghanistan and stated that they fled to the mountains while refusing to convert to Islam after the Muslim invasion in the 10th century.",
"The name Kator was used by Lagaturman, the last king of the Turk Shahi.",
"The title \"Shah Kator\" was assumed by Chitral's ruler Mohtaram Shah who assumed it upon being impressed by the majesty of the erstwhile pagan rulers of Chitral.",
"The theory of Kators being related to the Turki Shahis is based on the information of ''Jami- ut-Tawarikh'' and ''Tarikh-i-Binakiti''.",
"The region was also named after its ruling elite.",
"The royal usage may be the origin behind the name of Kator.===Mahmud of Ghazni===In 1020–21, Mahmud of Ghazni led a campaign against Kafiristan and the people of the \"pleasant valleys of Nur and Qirat\" according to Gardizi.",
"The Persian chronicles speak of Qirat and Nur (or Nardin), which H. M. Elliot on authority of Al-Biruni identifies with Nur and Kira tributaries of Kabul river.",
"Ferishta wrongly calls these two valleys as \"Nardin\" and Qirat and confuses this conquest with the one against \"Nardin\" or Nandana.",
"He also wrongly mentions that it took place after 412 AH.",
"Alexander Cunningham identifies the places conquered as \"Bairath\" and \"Narayanpura\".These people worshipped the lion.",
"While Clifford Edmund Bosworth considers that Mahmud attacked \"pagan Afghans\", Joseph Theodore Arlinghaus of Duke University does not consider it correct because his source Gardizi simply calls them \"pagan (kafiran)\" and not \"pagan Afghans\", as they were not known to be pagan or live on borders of Nuristan in the 11th century.",
"Mohammad Habib however considers that they might have been worshipping Buddha in the form of a lion (''Sakya Sinha'').",
"Ramesh Chandra Majumdar states that they had a Hindu temple which was destroyed by Mahmud's general.",
"Ram Sharan Sharma meanwhile states that they may have been Buddhist.",
"Cunningham claims based on the reporting of Ferishta that the place was plundered by 'Amir Ali after being taken.According to Gardizi, while returning from his recent invasion of India, Mahmud had heard about the Kafirs and the chief of Qirat surrendered without any struggle and accepted to convert, with the inhabitants converting as well.",
"Nur however refused to surrender and his general 'Amir Ali led an attack on it, forcing its people to convert.",
"According to Firshta, the rulers of both of them submitted and accepted Islam in 1022.He adds, \"On breaking a great temple situated there, the ornamented figure of a lion came out of it, which according to the belief of the Hindus was four thousand years old.",
"\"However, no permanent conquest was attempted.",
"''Iqbal namah-i-Jahangiri'' stated that Kafirs still lived in Darrah-i-Nur which Mahmud of Ghazni had claimed to have converted.",
"The Mughal Emperor Jahangir had received a delegation of these pure Kafirs in Jalalabad and had honoured them with gifts.===Timurids===Facial reconstruction of Timur from his skullThe campaigns of Timur are recorded by Zafarnama, written by Sharaf ad-Din Ali Yazdi, which is based on another work.",
"On his way to India, Timur attacked the Siyah-Posh in 1398 AD after receiving complaints from the trading city of Andarab about the raids by the Kafirs.",
"He penetrated Kafiristan from Khawak pass and restored an old fortress there.",
"He personally proceeded against the Kator region, which extended from Kabul to Kashmir.Timur sent a detachment of 10,000 soldiers against the Siyah-Poshas under Burhan Aglan and had the fort of Kator deserted by Kafirs destroyed, while the houses of the city were burnt.",
"The Kafirs took refuge on top of a hill and many were killed in the ensuing clash.",
"Some held out for three days but agreed to convert after Timur offered them the choice between death and Islam.",
"They however soon apostatised and ambushed Muslim soldiers in the night.",
"The Muslims repelled them and a number of the Kafirs were killed, with 150 being taken prisoner and later executed.",
"Timur ordered his men \"to kill all the men, to make prisoners of women and children, and to plunder and lay waste all their property.\"",
"His soldiers carried out the order and he directed them to build a tower of skulls of the dead Kafirs.Timur had his expedition engraved on a neighbouring hill in the month of Ramadan.",
"His detachment sent against the Siyah-Poshas however met with disaster, with Aglan being routed and forced to flee.",
"A small detachment of 400 men under Muhammad Azad was then sent and defeated the Kafirs, retrieving the horses and armour Aglan lost.",
"Timur later captured a few more places, though nothing more is stated, presumably he left the Siyah-Poshas alone.",
"He proceeded to exterminate the rebellious Afghan tribes and crossed the Indus River in September 1398.The Timurid Sultan Mahmud Mirza is said to have raided Kafiristan twice by ''Baburnama'', which earned him the title of ''ghazi''.===Yarkand Khanate===Mirza Muhammad Haidar Dughlat invaded Balor under orders of Sultan Said Khan in 1527-1528 AD, and was accompanied by Said's eldest son Rashid Khan.",
"The expedition was an Islamic frontier raid called ''ghaza''.",
"Dughlat undertook highly devastating plundering raids against the region.Rashid Khan (r. 1533–1569) undertook further expeditions against Bolor (Kafiristan), which are recorded by ''Tarikh-i-Kashgar'' and ''Bahr al-asar'' of Mahmud b. Amir Wali.",
"The Kashgari author mentions it briefly, though Wali goes into detail.",
"The first campaign failed with a number of Kashgari captured and enslaved by the people of Bolor.",
"A second invasion was successful and forced them to submit.",
"''Tarikh-i-Kashgar'' states that Bolor was governed by Shah Babur after Abdullah Khan's successful campaign in 1640.===Mughals===Babur himself came to the region in the winter of 1507–1508 and had an inscription carved commemorating his transit.",
"While fleeing to India to take refuge in the Afghan-Indian borderlands after Shibani Khan attacked Qandahar, which Babur had recently conquered, he marched from Kabul to Lamghan in September 1507.He eventually reached the Adinapur fort in Nangarhar district and commented that his men had to forage for food and raided the rice fields of the Kafirs in the Alishang district.While writing in his memoirs, Babur noted that when he captured Chigha Sarai in 1514, the \"Kafirs of Pech came to their assistance.\"",
"He mentions some Muslim ''nīmčas'' or half-breeds, probably converted Kafirs, who married with the Kafirs and lived at Chigha Sarai, located at confluence of Kunar River and Pech River.",
"In 1520, he mentions sending Haidar Alamdar to the Kafirs, who returned and met him under Bandpakht along with some Kafir chiefs who gifted him some wineskins.The relationship between the Siahposh and the residents of Panjshir and Andarab remained the same even more than a century after Timur's expedition.",
"Babur records about Panjshir that, \"It lies upon the road, and is in the immediate vicinity of Kafiristan.",
"The inroads of the robbers of Kafiristan are made through Panjshir.",
"In consequence of their vicinity of the Kafirs - the inhabitants of this district are happy to pay them a fixed contribution.",
"Since I last invaded Hindustan, and subdued it (in 1527), the Kafirs have descended into Panjshir, and returned after slaying a great number of people and committing extensive damages.",
"\"Per ''Tabakat-i-Akbari'', the Mughal Emperor Akbar had dispatched his younger brother Mirza Muhammad Hakim, who was a staunch adherent of the missionary-minded Naqshbandi Sufi order, against the Kafirs of Katwar in 1582.Hakim was a semi-independent governor of Kabul.",
"The ''Sifat-nama-yi Darviš Muhammad Hān-i Ğāzī'' of Kadi Muhammad Salim who accompanied the expedition mentions its details and gives Hakim the epithet of ''Darviš Khan Gazi''.Muhammad Darvish's religious crusade fought its way from Lamghan to Alishang, and is stated to have conquered and converted 66 valleys to Islam.",
"After conquering Tajau and Nijrau valleys in Panjshir area, his forces established a fort at Islamabad, located at the confluence of Alishang and Alingar rivers.",
"They continued the raid up to Alishang and made their last effort against the non-Muslims of Alingar, fighting up to Mangu, the modern border between Pashai and Ashkun-speaking areas.The conquest does not seem to have had a lasting effect, as Henry George Raverty mentions that Kafirs still lived in upper part of Alishang and Tagau.",
"''Khulasat al-ansab'' of Hafiz Rahmat Khan stated that the Afghans and Kafirs of Lamghan were still fighting each other during the time of Jahangir.===Final subjugation===Amir Abdur Rahman KhanUnder Amir Sher Ali Khan, Afghanistan was divided into provinces (''wilayats'') of Kabul, Kandahar, Herat and Afghan Turkestan.",
"Uruzgan and Kafiristan were later incorporated into Kabul.",
"Some parts of Kafiristan were already following Islam before its conquest.",
"Amir Abdul Rahman Khan tried to persuade them to convert to Islam by deputing Kafir elders.",
"The Kafirs were meanwhile poorly armed as compared to Afghans and numbered only 60,000.By 1895, the demarcation of nearby Chitral under indirect British rule, and the conquest of Pamirs by Russia, worried him about the endangerment of integration of Afghanistan through the independent Kafiristan.",
"Afghan tribes meanwhile undertook slave raids in places like Kafiristan, Hazarajat, Badakhshan and Chitral.The territory between Afghanistan and British India was demarcated between 1894 and 1896.Part of the frontier lying between Nawa Kotal in outskirts of Mohmand country and Bashgal Valley on outskirts of Kafiristan were demarcated by 1895 with an agreement reached on 9 April 1895.Abdur Rahman wanted to force every community and tribal confederation with his single interpretation of Islam due to it being the only uniting factor.",
"After the subjugation of the Hazaras, Kafiristan was the last remaining autonomous part.",
"Field marshal Ghulam Hayder Khan sent a message to Kafirs of Barikut which stated, \"It is not the duty of the government to compel, force or impose on them to accept, or take the path of the religion of Islam.",
"The obligation that does exist is this: they render obedience and pay their taxes.",
"As long as they do not disobey their command, they will not incinerate themselves with the fire of ''padishah's'' king's wrath.",
"In addition, they are not to block the building of the road that was planned through their territory.",
"\"Emir Abdur Rahman Khan's forces invaded Kafiristan in the winter of 1895–1896 and captured it in 40 days according to his autobiography.",
"Columns invaded it from the west through Panjshir to Kullum, the strongest fort of the region.",
"The columns from the north came through Badakhshan and from the east through Asmar.",
"A small column also came from south-west through Laghman.",
"The Kafirs were forcibly converted to Islam and resettled in Laghman, while the region was settled by veteran soldiers and other Afghans.",
"Kafiristan was renamed as Nuristan.",
"Other residents also converted to avoid the ''jizya''.His victory was celebrated with the publishing of a poem in 1896 or 1897 and Faiz Mohammad Katib Hazara gave him the title of \"Idol-Smasher\".",
"About 60,000 of the Kafirs became converts.",
"Mullahs were deployed after the conquest to teach them about fundamentals of Islam.",
"The large-scale conversion proved difficult however and complete Islamization took some time.",
"Kafir elders are known to have offered sacrifices in their shrines upon hearing rumours of Rahman's death in 1901.Three main roads connecting Badakhshan with Kunar and Lamghan (Chigha Sirai-Munjan, Asmar-Badakhshan and Munjan-Laghman) were built after the conquest."
],
[
"See also",
"*History of Afghanistan*Timeline of Afghan history*History of Arabs in Afghanistan*Hindu and Buddhist heritage of Afghanistan*Early Muslim conquests"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"*Elliot, Sir H. M., Edited by Dowson, John.",
"The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians.",
"The Muhammadan Period; published by London Trubner Company 1867–1877.",
"(Online Copy: The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians.",
"The Muhammadan Period; by Sir H. M. Elliot; Edited by John Dowson; London Trubner Company 1867–1877 - This online Copy has been posted by: The Packard Humanities Institute; Persian Texts in Translation; Also find other historical books: Author List and Title List)* * **"
],
[
"External links",
"* ''The Guardian'': \" Lost Tribe Struggles for Survival\"* ''Press Trust of India'' :\" Inscription throws new light to Hindu rule in Afghanistan \"* Association for the Protection of Afghan Archeology"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Durrani Empire"
],
[
"Introduction",
"The '''Durrani Empire''' (; ) or the '''Afghan Empire''' (; ), also known as the '''Sadozai Kingdom''' (; ), was an Afghan empire that was founded by Ahmad Shah Durrani in 1747, that spanned parts of Central Asia, the Iranian plateau, and the Indian Subcontinent.",
"At its peak, it ruled over the present-day Afghanistan, much of Pakistan, parts of northeastern and southeastern Iran, eastern Turkmenistan, and northwestern India.",
"Next to the Ottoman Empire, the Durrani Empire is considered to be among the most significant Islamic Empires of the 18th century.Ahmad was the son of Muhammad Zaman Khan (an Afghan chieftain of the Abdali tribe) and the commander of Nader Shah Afshar.",
"Following Afshar's death in June 1747, Ahmad secured Afghanistan by taking Kandahar, Ghazni, Kabul, and Peshawar.",
"After his accession as the nation's king, he changed his tribal name from ''Abdali'' to ''Durrani''.",
"In 1749, the Mughal Empire had ceded sovereignty over much of northwestern India to the Afghans; Ahmad then set out westward to take possession of Mashhad, which was ruled by the Afsharid dynasty under Shahrokh Shah, who also acknowledged Afghan suzerainty.",
"Subsequently, Ahmad sent an army to subdue the areas north of the Hindu Kush down to the Amu Darya, and in short order, all of the different Afghan tribes began to join his cause.",
"Under Ahmad, the Afghans invaded India on four occasions, subjugating parts of Kashmir and the majority of Punjab.",
"In early 1757, he sacked Delhi, but permitted Mughal emperor Alamgir II to remain in nominal control as long as he acknowledged Afghan suzerainty over the regions south of the Indus River, till Sutlej river.Following Ahmad's death in 1772, his son Timur Shah Durrani became the next ruler of the Durrani dynasty.",
"Under Timur, the city of Kabul became the new capital of the Durrani Empire while Peshawar served as its winter capital.",
"However, the empire had begun to crumble by this time, and faced territorial losses of Peshawar, Multan and Kashmir to the Sikh Empire in the early 19th century.",
"The dynasty would become heirs of Afghanistan for generations, up until Dost Muhammad Khan and the Barakzai dynasty deposed the Durrani dynasty in Kabul, leading to its supersession by the Emirate of Afghanistan.",
"The Durrani Empire is considered to be the foundational polity of the modern nation-state of Afghanistan, with Ahmad being credited as its Father of the Nation."
],
[
"History",
"===Reign of Ahmad Shah Durrani (1747–1772)=======Foundation of the Afghan state====In 1709, Mirwais Hotak chief of the Ghilji tribe of Kandahar Province, gained independence from the Safavid Persians.",
"From 1722 to 1725, his son Mahmud Hotak briefly ruled large parts of Iran and declared himself as ''Shah of Persia''.",
"However, the Hotak dynasty came to a complete end in 1738 after being toppled and banished by the Afsharids who were led by Nader Shah Afshar of Persia.The year 1747 marks the definitive appearance of an Afghan political entity independent of both the Persian and Mughal empires.",
"In June of that year a ''loya jirga'' (grand council) was called into session.",
"The ''jirga'' lasted for nine days and two chief contestants emerged: Hajji Jamal Khan of the Mohammadzai lineage and Ahmad Khan of the Sadozai.",
"Mohammad Sabir Khan, a noted ''darwish'' (holy man), who had earlier predicted that Ahmad Khan would be the leader of the Afghans, rose in the ''jirga'' and saidAhmad Khan reputedly hesitated to accept the open decision of the ''jirga'', so Sabir Khan again intervened.",
"He placed some wheat or barley sheaves in Ahmad Khan's turban, and crowned him ''Badshah, Durr-i-Dauran'' (Shah, Pearl of the Age).",
"The ''jirga'' concluded near the city of Kandahar with Ahmad Shah Durrani being selected as the new leader of the Afghans, thus the Durrani dynasty was founded.",
"Despite being younger than the other contenders, Ahmad Shah had several overriding factors in his favor.",
"He belonged to a respectable family of political background, especially since his father had served as Governor of Herat who died in a battle defending the Afghans.====Early victories====Portrait of Ahmad Shah Durrani, c. 1757One of Ahmad Shah's first military actions was to capture Qalati Ghilji and Ghazni from the Ghilji, and wrest Kabul and Peshawar from Mughal-appointed governor Nasir Khan.",
"In 1749, the Mughal Emperor Ahmad Shah Bahadur was induced to cede Sindh, the Punjab region and the important trans Indus River to Ahmad Shah Durrani in order to save his capital from Afghan attack.",
"Having thus gained substantial territories to the east without a fight, Ahmad Shah turned westward to take possession of Mashhad, which was ruled by Nader Shah Afshar's grandson, Shahrukh Afshar.",
"Ahmad Shah next sent an army to subdue the areas north of the Hindu Kush mountains.",
"In short order, the powerful army brought under its control the Tajik, Hazara, Uzbek, Turkmen, and other tribes of northern Afghanistan.",
"Ahmad Shah invaded the remnants of the Mughal Empire a third time, and then a fourth, consolidating control over the Kashmir and Punjab regions, with Lahore being governed by Afghans.",
"He sacked Delhi in 1757 but permitted the Mughal dynasty to remain in nominal control of the city as long as the ruler acknowledged Ahmad Shah's suzerainty over Punjab, Sindh, and Kashmir.",
"Leaving his second son Timur Shah to safeguard his interests, Ahmad Shah left India to return to Afghanistan.====Relations with China====Alarmed by the expansion of China's Qing Dynasty up to the eastern border of Kazakhstan, Ahmad Shah attempted to rally neighboring Muslim khanates and the Kazakhs to unite and attack China, ostensibly to liberate its western Muslim subjects.",
"Ahmad Shah halted trade with Qing China and dispatched troops to Kokand.",
"However, with his campaigns in India exhausting the state treasury, and with his troops stretched thin throughout Central Asia, Ahmad Shah lacked sufficient resources to do anything except to send envoys to Beijing for unsuccessful talks.====Third Battle of Panipat====Ahmad Shah Durrani and his coalition decisively defeat the Maratha Confederacy, during the Third Battle of Panipat and restored the Mughal Empire to Shah Alam II.The Mughal power in northern India had been declining after the death of Emperor Aurangzeb, who died in 1707.In 1751–52, the ''Ahamdiya'' treaty was signed between the Marathas and Mughals, when Balaji Bajirao was the Peshwa.",
"Through this treaty, the Marathas controlled virtually the whole of India from their capital at Pune and the Mughal rule was restricted only to Delhi (the Mughals remained the nominal heads of Delhi).",
"Marathas were now straining to expand their area of control towards the Northwest of India.",
"Ahmad Shah sacked the Mughal capital and withdrew with the booty he coveted.",
"To counter the Afghans, Peshwa Balaji Bajirao sent Raghunathrao.",
"He defeated the Rohillas and Afghan garrisons in Punjab and succeeded in ousting Timur Shah and his court from India and brought Lahore, Multan, Kashmir and other subahs on the Indian side of Attock under Maratha rule.",
"Thus, upon his return to Kandahar in 1757, Ahmad was forced to return to India and face the formidable attacks of the Maratha Confederacy.Muslim man from Afghanistan (愛烏罕回人).",
"Huang Qing Zhigong Tu, 1769Ahmad Shah declared a jihad (or Islamic holy war) against the Marathas, and warriors from various Afghan tribes joined his army, including the Baloch people under the command of Khan of Kalat Mir Nasir I of Kalat.",
"Suba Khan Tanoli (Zabardast Khan) was selected as army chief of all military forces.",
"Early skirmishes were followed by victory for the Afghans against the much larger Maratha garrisons in Northwest India and by 1759 Ahmad Shah and his army had reached Lahore and were poised to confront the Marathas.",
"Ahmad Shah Durrani was famous for winning wars much larger than his army.",
"By 1760, the Maratha groups had coalesced into a big enough army under the command of Sadashivrao Bhau.",
"Once again, Panipat was the scene of a confrontation between two warring contenders for control of northern India.",
"The Third Battle of Panipat (14 January 1761), fought between largely Muslim and largely Hindu armies was waged along a twelve-kilometer front.",
"Despite decisively defeating the Marathas, what might have been Ahmad Shah's peaceful control of his domains was disrupted by many challenges.",
"As far as losses are concerned, Afghans too suffered heavily in the Third Battle of Panipat.",
"This weakened his grasp over Punjab which fell to the rising Sikh misls.",
"There were rebellions in the north in the region of Bukhara.",
"The Durranis decisively defeated the Marathas in the Third Battle of Panipat on 14 January 1761.The defeat at Panipat resulted in heavy losses for the Marathas, and was a huge setback for Peshwa Balaji Rao.",
"He received the news of the defeat of Panipat on 24 January 1761 at Bhilsa, while leading a reinforcement force.",
"Besides several important generals, he had lost his own son Vishwasrao in the Battle of Panipat.",
"He died on 23 June 1761, and was succeeded by his younger son Madhav Rao I.====Final years====Bala Hissar fort in Peshawar was one of the royal residences of the Durrani kings.The victory at Panipat was the high point of Ahmad Shah's—and Afghan—power.",
"However, even prior to his death, the empire began to unravel.",
"In 1762, Ahmad Shah crossed the passes from Afghanistan for the sixth time to subdue the Sikhs.",
"From this time and on, the domination and control of the Empire began to loosen, and by the time of Durrani's death he had lost parts of Punjab to the Sikhs, as well as earlier losses of northern territories to the Uzbeks, necessitating a compromise with them.He assaulted Lahore and, after taking their holy city of Amritsar, massacred thousands of Sikh inhabitants, destroyed their revered Golden Temple.",
"Within two years, the Sikhs rebelled again and rebuilt their holy city of Amritsar.",
"Ahmad Shah tried several more times to subjugate the Sikhs permanently, but failed.",
"Durrani's forces instigated the Vaḍḍā Ghallūghārā when they killed thousands of Sikhs in the Punjab in 1762.Ahmad Shah also faced other rebellions in the north, and eventually he and the Uzbek Emir of Bukhara agreed that the Amu Darya would mark the division of their lands.",
"Ahmad Shah retired to his home in the mountains east of Kandahar, where he died in 1772.He had succeeded to a remarkable degree in balancing tribal alliances and hostilities, and in directing tribal energies away from rebellion.",
"He earned recognition as Ahmad Shah Baba, or \"Father\" of Afghanistan.The Durrani Empire lost its control over Kashmir to the Sikh Empire in the Battle of Shopian in 1819.===Other Durrani rulers in the Empire (1772–1823)===Ahmad Shah's successors governed so ineptly during a period of profound unrest that within fifty years of his death, the Durrani empire ''per se'' was at an end, and Afghanistan was embroiled in civil war.",
"Much of the territory conquered by Ahmad Shah fell to others in this half century.",
"By 1818, the Sadozai rulers who succeeded Ahmad Shah controlled little more than Kabul and the surrounding territory within a 160-kilometer radius.",
"They not only lost the outlying territories but also alienated other tribes and lineages among the Durrani Pashtuns.====Humayun Mirza (1772)====City of Kandahar, its principal bazaar and citadel, as seen from the Nakkara KhaunaA few months before his death, Ahmad Shah summoned Timur Shah from Herat and publicly declared him heir to the Durrani Empire.",
"Ahmad Shah made this decision without consulting with his tribal council, as a result the authority of the Durrani Emperor was put into question and created a growing rift that would toil the Durrani empire for years to come, as the tribal council had in majority, supported Ahmad Shah's eldest son and Timur Shah's brother, Sulaiman, the governor of Kandahar.",
"Prominent figures in court who supported the Sulaiman faction were Shah Wali Khan, Ahmad Shah's Wazir, and Sardar Jahan Khan.",
"The court had attempted to urge Ahmad Shah to reconsider his decision, coinciding with the fact that the eldest son should ascend to the throne.",
"Ahmad had ignored this, and quoted: \"Timur Shah was infinitely more capable of governing you than his brother\".",
"As well as accusing Sulaiman of being \"Violent without clemency\", and out of favour with the Kandahari Durranis.",
"Ahmad Shah's decision could have been influenced by his illness, which had affected his brain and his mental state.",
"However, choosing Timur Shah as a successor was likely to restrict power of the Senior Generals and the Durrani Tribal Council, which he deemed as a threat to his dynasty in the future.When Ahmad Shah was on his death bed, Sadar Jahan Khan had capitalized on Timur Shah's far proximity with him ruling over Herat, and poisoned the ear of the Shah.",
"This had worked as Timur Shah was denied an by Ahmad Shah on his deathbed, as a result, Timur Shah had begun mobilizing his forces for the inevitable conflict with his brother.",
"Timur Shah's plans were stalled, however, as a rebellion by Darwish Ali Khan under the Sunni Hazaras, likely instigated by the Sulaiman faction had risen up.",
"Timur Shah had crushed this revolt quickly and Darwish Khan was imprisoned; however, he later escaped.",
"Timur Shah had then lured him into Herat, offering pardon, where then Timur Shah had ordered his execution where his nephew, Muhammad Khan would be appointed in his place.During the revolt of Darwish, Ahmad Shah had died of his illness in 1772.Shah Wali Khan and Sardar Jahan Khan kept the Shah's death a secret by placing the body on a palanquin covered by thick curtains.",
"They had then left the King's mountain, taking as much treasure as they could and marched to Kandahar.",
"Shah Wali Khan had also announced to everyone that the king was ill and had given orders to not disturb him except his trusted officials.",
"To make the deception more believable, Ahmad Shah's chief eunuch, Yaqut Khan had brought food for the \"Sick\" Ruler.",
"Shah wali Khan had then notified Sulaiman that Ahmad Shah was dead and proclaimed Sulaiman as king.",
"However, many of the Amirs including Mahadad Khan had disliked Shah Wali's ambitions, and thus had fled to Timur's side, also notifying him of the ongoing situation at Kandahar.",
"Timur Shah had then marched toward Kandahar to face Shah Humayun.",
"Shah Wali, fearing of Timur's march had consulted with Shah Humayun, and had agreed on him marching out to Prince Timur Shah to welcome him.",
"He left Kandahar with over 150 horsemen and had arrived at Prince Timur's force at Farah.",
"Having not sent word, once Shah Wali had dismounted, Timur Shah ordered the killing of Shah Wali.",
"Angu Khan Bamiza'i assassinated Shah Wali Khan and his two sons, including 2 of his sisters children.",
"Shah Sulayman surrendered the throne to Timur Shah following this, and became a loyal follower of him according to the depiction of Amir Habibullah Khan.",
"Timur Shah ascended the throne in November 1772.====Timur Shah (1772–1793)====Coin of Timur Shah Durrani as ''Nizam of the Punjab'', minted in Lahore, dated 1757/8After his father, Ahmad Shah Durrani's death, he fought his brother Humayun Mirza for the throne, with Humayun supported by Shah Wali Khan.",
"Shah Wali was killed by Timur Shah as he attempted to ride into his camp and beg for peace and mercy.",
"Timur Shah then marched to Kandahar, forcing Humayun to either flee or stay as a devout supporter for Timur Shah.",
"With his throne secured, he began consolidating his power, with efforts to drive power away from the Durrani Pashtuns, and more toward the growing influential Qizilbash and Mongol guards consisted in his army.",
"Timur Shah would also move the capital of the Durrani Realm from Kandahar to Kabul, as a better base of operation to combat any threat arriving from anywhere, as Kabul was essentially the heart of the empire.",
"After consolidating his power, Timur Shah marched against the Sikh's in 1780 in a Jihad, and decisively defeated the Sikhs, forcing them to return Multan toward Durrani Suzerainty after it was seized after the death of Ahmad Shah Durrani.",
"Timur Shah, having secured Punjab, also faced recurring rebellions against him, including an assassination attempt early in his reign at Peshawar.",
"Timur Shah would encounter harsh resistance and rebellion, prominently those of Fayz Allah Khan, Azad Khan, and Arsalan Khan.",
"Timur Shah in his reign also fought against Shah Murad, the ruler of Bukhara who attempted raids into Afghan Turkestan and Khorasan, often harassing the Durrani vassal of the Afsharid dynasty centred in Mashhad.",
"In conclusion, Timur Shah spent most of his reign consolidating the empire, while also fighting off rebellion, he prove himself as a competent leader from holding the unstable empire apart.",
"Timur Shah died on 20 May 1793, succeeded by his son, Zaman Shah Durrani====Zaman Shah (1793–1801)====Zaman Shah Durrani being enthronedAfter the death of Timur Shah, three of his sons, the governors of Kandahar, Herat and Kabul, contended for the succession.",
"Zaman Shah, governor of Kabul, held the field by virtue of being in control of the capital, and became shah at the age of twenty-three.",
"Many of his half-brothers were imprisoned on their arrival in the capital for the purpose, ironically, of electing a new shah.",
"The quarrels among Timur's descendants that threw Afghanistan into turmoil also provided the pretext for the interventions of outside forces.The efforts of the Sadozai heirs of Timur to impose a true monarchy on the truculent Pashtun tribes, and their efforts to rule absolutely and without the advice of the other major Pashtun tribal leaders, were ultimately unsuccessful.",
"The Sikhs started to rise under the command of Sikh chief, Ranjit Singh, who succeeded in wresting power from Zaman's forces.",
"Later, when Zaman was blinded by his brother, Ranjit Singh gave him asylum in Punjab.Zaman's downfall was triggered by his attempts to consolidate power.",
"Although it had been through the support of the Barakzai chief, Painda Khan Barakzai, that he had come to the throne, Zaman soon began to remove prominent Barakzai leaders from positions of power and replace them with men of his own lineage, the Sadozai.",
"This upset the delicate balance of Durrani tribal politics that Ahmad Shah had established and may have prompted Painda Khan and other Durrani chiefs to plot against the shah.",
"Painda Khan and the chiefs of the Nurzai and the Alizai Durrani clans were executed, as was the chief of the Qizilbash clan.",
"Painda Khan's son fled to Iran and pledged the substantial support of his Barakzai followers to a rival claimant to the throne, Zaman's younger brother, Mahmud Shah.",
"The clans of the chiefs Zaman had executed joined forces with the rebels, and they took Kandahar without bloodshed.",
"Mahmud Shah had then proceeded to march to Kabul, where he met Zaman Shah and his army on the way from Ghanzi to Kabul, Zaman Shah was decisively defeated, including portions of his army fleeing to Mahmud Shah's cause.",
"Mahmud Shah ordered the lancing of Zaman Shah's eyes, and had succeeded Zaman Shah on the throne of the Durrani Empire.====Mahmud Shah (first reign, 1801–1803)====Zaman Shah's overthrow in 1801 was not the end of civil strife in Afghanistan, but the beginning of even greater violence.",
"Mahmud Shah's first reign lasted for only two years before he was replaced by Shuja Shah.====Shuja Shah (1803–1809 and 1839–1842)====The main street in the bazaar at Kabul, 1842 James Atkinson watercolour painting.Order of the Durrani Empire, founded by Shuja Shah in 1839.Yet another of Timur Shah's sons, Shuja Shah (or Shah Shuja), ruled for only six years.",
"On June 7, 1809, Shuja Shah signed a treaty with the British, which included a clause stating that he would oppose the passage of foreign troops through his territories.",
"This agreement, the first Afghan pact with a European power, stipulated joint action in case of Franco-Persian aggression against Afghan or British dominions.",
"Only a few weeks after signing the agreement, Shuja was deposed by his predecessor, Mahmud.",
"Much later, he was reinstated by the British, ruling during 1839–1842.Two of his sons also ruled for a brief period in 1842.====Mahmud Shah (second reign, 1809–1818)====Mahmud's second reign lasted 9 years, where he had further attempted to consolidate power, but was deposed by his brother in 1818, Mahmud's reign was also disputed in 1810, while he was campaigning, another one of Timur Shah Durrani's sons had seized the throne, but was defeated by Shah Mahmud in 1810.====Abbas Mirza (1810)====While Mahmud Shah was campaigning in 1810, another one of Timur Shah's sons placed himself in rule at Kabul.",
"Abbas Mirza ruled for a short period of time before being defeated by Mahmud Shah once he returned from campaign.====Sultan Ali Shah (1818–1819)====Ali Shah was another son of Timur Shah.",
"He seized power for a brief period in 1818–1819.in 1818 or 1819, He was strangled by his brother, Isma'il.====Ayub Shah (1819–1823)====Ayub Shah was another son of Timur Shah, who took control of the Durrani Empire after the death of Ali Shah Durrani.",
"The Durrani Empire lost its control over Kashmir to the Sikh Empire in the Battle of Shopian in 1819.Ayub Shah was himself later deposed, and presumably killed in 1823.===Durrani Herat (1793–1863)======Shah Shuja and the First Anglo Afghan War (1839–1842)===In the 19th century as a whole, Britain and Russia were interlocked in a battle for influence in South Asia.",
"Russian advance was trudging through Central Asia, while the British were landing in the masses on the Indian subcontinent.",
"The \"Army of the Indus\", full of both British and Indian infantrymen and cavalrymen, was intent on restoring Shah Shuja Durrani, the deposed monarch to the throne of Afghanistan.",
"By March 1839, the British had already crossed into the Emirate of Afghanistan."
],
[
"Languages",
"Similar to earlier Persianate rulers, Ahmad Shah Durrani rarely wrote by himself.",
"Instead, for textual composition in his name, he turned to scribes, secretaries, and a group of authors known as ''munshis''.",
"The sole written records from Ahmad Shah's reign are his official biography and a letter he wrote to the Ottoman court; both are written in Persian but not in Ahmad Shah's hand.",
"The modern historian Shah Mahmoud Hanifi says that Ahmad Shah's ''diwan'' compendium of Pashto poetry, which is kept in the British Library, has notations and provenance information that raise serious concerns about what the book is aggressively claimed to be, namely, evidence of Ahmad Shah's Pashtunness.For his son Sulaiman, a Shia who served as the governor of Qandahar, Ahmad Shah is claimed to have ordered a Pashto language textbook.",
"Ahmad Shah is not known to have spoken Pashto, and his tenacious literary bond with Pashto was not upheld by his successors.",
"Abdur Rahman Khan, who paid for a Pashto translation of the minutes of his meeting with British colonial official Lord Dufferin in 1885, was the next state ruler to leave a record of his interaction with Pashto more than a century later.Notwithstanding Ahmad Shah Durrani's attempts to establish a Pashto-based administration, when the nation's capital relocated from Qandahar to Kabul in 1772, Durrani's Afghanistan and Afghanistan that followed him kept Persian as the primary language of the chancery and the royal court.",
"The patronage of Persian-language histories also continued to prevail under Ahmad Shah Durrani."
],
[
"Military",
"The Durrani military was based on cavalry armed with flintlocks who performed hit-and-run attacks, combining new technology in firearms with Turco-Mongol tactics.",
"The core of the Durrani army were the 10,000 ''sher-bacha'' (blunderbuss)-carrying mounted ghulams (slave-soldiers) of which a third were previously Shia soldiers (Qizilbash) of Nader Shah.",
"Many others were also former troops of Nader Shah.",
"The bulk of the army were Afghan irregular tribal cavalry armed with lance and broadsword.",
"Mounted archers were still used but were uncommon due to the difficulty of training them.",
"Infantry played a very small role in the Durrani army and, with the exception of light swivel guns mounted on camels, the Zamburak, so did artillery."
],
[
"See also",
"* List of Durrani Wazirs* Indian campaign of Ahmad Shah Durrani* List of Pashtun empires and dynasties"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Sources",
"******"
],
[
"External links",
"* Afghanistan 1747–1809: Sources in the India Office Records * Biography of Ahmad Shah Abdali (Durrani)* Ahmad Shah Baba** Afghanistan and the Search for Unity Article on Durrani methods of government, published in ''Asian Affairs'', Volume 38, Issue 2, 2007, pp.",
"145–157."
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Aimaq people"
],
[
"Introduction",
"The '''Aimaq''' () or '''Chahar Aimaq''' (), also transliterated as '''Aymaq''', '''Aimagh''', '''Aimak''' and '''Aymak''', are a collection of Sunni and mostly Persian-speaking nomadic and semi-nomadic tribes.",
"They live mostly in the central and western highlands of Afghanistan, especially in Ghor and Badghis.",
"Aimaqs were originally known as ''chahar'' (\"four\") Aymaqs: Jamshidi, Aimaq Hazara, Firozkohi and Taymani.",
"The Timuri, which is a separate tribe but is sometimes included among Aimaqs, which is known as ''Aimaq-e digar'' (\"other Aimaq\").The Aimaq speak several subdialects of the Aimaq dialect of the Persian language, but some southern groups of Taymani, Firozkohi, and northeastern Timuri Aimaqs have adopted the Pashto language."
],
[
"Etymology",
"The word \"Aimaq\" is derived from the Turkic-Mongolic word \"Oymaq\" that means \"tribe\" and \"group of tribes\".",
"Aimaq Hazara and Timuri are closest to the Turco-Mongols since they are semi-nomadic tribes and some of them live in yurts, whereas other Aimaqs live in traditional black tents."
],
[
"Origin",
"The Aimaqs claim different origins based on their tribal background.",
"Some claim to be descended from the troops of Genghis Khan.",
"Other tribes such as the Taymani and Firozkohi claim descent from Pashtun tribes."
],
[
"Culture and society",
"The Aimaq are largely nomadic to semi-nomadic goat and sheep herders.",
"They also trade with villages and farmers during migrations for pastures for their livestock.",
"The material culture and foodstuffs of the Aimaq include skins, carpets, milk, dairy products and more.",
"They trade these products to settled peoples in return for vegetables, grains, fruits, nuts, and other types of foods and goods.=== Religion ===Aimaqs are largely Sunni Muslims except for the Jamshidi who are mainly Ismaili Shia in the main and in contrast to the Hazaras, who are mostly Shia Muslims."
],
[
"Demographics",
"ethnic groups and subgroups in Afghanistan (2005)Estimates of the Aimaq population vary between 250,000 and 500,000."
],
[
"See also",
"* Aimaq Hazara* Hazaras* Qara'unas"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* Macgregor, ''Central Asia'', (Calcutta, 1871)*"
],
[
"External links",
"* Aimaq Man with Children, Pal-Kotal-I-Guk, Ghor Province* Aimaq Nomad Camp Pal-Kotal-I-Guk Between Chakhcharan and Jam Afghanistan"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Arcturus"
],
[
"Introduction",
" Note (category: variability): H and K emission vary.",
"'''Arcturus''' is the brightest star in the northern constellation of Boötes.",
"With an apparent visual magnitude of −0.05, it is the fourth-brightest star in the night sky, and the brightest in the northern celestial hemisphere.",
"The name Arcturus originated from ancient Greece; it was then cataloged as '''α Boötis''' by Johann Bayer in 1603, which is Latinized to '''Alpha Boötis'''.",
"Arcturus forms one corner of the Spring Triangle asterism.Located relatively close at 36.7 light-years from the Sun, Arcturus is a single red giant of spectral type K1.5III—an aging star around 7.1 billion years old that has used up its core hydrogen and evolved off the main sequence.",
"It is about the same mass as the Sun, but has expanded to 25 times its size and is around 170 times as luminous.",
"Its diameter is 35 million kilometres.",
"Thus far no companion has been detected."
],
[
"Nomenclature",
"The traditional name ''Arcturus'' is Latinised from the ancient Greek Ἀρκτοῦρος (''Arktouros'') and means \"Guardian of the Bear\", ultimately from ἄρκτος (''arktos''), \"bear\" and οὖρος (''ouros''), \"watcher, guardian\".",
"The designation of Arcturus as ''α Boötis'' (Latinised to ''Alpha Boötis'') was made by Johann Bayer in 1603.In 2016, the International Astronomical Union organized a Working Group on Star Names (WGSN) to catalog and standardize proper names for stars.",
"The WGSN's first bulletin of July 2016 included a table of the first two batches of names approved by the WGSN, which included ''Arcturus'' for α Boötis."
],
[
"Observation",
"Arcturus is the brightest star in the constellation of Boötes.With an apparent visual magnitude of −0.05, Arcturus is the brightest star in the northern celestial hemisphere and the fourth-brightest star in the night sky, after Sirius (−1.46 apparent magnitude), Canopus (−0.72) and α Centauri (combined magnitude of −0.27).",
"However, α Centauri AB is a binary star, whose components are each fainter than Arcturus.",
"This makes Arcturus the third-brightest individual star, just ahead of α Centauri A (officially named ''Rigil Kentaurus''), whose apparent magnitude .",
"The French mathematician and astronomer Jean-Baptiste Morin observed Arcturus in the daytime with a telescope in 1635.This was the first recorded full daylight viewing for any star other than the Sun and supernovae.",
"Arcturus has been seen at or just before sunset with the naked eye.Arcturus is visible from both of Earth's hemispheres as it is located 19° north of the celestial equator.",
"The star culminates at midnight on 27 April, and at 9 p.m. on June 10 being visible during the late northern spring or the southern autumn.",
"From the northern hemisphere, an easy way to find Arcturus is to follow the arc of the handle of the Big Dipper (or Plough in the UK).",
"By continuing in this path, one can find Spica, \"Arc to Arcturus, then spike (or speed on) to Spica\".",
"Together with the bright stars Spica and Regulus (or Denebola, depending on the source), Arcturus is part of the Spring Triangle asterism.",
"With Cor Caroli, these four stars form the Great Diamond asterism.Ptolemy described Arcturus as ''subrufa'' (\"slightly red\"): it has a B-V color index of +1.23, roughly midway between Pollux (B-V +1.00) and Aldebaran (B-V +1.54).η Boötis, or Muphrid, is only 3.3 light-years distant from Arcturus, and would have a visual magnitude −2.5, about as bright as Jupiter at its brightest from Earth, whereas an observer on the former system would find Arcturus with a magnitude -5.0, slightly brighter than Venus as seen from Earth, but with an orangish color."
],
[
"Physical characteristics",
"Optical image of Arcturus (DSS2 / MAST / STScI / NASA)Based upon an annual parallax shift of 88.83 milliarcseconds as measured by the Hipparcos satellite, Arcturus is from the Sun.",
"The parallax margin of error is 0.54 milliarcseconds, translating to a distance margin of error of ±.",
"Because of its proximity, Arcturus has a high proper motion, two arcseconds a year, greater than any first magnitude star other than α Centauri.Arcturus is moving rapidly () relative to the Sun, and is now almost at its closest point to the Sun.",
"Closest approach will happen in about 4,000 years, when the star will be a few hundredths of a light-year closer to Earth than it is today.",
"(In antiquity, Arcturus was closer to the centre of the constellation.)",
"Arcturus is thought to be an old-disk star, and appears to be moving with a group of 52 other such stars, known as the Arcturus stream.With an absolute magnitude of −0.30, Arcturus is, together with Vega and Sirius, one of the most luminous stars in the Sun's neighborhood.",
"It is about 110 times brighter than the Sun in visible light wavelengths, but this underestimates its strength as much of the light it gives off is in the infrared; total (bolometric) power output is about 180 times that of the Sun.",
"With a near-infrared J band magnitude of −2.2, only Betelgeuse (−2.9) and R Doradus (−2.6) are brighter.",
"The lower output in visible light is due to a lower efficacy as the star has a lower surface temperature than the Sun.As a single star, the mass of Arcturus cannot be measured directly, but models suggest it is slightly greater than that of the Sun.",
"Evolutionary matching to the observed physical parameters gives a mass of , while the oxygen isotope ratio for a first dredge-up star gives a mass of .",
"Given the star's evolutionary state, it is expected to have undergone significant mass loss in the past.",
"The star displays magnetic activity that is heating the coronal structures, and it undergoes a solar-type magnetic cycle with a duration that is probably less than 14 years.",
"A weak magnetic field has been detected in the photosphere with a strength of around half a gauss.",
"The magnetic activity appears to lie along four latitudes and is rotationally modulated.Arcturus is estimated to be around 6 to 8.5 billion years old, but there is some uncertainty about its evolutionary status.",
"Based upon the color characteristics of Arcturus, it is currently ascending the red-giant branch and will continue to do so until it accumulates a large enough degenerate helium core to ignite the helium flash.",
"It has likely exhausted the hydrogen from its core and is now in its active hydrogen shell burning phase.",
"However, Charbonnel et al.",
"(1998) placed it slightly above the horizontal branch, and suggested it has already completed the helium flash stage.Size comparison between the Sun, Beta Ursae Majoris, Pollux, and Arcturus.===Spectrum===Arcturus has evolved off the main sequence to the red giant branch, reaching an early K-type stellar classification.",
"It is frequently assigned the spectral type of K0III, but in 1989 was used as the spectral standard for type K1.5III Fe−0.5, with the suffix notation indicating a mild underabundance of iron compared to typical stars of its type.",
"As the brightest K-type giant in the sky, it has been the subject of multiple atlases with coverage from the ultraviolet to infrared.The spectrum shows a dramatic transition from emission lines in the ultraviolet to atomic absorption lines in the visible range and molecular absorption lines in the infrared.",
"This is due to the optical depth of the atmosphere varying with wavelength.",
"The spectrum shows very strong absorption in some molecular lines that are not produced in the photosphere but in a surrounding shell.",
"Examination of carbon monoxide lines show the molecular component of the atmosphere extending outward to 2–3 times the radius of the star, with the chromospheric wind steeply accelerating to 35–40 km/s in this region.Astronomers term \"metals\" those elements with higher atomic numbers than helium.",
"The atmosphere of Arcturus has an enrichment of alpha elements relative to iron but only about a third of solar metallicity.",
"Arcturus is possibly a Population II star.===Oscillations===As one of the brightest stars in the sky, Arcturus has been the subject of a number of studies in the emerging field of asteroseismology.",
"Belmonte and colleagues carried out a radial velocity (Doppler shift of spectral lines) study of the star in April and May 1988, which showed variability with a frequency of the order of a few microhertz (μHz), the highest peak corresponding to 4.3 μHz (2.7 days) with an amplitude of 60 ms−1, with a frequency separation of c. 5 μHz.",
"They suggested that the most plausible explanation for the variability of Arcturus is stellar oscillations.Asteroseismological measurements allow direct calculation of the mass and radius, giving values of and .",
"This form of modelling is still relatively inaccurate, but a useful check on other models.===Possible planetary system===Hipparcos satellite astrometry suggested that Arcturus is a binary star, with the companion about twenty times dimmer than the primary and orbiting close enough to be at the very limits of humans' current ability to make it out.",
"Recent results remain inconclusive, but do support the marginal ''Hipparcos'' detection of a binary companion.In 1993, radial velocity measurements of Aldebaran, Arcturus and Pollux showed that Arcturus exhibited a long-period radial velocity oscillation, which could be interpreted as a ''substellar companion''.",
"This substellar object would be nearly 12 times the mass of Jupiter and be located roughly at the same orbital distance from Arcturus as the Earth is from the Sun, at 1.1 astronomical units.",
"However, all three stars surveyed showed similar oscillations yielding similar companion masses, and the authors concluded that the variation was likely to be intrinsic to the star rather than due to the gravitational effect of a companion.",
"So far no substellar companion has been confirmed."
],
[
"Mythology",
"Arcturus in ArctophyllaxOne astronomical tradition associates Arcturus with the mythology around Arcas, who was about to shoot and kill his own mother Callisto who had been transformed into a bear.",
"Zeus averted their imminent tragic fate by transforming the boy into the constellation Boötes, called Arctophylax \"bear guardian\" by the Greeks, and his mother into Ursa Major (Greek: Arctos \"the bear\").",
"The account is given in Hyginus's ''Astronomy''.Aratus in his ''Phaenomena'' said that the star Arcturus lay below the belt of Arctophylax, and according to Ptolemy in the ''Almagest'' it lay between his thighs.An alternative lore associates the name with the legend around Icarius, who gave the gift of wine to other men, but was murdered by them, because they had had no experience with intoxication and mistook the wine for poison.",
"It is stated this Icarius, became Arcturus, while his dog, Maira, became Canicula (Procyon), although \"Arcturus\" here may be used in the sense of the constellation rather than the star."
],
[
"Cultural significance",
"As one of the brightest stars in the sky, Arcturus has been significant to observers since antiquity.In ancient Mesopotamia, it was linked to the god Enlil, and also known as Shudun, \"yoke\", or SHU-PA of unknown derivation in the ''Three Stars Each'' Babylonian star catalogues and later MUL.APIN around 1100 BC.In ancient Greek the star is found in ancient astronomical literature, e.g.",
"Hesiod's ''Work and Days'', circa 700 BC, as well as Hipparchus's and Ptolemy's star catalogs.",
"The folk-etymology connecting the star name with the bears (Greek: ἄρκτος, arktos) was probably invented much later.",
"It fell out of use in favour of Arabic names until it was revived in the Renaissance.Arcturus next to the head of Comet Donati in 1858In Arabic, Arcturus is one of two stars called ''al-simāk'' \"the uplifted ones\" (the other is Spica).",
"Arcturus is specified as السماك الرامح ''as-simāk ar-rāmiħ'' \"the uplifted one of the lancer\".",
"The term ''Al Simak Al Ramih'' has appeared in Al Achsasi Al Mouakket catalogue (translated into Latin as ''Al Simak Lanceator'').",
"This has been variously romanized in the past, leading to obsolete variants such as ''Aramec'' and ''Azimech''.",
"For example, the name ''Alramih'' is used in Geoffrey Chaucer's ''A Treatise on the Astrolabe'' (1391).",
"Another Arabic name is ''Haris-el-sema'', from ''حارس السماء'' ''ħāris al-samā’'' \"the keeper of heaven\".",
"or ''حارس الشمال'' ''ħāris al-shamāl’'' \"the keeper of north\".In Indian astronomy, Arcturus is called Swati or Svati (Devanagari स्वाति, Transliteration IAST svāti, svātī́), possibly 'su' + 'ati' (\"great goer\", in reference to its remoteness) meaning very beneficent.",
"It has been referred to as \"the real pearl\" in Bhartṛhari's kāvyas.",
"In Chinese astronomy, Arcturus is called ''Da Jiao'' (), because it is the brightest star in the Chinese constellation called ''Jiao Xiu'' ().",
"Later it became a part of another constellation ''Kang Xiu'' ().The Wotjobaluk Koori people of southeastern Australia knew Arcturus as ''Marpean-kurrk'', mother of ''Djuit'' (Antares) and another star in Boötes, ''Weet-kurrk'' (Muphrid).",
"Its appearance in the north signified the arrival of the larvae of the wood ant (a food item) in spring.",
"The beginning of summer was marked by the star's setting with the Sun in the west and the disappearance of the larvae.",
"The people of Milingimbi Island in Arnhem Land saw Arcturus and Muphrid as man and woman, and took the appearance of Arcturus at sunrise as a sign to go and harvest ''rakia'' or spikerush.",
"The Weilwan of northern New South Wales knew Arcturus as ''Guembila'' \"red\".Prehistoric Polynesian navigators knew Arcturus as ''Hōkūleʻa'', the \"Star of Joy\".",
"Arcturus is the zenith star of the Hawaiian Islands.",
"Using Hōkūleʻa and other stars, the Polynesians launched their double-hulled canoes from Tahiti and the Marquesas Islands.",
"Traveling east and north they eventually crossed the equator and reached the latitude at which Arcturus would appear directly overhead in the summer night sky.",
"Knowing they had arrived at the exact latitude of the island chain, they sailed due west on the trade winds to landfall.",
"If Hōkūleʻa could be kept directly overhead, they landed on the southeastern shores of the Big Island of Hawaii.",
"For a return trip to Tahiti the navigators could use Sirius, the zenith star of that island.",
"Since 1976, the Polynesian Voyaging Society's ''Hōkūleʻa'' has crossed the Pacific Ocean many times under navigators who have incorporated this wayfinding technique in their non-instrument navigation.Arcturus had several other names that described its significance to indigenous Polynesians.",
"In the Society Islands, Arcturus, called ''Ana-tahua-taata-metua-te-tupu-mavae'' (\"a pillar to stand by\"), was one of the ten \"pillars of the sky\", bright stars that represented the ten heavens of the Tahitian afterlife.",
"In Hawaii, the pattern of Boötes was called ''Hoku-iwa'', meaning \"stars of the frigatebird\".",
"This constellation marked the path for Hawaiʻiloa on his return to Hawaii from the South Pacific Ocean.",
"The Hawaiians called Arcturus ''Hoku-leʻa''.",
"It was equated to the Tuamotuan constellation ''Te Kiva'', meaning \"frigatebird\", which could either represent the figure of Boötes or just Arcturus.",
"However, Arcturus may instead be the Tuamotuan star called ''Turu''.",
"The Hawaiian name for Arcturus as a single star was likely ''Hoku-leʻa'', which means \"star of gladness\", or \"clear star\".",
"In the Marquesas Islands, Arcturus was probably called ''Tau-tou'' and was the star that ruled the month approximating January.",
"The Māori and Moriori called it ''Tautoru'', a variant of the Marquesan name and a name shared with Orion's Belt.In Inuit astronomy, Arcturus is called the Old Man (''Uttuqalualuk'' in Inuit languages) and The First Ones (''Sivulliik'' in Inuit languages).The Miꞌkmaq of eastern Canada saw Arcturus as ''Kookoogwéss'', the owl.Early-20th-century Armenian scientist Nazaret Daghavarian theorized that the star commonly referred to in Armenian folklore as ''Gutani astgh'' (Armenian: Գութանի աստղ; lit.",
"star of the plow) was in fact Arcturus, as the constellation of Boötes was called \"Ezogh\" (Armenian: Եզող; lit.",
"the person who is plowing) by Armenians."
],
[
"In popular culture",
"In Ancient Rome, the star's celestial activity was supposed to portend tempestuous weather, and a personification of the star acts as narrator of the prologue to Plautus' comedy ''Rudens'' (circa 211 BC).The Kāraṇḍavyūha Sūtra, compiled at the end of the 4th century or beginning of the 5th century, names one of Avalokiteśvara's meditative absorptions as \"The face of Arcturus\".One of the possible etymologies offered for the name \"Arthur\" assumes that it is derived from \"Arcturus\" and that the late 5th to early 6th-century figure on whom the myth of King Arthur is based was originally named for the star.In the Middle Ages, Arcturus was considered a Behenian fixed star and attributed to the stone Jasper and the plantain herb.",
"Cornelius Agrippa listed its kabbalistic sign Image:Agrippa1531 Alchameth.png under the alternate name ''Alchameth''.Arcturus's light was employed in the mechanism used to open the 1933 Chicago World's Fair.",
"The star was chosen as it was thought that light from Arcturus had started its journey at about the time of the previous Chicago World's Fair in 1893 (at 36.7 light-years away, the light actually started in 1896).At the height of the American Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln observed Arcturus through a 9.6-inch refractor telescope when he visited the Naval Observatory in Washington, DC, in August, 1863."
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"******************"
],
[
"External links",
"* SolStation.com entry"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Androphagi"
],
[
"Introduction",
"The '''Androphagi''' were an ancient Scythian tribe whose existence was recorded by ancient Greco-Roman authors.The Androphagi were closely related to the Melanchlaeni and the Budini."
],
[
"Name",
"The name is a Latinisation of the ancient Greek name (), which meant \"Man-Eaters.\"",
"This name is a descriptive one based on this tribe's practice of cannibalism, and their own tribal name is unknown."
],
[
"Location",
"The location of the Androphagi near Scythia.The Androphagi lived in the region to the east of the middle Dnipro river, especially in the valley of the Sula and some smaller rivers.The neighbours of the Androphagi were the Neuri to the west and the Scythians to the south."
],
[
"History",
"===Origin===The Scythians originated in the region of the Volga-Ural steppes of Central Asia, possibly around the 9th century BC, as a section of the population of the Srubnaya culture containing a significant element originating from the Siberian Andronovo culture.",
"The population of the Srubnaya culture was among the first truly nomadic pastoralist groups, who themselves emerged in the Central Asian and Siberian steppes during the 9th century BC as a result of the cold and dry climate then prevailing in these regions.During the 9th to 8th centuries BC, a significant movement of the nomadic peoples of the Eurasian Steppe started when another nomadic Iranic tribe closely related to the Scythians from eastern Central Asia, either the Massagetae or the Issedones, migrated westwards, forcing the early Scythians to the west across the Araxes river, following which some Scythian tribes had migrated westwards into the steppe adjacent to the shores of the Black Sea, which they occupied along with the Cimmerians, who were also a nomadic Iranic people closely related to the Scythians.Over the course of the 8th and 7th centuries BC, the Scythians migrated into the Caucasian and Caspian Steppes in several waves, becoming the dominant population of the region, where they assimilated most of the Cimmerians and conquered their territory, with this absorption of the Cimmerians by the Scythians being facilitated by their similar ethnic backgrounds and lifestyles, after which the Scythians settled in the area between the Araxes, the Caucasus and the Lake Maeotis.",
"The section of the Scythians from whom the Androphagi originated participated in this migration, and had established itself in Ciscaucasia around .From their base in the Caucasian Steppe, during the period of the 8th to 7th centuries BC itself, the Scythians conquered the Pontic and Crimean Steppes to the north of the Black Sea up to the Danube river, which formed the western boundary of Scythian territory onwards, with this process of Scythian takeover of the Pontic Steppe becoming fully complete by the 7th century BC.Archaeologically, the westwards migration of the Early Scythians from Central Asia into the Caspian Steppe constituted the latest of the two to three waves of expansion of the Srubnaya culture to the west of the Volga.",
"The last and third wave corresponding to the Scythian migration has been dated to the 9th century BC.",
"The expansion of the Scythians into the Pontic Steppe is attested through the westward movement of the Srubnaya-Khvalynsk culture into Ukraine.",
"The Srubnaya-Khvalynsk culture in Ukraine is referred to in scholarship as the \"Late Srubnaya\" culture.===Migration towards the forest steppe===From the Caucasian steppe, the tribe of the Royal Scythians expanded to the south, following the coast of the Caspian Sea and arrived in the Ciscaucasian steppes, from where they settled in eastern Transcaucasia until the early 6th century BC.The Royal Scythians were finally expelled from West Asia in the , after which, beginning in the later 7th and lasting throughout much of the 6th century BC, the majority of the Scythians migrated from Ciscaucasia into the Pontic Steppe, which became the centre of Scythian power.The retreat of the Royal Scythians from West Asia into the Pontic steppe pushed a Scythian splinter group to the north, into the region of Donets-Kramatorsk, where they formed the Vorskla and Sula-Donets groups of the Scythian culture, of which the Donets group corresponded to the Melanchlaeni, the Sula group to the Androphagi, and the Vorskla group to the Budini, with all of these groups remaining independent from the Scythians proper.",
"This splinter group arrived in the forest-steppe region in part from the Kuban region, but for the most from northern Ciscaucasia.Of these groups, the Androphagi and the Melanchlaeni were closely related tribes.===The Persian invasion===When the Persian Achaemenid king Darius I attacked the Scythians in 513 BC, the Scythian king Idanthyrsus summoned the kings of the peoples surrounding his kingdom to a meeting to decide how to deal with the Persian invasion.",
"The kings of the Budini, Gelonians, and Sarmatians accepted to help the Scythians against the Persian attack, while the kings of the Agathyrsi, Androphagi, Melanchlaeni, Neuri, and Tauri refused to support the Scythians.During the campaign, the Scythians and the Persian army pursuing them passed through the territories of the Melanchlaeni, Androphagi, and Neuri, before they reached the borders of the Agathyrsi, who refused to let the Scythian divisions to pass into their territories and find refuge there, thus forcing the Scythians to return to Scythia with the Persians pursuing them."
],
[
"Society and culture",
"The ancient Greek author Herodotus of Halicarnassus described the Androphagi as wearing Scythian-type clothing, and speaking a \"peculiar language.",
"\"===Lifestyle===The Androphagi were largely engaged in agriculture and farming, and hunting was of lesser importance among them.===Language===The \"peculiar language\" of the Androphagi might have been a dialect of Iranic language different from that of the Pontic Scythians.",
"The Sula group of the Scythian culture which corresponded to the Androphagi was part of an area of Iranic toponymy and hydronymy.===Ritual cannibalism===Herodotus of Halicarnassus claimed that the Androphagi were the only ones who practised cannibalism among the peoples living near Scythia, which seems to be confirmed by the intact and unbroken human bones of seventeen individuals which were found along with cut and broken animal bones in the kitchen refuse of seven Androphagi earthworks.",
"However, traces of similar ritual cannibalism are recorded from seven earthworks of the Melanchlaeni and Budini, as well as in the Smiela kurgan 15, which was one of the earliest burials of the Tiasmyn group of the Scythian culture.The Sauromatians who lived in the Urals and the lower Volga, and Massagetae and Issedones to the east of the Urals, practised similar ritual cannibalism, suggesting that the early Scythic peoples of the Central Asian steppe had customs and beliefs connected to ritual cannibalism.===Trade===Trade relations between the Androphagi and the ancient Greek colonies on the northern shores of the Black Sea had been established in the 6th century BC."
],
[
"Archaeology",
"The Androphagi archaeologically belonged to the Scythian culture, and they corresponded to its Sula group, which was the largest Scythian culture group of the eastern European forest steppe zone.The Donets, Sula and Vorskla groups of the Scythian culture, respectively corresponding to the Melanchlaeni, Androphagi, and Budini, are sometimes grouped the Zolnichnaya (that is \"Ash-Mounds\") culture because of the presence of several (), that is ash mounds containing containing refuse from kitchens and other sources, near dwellings.",
"The three groups of the Zolnichnaya culture were closely related to each other, with the Vorskla group nevertheless exhibiting enough significant differences from the Sula and Donets groups that the latter two are sometimes grouped together as a Sula-Donets group distinct from the Vorskla group.The earliest Scythians had belonged to the Srubnaya culture culture, and, like the Donets group of the Scythian culture which corresponds to the Melanchlaeni, the Sula group of the Scythian culture contained an important element of the Srubnaya culture in its substratum, although there were some differences between the Donets and Sula groups."
],
[
"See also",
"*Massagetae*Issedones"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Sources",
"* * * ** * * * * * * * * * * *"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Albert Brooks"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Albert Brooks''' (born '''Albert Lawrence Einstein'''; July 22, 1947) is an American actor, comedian, director and screenwriter.",
"He received an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in the 1987 comedy-drama film ''Broadcast News'' and was widely praised for his performance in the 2011 action drama film ''Drive''.",
"Brooks has also acted in films such as ''Taxi Driver'' (1976), ''Private Benjamin'' (1980), ''Unfaithfully Yours'' (1984), and ''My First Mister'' (2001).",
"He has written, directed, and starred in several comedy films, such as ''Modern Romance'' (1981), ''Lost in America'' (1985), and ''Defending Your Life'' (1991).",
"He is also the author of ''2030: The Real Story of What Happens to America'' (2011).Brooks has also voiced several characters in animated films and television shows.",
"His voice acting roles include Marlin in ''Finding Nemo'' (2003) and its sequel ''Finding Dory'' (2016), Tiberius in ''The Secret Life of Pets'' (2016), and several one-time characters in ''The Simpsons'', including Hank Scorpio in \"You Only Move Twice\" (1996) and Russ Cargill in ''The Simpsons Movie'' (2007)."
],
[
"Early life",
"Brooks was born Albert Lawrence Einstein on July 22, 1947 into a Jewish show business family in Beverly Hills, California, to Thelma Leeds (née Goodman), an actress, and Harry Einstein, a radio comedian who performed on Eddie Cantor's radio program and was known as \"Parkyakarkus\".",
"He is the youngest of three sons.",
"His older brothers are the late comedic actor Bob Einstein (1942–2019), and Clifford Einstein (b.",
"1939), a partner and longtime chief creative officer at Los Angeles advertising agency Dailey & Associates.",
"His older half-brother was Charles Einstein (1926–2007), a writer for such television programs as ''Playhouse 90'' and ''Lou Grant''.",
"His grandparents emigrated from Austria and Russia.",
"He grew up among show business families in Southern California, attending Beverly Hills High School with Richard Dreyfuss and Rob Reiner."
],
[
"Career",
"===Early career===Brooks attended Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh (where his classmates included Michael McKean and David L. Lander), but dropped out after one year to focus on his comedy career.",
"By the age of 19, he had changed his professional name to Albert Brooks, joking that \"the real Albert Einstein changed his name to sound more intelligent\".",
"He quickly became a regular on variety and talk shows during the late 1960s and early 1970s, and was on the writing staff for the ill-fated ABC show ''Turn-On'', which was cancelled after one episode.",
"In 1970-71, he also worked with college friends McKean and Lander (alongside Harry Shearer) as a writer/guest performer on some early material by radio and LP record comedy group The Credibility Gap.",
"Brooks led a new generation of self-reflective baby-boomer comics appearing on NBC's ''The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson''.",
"His on-stage persona, that of an egotistical, narcissistic, nervous comic, an ironic showbiz insider who punctured himself before an audience by disassembling his mastery of comedic stagecraft, influenced other post-modern comedians of the 1970s, including Steve Martin, Martin Mull, and Andy Kaufman.After two successful comedy albums, ''Comedy Minus One'' (1973) and the Grammy Award–nominated ''A Star Is Bought'' (1975), Brooks left the stand-up circuit to try his hand as a filmmaker.",
"He had already made his first short film, ''The Famous Comedians School'', a satiric short and an early example of the mockumentary subgenre that was aired in 1972 on the PBS show ''The Great American Dream Machine''.In 1975, Brooks directed six short films for the first season of NBC's ''Saturday Night Live''.",
"In 1976, he appeared in his first mainstream film role, in Martin Scorsese's landmark ''Taxi Driver''; Scorsese allowed Brooks to improvise much of his dialogue.Brooks directed his first feature film, ''Real Life'', in 1979, which he co-wrote with Harry Shearer.",
"The film, in which Brooks (playing a version of himself) films a typical suburban family in an effort to win both an Oscar and a Nobel Prize, was a sendup of PBS's ''An American Family'' documentary.",
"It has also been viewed as foretelling the emergence of reality television.",
"Brooks also appeared in the film ''Private Benjamin'' (1980), starring Goldie Hawn.===1981–1999===Through the 1980s and 1990s, Brooks co-wrote (with long-time collaborator Monica Johnson), directed and starred in a series of well-received comedies, playing variants on his standard neurotic and self-obsessed character.",
"These include 1981's ''Modern Romance'', where Brooks played a film editor desperate to win back his ex-girlfriend (Kathryn Harrold).",
"The film received a limited release and ultimately grossed under $3 million domestically.",
"His best-received film, ''Lost in America'' (1985), featured Brooks and Julie Hagerty as a couple who leave their yuppie lifestyle and drop out of society to live in a motor home as they have always dreamed of doing, meeting disappointment.Brooks's ''Defending Your Life'' (1991) placed his lead character in the afterlife, put on trial to justify his human fears and determine his cosmic fate.",
"Critics responded to the off-beat premise and the chemistry between Brooks and Meryl Streep, as his post-death love interest.",
"His later efforts did not find large audiences, but still retained Brooks's touch as a filmmaker.",
"He garnered positive reviews for ''Mother'' (1996), which starred Brooks as a middle-aged writer moving back home to resolve tensions between himself and his mother (Debbie Reynolds).",
"1999's ''The Muse'' featured Brooks as a Hollywood screenwriter who has \"lost his edge\", using the services of an authentic muse (Sharon Stone) for inspiration.",
"In an interview with Brooks with regards to ''The Muse'', Gavin Smith wrote, \"Brooks's distinctive film making style is remarkably discreet and unemphatic; he has a light, deft touch, with a classical precision and economy, shooting and cutting his scenes in smooth, seamless successions of medium shots, with clean, high-key lighting.",
"\"Brooks has appeared as a guest voice on ''The Simpsons'' seven times during its run (always under the name ''A.",
"Brooks'').",
"He is described as the best guest star in the show's history by IGN, particularly for his role as supervillain Hank Scorpio in the episode \"You Only Move Twice\".Brooks also acted in other writers' and directors' films during the 1980s and 1990s.",
"He had a cameo in the opening scene of ''Twilight Zone: The Movie'', playing a driver whose passenger (Dan Aykroyd) has a shocking secret.",
"In James L. Brooks's hit ''Broadcast News'' (1987), Albert Brooks was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for playing an insecure, supremely ethical television news reporter, who offers the rhetorical question, \"Wouldn't this be a great world if insecurity and desperation made us more attractive?\"",
"He also won positive notices for his role in 1998's ''Out of Sight'', playing an untrustworthy banker and ex-convict.===2000–present===Brooks with Sheetal Sheth at the premiere of ''Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World'' in 2006Brooks received positive reviews for his portrayal of a dying retail store owner who befriends a disillusioned teenager (played by Leelee Sobieski) in ''My First Mister'' (2001).",
"Brooks continued his voiceover work in Pixar's ''Finding Nemo'' (2003), as the voice of Marlin, one of the film's protagonists.His 2005 film ''Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World'' was dropped by Sony Pictures due to their desire to change the title.",
"Warner Independent Pictures purchased the film and gave it a limited release in January 2006; the film received mixed reviews and a low box office gross.",
"As with ''Real Life'', Brooks plays a fictionalized \"Albert Brooks\", a filmmaker ostensibly commissioned by the US government to see what makes the Muslim people laugh, and sending him on a tour of India and Pakistan.In 2006 he appeared in the documentary film ''Wanderlust'' as David Howard from ''Lost in America''.",
"In 2007, he continued his long-term collaboration with ''The Simpsons'' by voicing Russ Cargill, the central antagonist of ''The Simpsons Movie''.",
"He portrayed Lenny Botwin, Nancy Botwin's estranged father-in-law, during the 2008 season of the Showtime series ''Weeds''.",
"''2030: The Real Story of What Happens to America'', his first novel, was published by St. Martin's Press on May 10, 2011.Brooks co-starred as the vicious gangster Bernie Rose, the main antagonist in the 2011 film ''Drive'', alongside Ryan Gosling and Carey Mulligan.",
"His performance received much critical praise and positive reviews.",
"After receiving awards and nominations from several film festivals and critic groups, but not an Academy Award nomination, Brooks responded humorously on Twitter, \"And to the Academy: ‘You don't like me.",
"You really don't like me’.",
"\"Brooks voiced Tiberius, a curmudgeonly red-tailed hawk, in the 2016 film ''The Secret Life of Pets'', and reprised the role of Marlin in ''Finding Dory'' the same year.In early November 2023, a documentary about the comedian/filmmaker, ''Albert Brooks: Defending My Life'', directed by his friend Rob Reiner, was released on HBO Max.",
"The documentary includes interviews from David Letterman, Sharon Stone, Larry David, James L Brooks, Conan O'Brien, Sarah Silverman, Ben Stiller, and others.",
"Later that month, on the podcast WTF with Marc Maron, Brooks supplemented the biographical information in the documentary with additional stories from his life."
],
[
"Personal life",
"In 1997, Brooks married artist Kimberly Shlain, daughter of surgeon and writer Leonard Shlain.",
"They have two children, Jacob and Claire and live in Santa Monica, California."
],
[
"Works",
"===as Director=== Year Title Distribution 1971/1972 \"Albert Brooks's Famous School for Comedians\" PBS 1979 ''Real Life'' Paramount Pictures 1981 ''Modern Romance'' Columbia Pictures 1985 ''Lost in America''Warner Bros. 1991 ''Defending Your Life'' 1996 ''Mother'' Paramount Pictures 1999 ''The Muse'' October Films 2005 ''Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World'' Warner Independent Pictures=== Comedy albums ===YearTitleType1973''Comedy Minus One''live1975''A Star Is Bought''studio=== Literature ===YearTitle2011''2030: The Real Story of What Happens to America''"
],
[
"Filmography",
"===Film=== Year Title Role Notes 1976 ''Taxi Driver'' Tom 1979 ''Real Life'' Albert Brooks Also writer/director 1980 ''Private Benjamin'' Yale Goodman 1981 ''Modern Romance'' Robert Cole Also writer/director 1983 ''Twilight Zone: The Movie'' Car Driver Segment: \"Prologue\" ''Terms of Endearment'' Rudyard Voice; credited as \"A. Brooks\" 1984 ''Unfaithfully Yours'' Norman Robbins 1985 ''Lost in America'' David Howard Also writer/director 1987 ''Broadcast News'' Aaron Altman Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor 1991 ''Defending Your Life'' Daniel Miller Also writer/director 1994 ''I'll Do Anything'' Burke Adler ''The Scout'' Al Percolo Also writer 1996 ''Mother'' John Henderson Also writer/director 1997 ''Critical Care'' Dr. Butz 1998 ''Dr.",
"Dolittle'' Jacob the Tiger Voice ''Out of Sight'' Richard Ripley 1999 ''The Muse'' Steven Phillips Also writer/director 2001 ''My First Mister'' Randall 'R' Harris 2003 ''Finding Nemo'' Marlin Voice ''Exploring the Reef with Jean-Michel Cousteau'' Voice, short film ''The In-Laws'' Jerry Peyser 2005 ''Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World'' Himself Also writer/director 2007 ''The Simpsons Movie'' Russ Cargill Voice; credited as \"A. Brooks\" 2011 ''Drive'' Bernie Rose 2012 ''This Is 40'' Larry 2014 ''A Most Violent Year'' Andrew Walsh 2015 ''The Little Prince'' The Businessman Voice ''Concussion'' Cyril Wecht 2016 ''Finding Dory'' Marlin Voice ''The Secret Life of Pets'' Tiberius 2017 ''I Love You, Daddy'' Dick Welker Voice; credited as \"A. Brooks\" 2023 ''Albert Brooks: Defending My Life'' Himself Documentary TBA ''Ella McCay'' Filming===Television=== Year Title Role Notes 1969 ''Hot Wheels'' Mickey Barnes / Kip Chogi Voice 1970 ''The Odd Couple'' Rudy 2 episodes 1971 ''Love, American Style'' Christopher Leacock Episode 2.16: \"Love and Operation Model\" 1972 ''The New Dick Van Dyke Show'' Dr. Norman Episode 2.2: \"The Needle\" 1975–1976 ''Saturday Night Live'' Interviewer / Bob / Heart Surgeon Assistant director: 7 episodesWriter: 5 episodesActor: 4 episodes 1990–2023 ''The Simpsons'' Hank Scorpio, Jacques, Various roles Voice, 9 episodes; credited as \"A. Brooks\" 2008 ''Weeds'' Lenny Botwin 4 episodes 2021 ''Curb Your Enthusiasm'' Himself Episode: \"The Five-Foot Fence\""
],
[
"Awards and nominations",
" Year Award WorkResult 1985 National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Screenplay ''Lost in America'' 1987 American Comedy Award for Funniest Male Supporting Actor ''Broadcast News'' Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actor Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actor National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actor 1996 National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Screenplay ''Mother'' New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Screenplay 2011 African American Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor ''Drive'' Austin Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actor Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor Florida Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor Houston Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actor Las Vegas Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actor National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actor New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor New York Film Critics Online Award for Best Supporting Actor Oklahoma Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor Phoenix Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actor San Francisco Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture St. Louis Gateway Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor Village Voice Film Poll – Supporting Actor Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor Central Ohio Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor Detroit Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actor Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Male Indiana Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor London Film Critics Circle Award for Supporting Actor of the Year Online Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actor San Diego Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actor Southeastern Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* * * * Interview: Albert Brooks: Comedy And Dystopia – On Point.",
"* \" The films of Albert Brooks\".",
"''Hell Is For Hyphenates''.",
"January 31, 2014."
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Antares"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Antares''' is the brightest star in the constellation of Scorpius.",
"It has the Bayer designation '''α Scorpii''', which is Latinised to '''Alpha Scorpii'''.",
"Often referred to as \"the heart of the scorpion\", Antares is flanked by σ Scorpii and τ Scorpii near the center of the constellation.",
"Distinctly reddish when viewed with the naked eye, Antares is a slow irregular variable star that ranges in brightness from an apparent visual magnitude of +0.6 down to +1.6.It is on average the fifteenth-brightest star in the night sky.",
"Antares is the brightest and most evolved stellar member of the Scorpius–Centaurus association, the nearest OB association to the Sun.",
"It is located about from Earth at the rim of the Upper Scorpius subgroup, and is illuminating the Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex in its foreground.Classified as spectral type M1.5Iab-Ib, Antares is a red supergiant, a large evolved massive star and one of the largest stars visible to the naked eye.",
"Its exact size remains uncertain, but if placed at the center of the Solar System, it would extend out to somewhere between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.",
"Its mass is calculated to be around 12 times that of the Sun.",
"Antares appears as a single star when viewed with the naked eye, but it is actually a binary star system, with its two components called α Scorpii A and α Scorpii B.",
"The brighter of the pair is the red supergiant, while the fainter is a hot main sequence star of magnitude 5.5.They have a projected separation of about .Its traditional name ''Antares'' derives from the Ancient Greek , meaning \"rival to Ares\", due to the similarity of its reddish hue to the appearance of the planet Mars."
],
[
"Nomenclature",
"τ (lower left) and σ Scorpii; Antares appears white in this WISE false-colour infrared image.",
"''α Scorpii'' (Latinised to ''Alpha Scorpii'') is the star's Bayer designation.",
"Antares has the Flamsteed designation 21 Scorpii, as well as catalogue designations such as HR 6134 in the Bright Star Catalogue and HD 148478 in the Henry Draper Catalogue.",
"As a prominent infrared source, it appears in the Two Micron All-Sky Survey catalogue as 2MASS J16292443-2625549 and the Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) Sky Survey Atlas catalogue as IRAS 16262–2619.It is also catalogued as a double star WDS J16294-2626 and CCDM J16294-2626.Antares is a variable star and is listed in the General Catalogue of Variable Stars, but as a Bayer-designated star it does not have a separate variable star designation.Its traditional name ''Antares'' derives from the Ancient Greek , meaning \"rival to Ares\", due to the similarity of its reddish hue to the appearance of the planet Mars.",
"The comparison of Antares with Mars may have originated with early Mesopotamian astronomers which is considered an outdated speculation, because the name of this star in Mesopotamian astronomy has always been \"heart of Scorpion\" and it was associated with the goddess Lisin.",
"Some scholars have speculated that the star may have been named after Antar, or Antarah ibn Shaddad, the Arab warrior-hero celebrated in the pre-Islamic poems Mu'allaqat.",
"However, the name \"Antares\" is already proven in the Greek culture, e.g.",
"in Ptolemy's Almagest and Tetrabiblos.",
"In 2016, the International Astronomical Union organised a Working Group on Star Names (WGSN) to catalog and standardise proper names for stars.",
"The WGSN's first bulletin of July 2016 included a table of the first two batches of names approved by the WGSN, which included ''Antares'' for the star α Scorpii A.",
"It is now so entered in the IAU Catalog of Star Names."
],
[
"Observation",
"Antares is visible all night around May 31 of each year, when the star is at opposition to the Sun.",
"Antares then rises at dusk and sets at dawn as seen at the equator.For two to three weeks on either side of November 30, Antares is not visible in the night sky from mid-northern latitudes, because it is near conjunction with the Sun.",
"In higher northern latitudes, Antares is only visible low in the south in summertime.",
"Higher than 64° northern latitude, the star does not rise at all.Antares is easier to see from the southern hemisphere due to its southerly declination.",
"In the whole of Antarctica, the star is circumpolar as the whole continent is above 64° S latitude.",
"=== History ===Antares near the Sun on 30 November 2012Radial velocity variations were observed in the spectrum of Antares in the early 20th century, and attempts were made to derive spectroscopic orbits.",
"It became apparent that the small variations could not be due to orbital motion, and they were actually caused by pulsation of the star's atmosphere.",
"Even in 1928, it was calculated that the size of the star must vary by about 20%.Antares was first reported to have a companion star by Johann Tobias Bürg during an occultation on April 13, 1819, although this was not widely accepted and dismissed as a possible atmospheric effect.",
"It was then observed by Scottish astronomer James William Grant FRSE while in India on 23 July 1844.It was rediscovered by Ormsby M. Mitchel in 1846 and measured by William Rutter Dawes in April 1847.In 1952, Antares was reported to vary in brightness.",
"A photographic magnitude range from 3.00 to 3.16 was described.",
"The brightness has been monitored by the American Association of Variable Star Observers since 1945, and it has been classified as an ''LC'' slow irregular variable star, whose apparent magnitude slowly varies between extremes of +0.6 and +1.6, although usually near magnitude +1.0.There is no obvious periodicity, but statistical analyses have suggested periods of 1,733 days or days.",
"No separate long secondary period has been detected, although it has been suggested that primary periods longer than a thousand days are analogous to long secondary periods.Research published in 2018 demonstrated that Ngarrindjeri Aboriginal people from South Australia observed the variability of Antares and incorporated it into their oral traditions as Waiyungari (meaning 'red man').=== Occultations and conjunctions ===Lunar Occultation of Antares (reappearance) was observed on 2006 May 14 from The Blue Mountains, Australia.",
"Antares B reappears first, followed by Antares A 7.53 seconds later.Antares is 4.57 degrees south of the ecliptic, one of four first magnitude stars within 6° of the ecliptic (the others are Spica, Regulus and Aldebaran), so it can be occulted by the Moon.",
"The occultation of 31 July 2009 was visible in much of southern Asia and the Middle East.",
"Every year around December 2 the Sun passes 5° north of Antares.",
"Lunar occultations of Antares are fairly common, depending on the 18.6-year cycle of the lunar nodes.",
"The last cycle ended in 2010 and the next begins in 2023.Shown at right is a video of a reappearance event, clearly showing events for both components.Antares can also be occulted by the planets, e.g.",
"Venus, but these events are rare.",
"The last occultation of Antares by Venus took place on September 17, 525 BC; the next one will be November 17, 2400.Other planets have been calculated not to have occulted Antares over the last millennium, nor will they in the next millennium, as most planets stay near the ecliptic and pass north of Antares.",
"Venus will be extremely near Antares on October 19, 2117 and every eight years thereafter through to October 29, 2157 it will pass ''south'' of the star.=== Illumination of Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex ===Antares is the brightest and most evolved stellar member of the Scorpius–Centaurus association, the nearest OB association to the Sun.",
"It is a member of the Upper Scorpius subgroup of the association, which contains thousands of stars with a mean age of 11 million years.",
"Antares is located about from Earth at the rim of the Upper Scorpius subgroup, and is illuminating the Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex in its foreground.",
"The illuminated cloud is sometimes referred to as the Antares Nebula or is otherwise identified as VdB 107."
],
[
"Stellar system",
"α Scorpii is a double star that is thought to form a binary system.",
"The best calculated orbit for the stars is still considered to be unreliable.",
"It describes an almost circular orbit seen nearly edge-on, with a period of 1,218 years and a semi-major axis of about .",
"Other recent estimates of the period have ranged from 880 years for a calculated orbit, to 2,562 years for a simple Kepler's Law estimate.Early measurements of the pair found them to be about apart in 1847–49, or apart in 1848.More modern observations consistently give separations around .",
"The variations in the separation are often interpreted as evidence of orbital motion, but are more likely to be simply observational inaccuracies with very little true relative motion between the two components.The pair have a projected separation of about 529 astronomical units (AU) (≈ 80 billion km) at the estimated distance of Antares, giving a minimum value for the distance between them.",
"Spectroscopic examination of the energy states in the outflow of matter from the companion star suggests that the latter is over beyond the primary (about 33 billion km).===Antares===alt=(July 2008, outdated).",
"Relative sizes of some planets in the Solar System and several well-known stars, including Antares A: Antares is a red supergiant star with a stellar classification of M1.5Iab-Ib, and is indicated to be a spectral standard for that class.",
"Due to the nature of the star, the derived parallax measurements have large errors, so that the true distance of Antares is approximately from the Sun.The brightness of Antares at visual wavelengths is about 10,000 times that of the Sun, but because the star radiates a considerable part of its energy in the infrared part of the spectrum, the true bolometric luminosity is around 100,000 times that of the Sun.",
"There is a large margin of error assigned to values for the bolometric luminosity, typically 30% or more.",
"There is also considerable variation between values published by different authors, for example and published in 2012 and 2013.The mass of the star has been calculated to be about , or .",
"Comparison of the effective temperature and luminosity of Antares to theoretical evolutionary tracks for massive stars suggest a progenitor mass of and an age of 12 million years (MYr), or an initial mass of and an age of 11 to 15 MYr.",
"Massive stars like Antares are expected to explode as supernovae.Comparison between the red supergiant Antares, Arcturus and the Sun, shown as the tiny dot toward the upper right|alt=Portion of a large yellow-orange circle representing Antares, with a black circle for the orbit of Mars, and images of Arcturus and the sun to scaleLike most cool supergiants, Antares's size has much uncertainty due to the tenuous and translucent nature of the extended outer regions of the star.",
"Defining an effective temperature is difficult due to spectral lines being generated at different depths in the atmosphere, and linear measurements produce different results depending on the wavelength observed.",
"In addition, Antares appears to pulsate, varying its radius by 19%.",
"It also varies in temperature by 150 K, lagging 70 days behind radial velocity changes which are likely to be caused by the pulsations.The diameter of Antares can be measured most accurately using interferometry or observing lunar occultations events.",
"An apparent diameter from occultations 41.3 ± 0.1 milliarcseconds has been published.",
"Interferometry allows synthesis of a view of the stellar disc, which is then represented as a limb-darkened disk surrounded by an extended atmosphere.",
"The diameter of the limb-darkened disk was measured as in 2009 and in 2010.The linear radius of the star can be calculated from its angular diameter and distance.",
"However, the distance to Antares is not known with the same accuracy as modern measurements of its diameter.The Hipparcos satellite's trigonometric parallax of leads to a radius of about .",
"Older radii estimates exceeding were derived from older measurements of the diameter, but those measurements are likely to have been affected by asymmetry of the atmosphere and the narrow range of infrared wavelengths observed; Antares has an extended shell which radiates strongly at those particular wavelengths.",
"Despite its large size compared to the Sun, Antares is dwarfed by even larger red supergiants, such as VY Canis Majoris or VV Cephei A and Mu Cephei.Antares, like the similarly sized red supergiant Betelgeuse in the constellation Orion, will almost certainly explode as a supernova, probably in million years.",
"For a few months, the Antares supernova could be as bright as the full moon and be visible in daytime.===Antares B===Antares B is a magnitude 5.5 blue-white main-sequence star of spectral type B2.5V; it also has numerous unusual spectral lines suggesting it has been polluted by matter ejected by Antares.",
"It is assumed to be a relatively normal early-B main sequence star with a mass around , a temperature around , and a radius of about .Antares B is normally difficult to see in small telescopes due to glare from Antares, but can sometimes be seen in apertures over .",
"It is often described as green, but this is probably either a contrast effect, or the result of the mixing of light from the two stars when they are seen together through a telescope and are too close to be completely resolved.",
"Antares B can sometimes be observed with a small telescope for a few seconds during lunar occultations while Antares is hidden by the Moon.",
"Antares B appears a profound blue or bluish-green color, in contrast to the orange-red Antares."
],
[
"Etymology and mythology",
"Antares seen from the ground.",
"The very bright star towards the upper left corner of the frame is Antares.In the Babylonian star catalogues dating from at least 1100 BCE, Antares was called GABA GIR.TAB, \"the Breast of the Scorpion\".",
"In MUL.APIN, which dates between 1100 and 700 BC, it is one of the stars of Ea in the southern sky and denotes the breast of the Scorpion goddess Ishhara.",
"Later names that translate as \"the Heart of Scorpion\" include '''' from the Arabic قَلْبُ ٱلْعَقْرَبِ ''''.",
"This had been directly translated from the Ancient Greek ''''. ''''",
"was a calque of the Greek name rendered in Latin.In ancient Mesopotamia, Antares may have been known by various names: Urbat, Bilu-sha-ziri (\"the Lord of the Seed\"), Kak-shisa (\"the Creator of Prosperity\"), Dar Lugal (\"The King\"), Masu Sar (\"the Hero and the King\"), and Kakkab Bir (\"the Vermilion Star\").",
"In ancient Egypt, Antares represented the scorpion goddess Serket (and was the symbol of Isis in the pyramidal ceremonies).",
"It was called '''' \"the red one of the prow\".",
"In Persia, Antares was known as ''Satevis'', one of the four \"royal stars\".",
"In India, it with σ Scorpii and τ Scorpii were Jyeshthā (the eldest or biggest, probably attributing its huge size), one of the ''nakshatra'' (Hindu lunar mansions).The ancient Chinese called Antares 心宿二 (''Xīnxiù'èr'', \"second star of the Heart\"), because it was the second star of the mansion ''Xin'' (心).",
"It was the national star of the Shang Dynasty, and it was sometimes referred to as () because of its reddish appearance.The Māori people of New Zealand call Antares ''Rēhua'', and regard it as the chief of all the stars.",
"Rēhua is father of ''Puanga/Puaka'' (Rigel), an important star in the calculation of the Māori calendar.",
"The Wotjobaluk Koori people of Victoria, Australia, knew Antares as ''Djuit'', son of ''Marpean-kurrk'' (Arcturus); the stars on each side represented his wives.",
"The Kulin Kooris saw Antares (''Balayang'') as the brother of ''Bunjil'' (Altair)."
],
[
"In culture",
"Antares appears in the flag of Brazil, which displays 27 stars, each representing a federated unit of Brazil.",
"Antares represents the state of Piauí.The 1995 Oldsmobile Antares concept car is named after the star.Antares is one of the medieval Behenian fixed stars."
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"*************"
],
[
"External links",
"** Best Ever Image of a Star’s Surface and Atmosphere – First map of motion of material on a star other than the Sun"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Aldebaran"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Aldebaran''' () is a star located in the zodiac constellation of Taurus.",
"It has the Bayer designation '''α Tauri''', which is Latinized to '''Alpha Tauri''' and abbreviated Alpha Tau or α Tau.",
"Aldebaran varies in brightness from an apparent visual magnitude 0.75 down to 0.95, making it the brightest star in the constellation, as well as (typically) the fourteenth-brightest star in the night sky.",
"It is positioned at a distance of approximately 65 light-years from the Sun.",
"The star lies along the line of sight to the nearby Hyades cluster.Aldebaran is a red giant, meaning that it is cooler than the Sun with a surface temperature of , but its radius is about 44 times the Sun's, so it is over 400 times as luminous.",
"As a giant star, it has moved off the main sequence on the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram after depleting its supply of hydrogen in the core.",
"The star spins slowly and takes 520 days to complete a rotation.",
"Aldebaran is believed to host a planet several times the mass of Jupiter, named .The planetary exploration probe ''Pioneer 10'' is heading in the general direction of the star and should make its closest approach in about two million years."
],
[
"Nomenclature",
"Aldebaran is the brightest star in the constellation of Taurus (center).The traditional name Aldebaran derives from the Arabic (), meaning , because it seems to follow the Pleiades.",
"In 2016, the International Astronomical Union Working Group on Star Names (WGSN) approved the proper name ''Aldebaran'' for this star.Aldebaran is the brightest star in the constellation Taurus and so has the Bayer designation α Tauri, Latinised as Alpha Tauri.",
"It has the Flamsteed designation 87 Tauri as the 87th star in the constellation of approximately 7th magnitude or brighter, ordered by right ascension.",
"It also has the Bright Star Catalogue number 1457, the HD number 29139, and the Hipparcos catalogue number 21421, mostly seen in scientific publications.It is a variable star listed in the General Catalogue of Variable Stars, but it is listed using its Bayer designation and does not have a separate variable star designation.Aldebaran and several nearby stars are included in double star catalogues such as the Washington Double Star Catalog as WDS 04359+1631 and the Aitken Double Star Catalogue as ADS 3321.It was included with an 11th-magnitude companion as a double star as H IV 66 in the Herschel Catalogue of Double Stars and Σ II 2 in the Struve Double Star Catalog, and together with a 14th-magnitude star as β 550 in the Burnham Double Star Catalogue."
],
[
"Observation",
"HyadesAldebaran is one of the easiest stars to find in the night sky, partly due to its brightness and partly due to being near one of the more noticeable asterisms in the sky.",
"Following the three stars of Orion's belt in the direction opposite to Sirius, the first bright star encountered is Aldebaran.It is best seen at midnight between late November and early December.The star is, by chance, in the line of sight between the Earth and the Hyades, so it has the appearance of being the brightest member of the open cluster, but the cluster that forms the bull's-head-shaped asterism is more than twice as far away, at about 150 light years.Aldebaran is 5.47 degrees south of the ecliptic and so can be occulted by the Moon.",
"Such occultations occur when the Moon's ascending node is near the autumnal equinox.",
"A series of 49 occultations occurred starting on 29 January 2015 and ending at 3 September 2018.Each event was visible from points in the northern hemisphere or close to the equator; people in e.g.",
"Australia or South Africa can never observe an Aldebaran occultation since it is too far south of the ecliptic.",
"A reasonably accurate estimate for the diameter of Aldebaran was obtained during the occultation of 22 September 1978.In the 2020s, Aldebaran is in conjunction in ecliptic longitude with the sun around May 30 of each year.With a near-infrared J band magnitude of −2.1, only Betelgeuse (−2.9), R Doradus (−2.6), and Arcturus (−2.2) are brighter at that wavelength."
],
[
"Observational history",
"the Moon.",
"Aldebaran is the red dot to the right, barely visible in the thumbnail.On 11 March AD 509, a lunar occultation of Aldebaran was observed in Athens, Greece.",
"English astronomer Edmund Halley studied the timing of this event, and in 1718 concluded that Aldebaran must have changed position since that time, moving several minutes of arc further to the north.",
"This, as well as observations of the changing positions of stars Sirius and Arcturus, led to the discovery of proper motion.",
"Based on present day observations, the position of Aldebaran has shifted 7′ in the last 2000 years; roughly a quarter the diameter of the full moon.",
"Due to precession of the equinoxes, 5,000 years ago the vernal equinox was close to Aldebaran.",
"Between 420,000 and 210,000 years ago, Alderbaran was the brightest star in the night sky, peaking in brightness 320,000 years ago with an apparent magnitude of .English astronomer William Herschel discovered a faint companion to Aldebaran in 1782; an 11th-magnitude star at an angular separation of 117″.",
"This star was shown to be itself a close double star by S. W. Burnham in 1888, and he discovered an additional 14th-magnitude companion at an angular separation of 31″.",
"Follow-on measurements of proper motion showed that Herschel's companion was diverging from Aldebaran, and hence they were not physically connected.",
"However, the companion discovered by Burnham had almost exactly the same proper motion as Aldebaran, suggesting that the two formed a wide binary star system.Working at his private observatory in Tulse Hill, England, in 1864 William Huggins performed the first studies of the spectrum of Aldebaran, where he was able to identify the lines of nine elements, including iron, sodium, calcium, and magnesium.",
"In 1886, Edward C. Pickering at the Harvard College Observatory used a photographic plate to capture fifty absorption lines in the spectrum of Aldebaran.",
"This became part of the Draper Catalogue, published in 1890.By 1887, the photographic technique had improved to the point that it was possible to measure a star's radial velocity from the amount of Doppler shift in the spectrum.",
"By this means, the recession velocity of Aldebaran was estimated as (48 km/s), using measurements performed at Potsdam Observatory by Hermann C. Vogel and his assistant Julius Scheiner.Aldebaran was observed using an interferometer attached to the Hooker Telescope at the Mount Wilson Observatory in 1921 in order to measure its angular diameter, but it was not resolved in these observations.The extensive history of observations of Aldebaran led to it being included in the list of 33 stars chosen as benchmarks for the Gaia mission to calibrate derived stellar parameters.",
"It had previously been used to calibrate instruments on board the Hubble Space Telescope."
],
[
"Physical characteristics",
"Size comparison between Aldebaran and the SunAldebaran is listed as the spectral standard for type K5+ III stars.",
"Its spectrum shows that it is a giant star that has evolved off the main sequence band of the HR diagram after exhausting the hydrogen at its core.",
"The collapse of the center of the star into a degenerate helium core has ignited a shell of hydrogen outside the core and Aldebaran is now on the red giant branch (RGB).The effective temperature of Aldebaran's photosphere is .",
"It has a surface gravity of , typical for a giant star, but around 25 times lower than the Earth's and 700 times lower than the Sun's.",
"Its metallicity is about 30% lower than the Sun's.Measurements by the Hipparcos satellite and other sources put Aldebaran around away.",
"Asteroseismology has determined that it is about 16% more massive than the Sun, yet it shines with 518 times the Sun's luminosity due to the expanded radius.",
"The angular diameter of Aldebaran has been measured many times.",
"The value adopted as part of the Gaia benchmark calibration is .",
"It is 44 times the diameter of the Sun, approximately 61 million kilometres.Aldebaran is a slightly variable star, assigned to the slow irregular type ''LB''.",
"The General Catalogue of Variable Stars indicates variation between apparent magnitude 0.75 and 0.95 from historical reports.",
"Modern studies show a smaller amplitude, with some showing almost no variation.",
"Hipparcos photometry shows an amplitude of only about 0.02 magnitudes and a possible period around 18 days.",
"Intensive ground-based photometry showed variations of up to 0.03 magnitudes and a possible period around 91 days.",
"Analysis of observations over a much longer period still find a total amplitude likely to be less than 0.1 magnitudes, and the variation is considered to be irregular.The photosphere shows abundances of carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen that suggest the giant has gone through its first dredge-up stage—a normal step in the evolution of a star into a red giant during which material from deep within the star is brought up to the surface by convection.",
"With its slow rotation, Aldebaran lacks a dynamo needed to generate a corona and hence is not a source of hard X-ray emission.",
"However, small scale magnetic fields may still be present in the lower atmosphere, resulting from convection turbulence near the surface.",
"The measured strength of the magnetic field on Aldebaran is .",
"Any resulting soft X-ray emissions from this region may be attenuated by the chromosphere, although ultraviolet emission has been detected in the spectrum.",
"The star is currently losing mass at a rate of (about one Earth mass in 300,000 years) with a velocity of .",
"This stellar wind may be generated by the weak magnetic fields in the lower atmosphere.Beyond the chromosphere of Aldebaran is an extended molecular outer atmosphere (''MOLsphere'') where the temperature is cool enough for molecules of gas to form.",
"This region lies at about 2.5 times the radius of the star and has a temperature of about .",
"The spectrum reveals lines of carbon monoxide, water, and titanium oxide.",
"Outside the MOLSphere, the stellar wind continues to expand until it reaches the termination shock boundary with the hot, ionized interstellar medium that dominates the Local Bubble, forming a roughly spherical astrosphere with a radius of around , centered on Aldebaran."
],
[
"Visual companions",
"Five faint stars appear close to Aldebaran in the sky.",
"These double star components were given upper-case Latin letter designations more or less in the order of their discovery, with the letter A reserved for the primary star.",
"Some characteristics of these components, including their position relative to Aldebaran, are shown in the table.+ WDS 04359+1631 catalogue entry α Tau Apparentmagnitude Angularseparation (″) Positionangle (°) Year Parallax (mas) B 13.60 31.60 113 2007 C 11.30 129.50 32 2011 D 13.70 E 12.00 36.10 323 2000 F 13.60 255.70 121 2000 Some surveys, for example Gaia Data Release 2, have indicated that Alpha Tauri B may have about the same proper motion and parallax as Aldebaran and thus may be a physical binary system.",
"These measurements are difficult, since the dim B component appears so close to the bright primary star, and the margin of error is too large to establish (or exclude) a physical relationship between the two.",
"So far neither the B component, nor anything else, has been unambiguously shown to be physically associated with Aldebaran.",
"A spectral type of M2.5 has been published for Alpha Tauri B.Alpha Tauri CD is a binary system with the C and D component stars gravitationally bound to and co-orbiting each other.",
"These co-orbiting stars have been shown to be located far beyond Aldebaran and are members of the Hyades star cluster.",
"As with the rest of the stars in the cluster they do not physically interact with Aldebaran in any way."
],
[
"Planetary system",
"In 1993 radial velocity measurements of Aldebaran, Arcturus and Pollux showed that Aldebaran exhibited a long-period radial velocity oscillation, which could be interpreted as a substellar companion.",
"The measurements for Aldebaran implied a companion with a minimum mass 11.4 times that of Jupiter in a 643-day orbit at a separation of in a mildly eccentric orbit.",
"However, all three stars surveyed showed similar oscillations yielding similar companion masses, and the authors concluded that the variation was likely to be intrinsic to the star rather than due to the gravitational effect of a companion.Big dipper as seen from AldebaranIn 2015 a study showed stable long-term evidence for both a planetary companion and stellar activity.",
"An asteroseismic analysis of the residuals to the planet fit has determined that Aldebaran b has a minimum mass of Jupiter masses, and that when the star was on the main sequence it would have given this planet Earth-like levels of illumination and therefore, potentially, temperature.",
"This would place it and any of its moons in the habitable zone.",
"Follow-up study in 2019 have found the evidence for planetary existence inconclusive though."
],
[
"Etymology and mythology",
"Aldebaran was originally ( in Arabic), meaning , since it follows the Pleiades; in fact, the Arabs sometimes also applied the name to the Hyades as a whole.",
"A variety of transliterated spellings have been used, with the current ''Aldebaran'' becoming standard relatively recently.===Mythology===This easily seen and striking star in its suggestive asterism is a popular subject for ancient and modern myths.",
"* Mexican culture: For the Seris of northwestern Mexico, this star provides light for the seven women giving birth (Pleiades).",
"It has three names: '''', '''', and '''' ().",
"The lunar month corresponding to October is called '''' .",
"* Australian Aboriginal culture: amongst indigenous people of the Clarence River, in north-eastern New South Wales, this star is the ancestor ''Karambal'', who stole another man's wife.",
"The woman's husband tracked him down and burned the tree in which he was hiding.",
"It is believed that he rose to the sky as smoke and became the star Aldebaran.===Names in other languages===* In Indian astronomy it is identified as the lunar station Rohini.",
"In Hindu mythology, Rohini is one of the twenty-seven daughters of the sage-king Daksha and Asikni, and the favourite wife of the moon god, Chandra.",
"* In Ancient Greek it has been called , literally or .",
"* In Chinese, (), meaning , refers to an asterism consisting of Aldebaran, ε Tauri, δ3 Tauri, δ1 Tauri, γ Tauri, 71 Tauri and λ Tauri.",
"Consequently, the Chinese name for Aldebaran itself is (), .===In modern culture===Italian frigate ''Aldebaran'' (F 590)As the brightest star in a Zodiac constellation, it is given great significance within astrology.The name Aldebaran or Alpha Tauri has been adopted many times, including* Aldebaran Rock in Antarctica* United States Navy stores ship and * proposed micro-satellite launch vehicle Aldebaran* French company Aldebaran Robotics* Fashion brand AlphaTauri* Formula 1 team Scuderia AlphaTauri, active from to , previously known as Toro RossoThe star also appears in works of fiction such as ''Far From the Madding Crowd'' (1874) and ''Down and Out in Paris and London'' (1933).",
"It is frequently seen in science fiction, including the ''Lensman series'' (1948-1954) and ''Fallen Dragon'' (2001).",
"Aldebaran regularly features in conspiracy theories as one of the origins of extraterrestrial aliens, often linked to Nazi UFOs.",
"A well-known example is the German conspiracy theorist Axel Stoll, who considered the star the home of the Aryan race and the target of expeditions by the Wehrmacht.The planetary exploration probe ''Pioneer 10'' is no longer powered or in contact with Earth, but its trajectory is taking it in the general direction of Aldebaran.",
"It is expected to make its closest approach in about two million years.The Austrian chemist Carl Auer von Welsbach proposed the name ''aldebaranium'' (chemical symbol Ad) for a rare earth element that he (among others) had found.",
"Today, it is called ytterbium (symbol Yb)."
],
[
"See also",
"* Lists of stars* List of brightest stars* List of nearest bright stars* Historical brightest stars* Taurus (Chinese astronomy)"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* * Daytime occultation of Aldebaran by the Moon (Moscow, Russia) YouTube video"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Altair"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Altair''' is the brightest star in the constellation of Aquila and the twelfth-brightest star in the night sky.",
"It has the Bayer designation Alpha Aquilae, which is Latinised from '''α Aquilae''' and abbreviated '''Alpha Aql''' or '''α Aql'''.",
"Altair is an A-type main-sequence star with an apparent visual magnitude of 0.77 and is one of the vertices of the Summer Triangle asterism; the other two vertices are marked by Deneb and Vega.",
"It is located at a distance of from the Sun.",
"Altair is currently in the G-cloud—a nearby interstellar cloud, an accumulation of gas and dust.",
"Altair rotates rapidly, with a velocity at the equator of approximately 286 km/s.",
"This is a significant fraction of the star's estimated breakup speed of 400 km/s.",
"A study with the Palomar Testbed Interferometer revealed that Altair is not spherical, but is flattened at the poles due to its high rate of rotation.",
"Other interferometric studies with multiple telescopes, operating in the infrared, have imaged and confirmed this phenomenon."
],
[
"Nomenclature",
"Altair is the brightest star in the constellation Aquila.",
"''α Aquilae'' (Latinised to ''Alpha Aquilae'') is the star's Bayer designation.",
"The traditional name ''Altair'' has been used since medieval times.",
"It is an abbreviation of the Arabic phrase ''Al-Nisr Al-Ṭa'ir'', \"\".In 2016, the International Astronomical Union organized a Working Group on Star Names (WGSN) to catalog and standardize proper names for stars.",
"The WGSN's first bulletin of July 2016 included a table of the first two batches of names approved by the WGSN, which included ''Altair'' for this star.",
"It is now so entered in the IAU Catalog of Star Names."
],
[
"Physical characteristics",
"Altair in comparison with the SunAlong with β Aquilae and γ Aquilae, Altair forms the well-known line of stars sometimes referred to as the ''Family of Aquila'' or ''Shaft of Aquila''.",
"Altair is a type-A main-sequence star with about 1.8 times the mass of the Sun and 11 times its luminosity.",
"It is thought to be a young star close to the zero age main sequence at about 100 million years old, although previous estimates gave an age closer to one billion years old.",
"Altair rotates rapidly, with a rotational period of under eight hours; for comparison, the equator of the Sun makes a complete rotation in a little more than 25 days, but Altair's rotation is similar to, and slightly faster than, those of Jupiter and Saturn.",
"Like those two planets, its rapid rotation causes the star to be oblate; its equatorial diameter is over 20 percent greater than its polar diameter.A light curve for Altair, adapted from Buzasi ''et al.''",
"(2005)Satellite measurements made in 1999 with the Wide Field Infrared Explorer showed that the brightness of Altair fluctuates slightly, varying by just a few thousandths of a magnitude with several different periods less than 2 hours.",
"As a result, it was identified in 2005 as a Delta Scuti variable star.",
"Its light curve can be approximated by adding together a number of sine waves, with periods that range between 0.8 and 1.5 hours.",
"It is a weak source of coronal X-ray emission, with the most active sources of emission being located near the star's equator.",
"This activity may be due to convection cells forming at the cooler equator.===Rotational effects===Direct image of Altair, taken with the CHARA arrayThe angular diameter of Altair was measured interferometrically by R. Hanbury Brown and his co-workers at Narrabri Observatory in the 1960s.",
"They found a diameter of 3milliarcseconds.",
"Although Hanbury Brown et al.",
"realized that Altair would be rotationally flattened, they had insufficient data to experimentally observe its oblateness.",
"Later, using infrared interferometric measurements made by the Palomar Testbed Interferometer in 1999 and 2000, Altair was found to be flattened.",
"This work was published by G. T. van Belle, David R. Ciardi and their co-authors in 2001.Theory predicts that, owing to Altair's rapid rotation, its surface gravity and effective temperature should be lower at the equator, making the equator less luminous than the poles.",
"This phenomenon, known as gravity darkening or the von Zeipel effect, was confirmed for Altair by measurements made by the Navy Precision Optical Interferometer in 2001, and analyzed by Ohishi et al.",
"(2004) and Peterson et al.",
"(2006).",
"Also, A. Domiciano de Souza et al.",
"(2005) verified gravity darkening using the measurements made by the Palomar and Navy interferometers, together with new measurements made by the VINCI instrument at the VLTI.Altair is one of the few stars for which a direct image has been obtained.",
"In 2006 and 2007, J. D. Monnier and his coworkers produced an image of Altair's surface from 2006 infrared observations made with the MIRC instrument on the CHARA array interferometer; this was the first time the surface of any main-sequence star, apart from the Sun, had been imaged.",
"The false-color image was published in 2007.The equatorial radius of the star was estimated to be 2.03 solar radii, and the polar radius 1.63 solar radii—a 25% increase of the stellar radius from pole to equator.",
"The polar axis is inclined by about 60° to the line of sight from the Earth."
],
[
"Etymology, mythology and culture",
"leftThe term ''Al Nesr Al Tair'' appeared in Al Achsasi al Mouakket's catalogue, which was translated into Latin as ''Vultur Volans''.",
"This name was applied by the Arabs to the asterism of Altair, β Aquilae and γ Aquilae and probably goes back to the ancient Babylonians and Sumerians, who called Altair \"the eagle star\".",
"The spelling ''Atair'' has also been used.",
"Medieval astrolabes of England and Western Europe depicted Altair and Vega as birds.The Koori people of Victoria also knew Altair as ''Bunjil'', the wedge-tailed eagle, and β and γ Aquilae are his two wives the black swans.",
"The people of the Murray River knew the star as ''Totyerguil''.",
"The Murray River was formed when ''Totyerguil'' the hunter speared ''Otjout'', a giant Murray cod, who, when wounded, churned a channel across southern Australia before entering the sky as the constellation Delphinus.In Chinese belief, the asterism consisting of Altair, β Aquilae and γ Aquilae is known as ''Hé Gǔ'' (; lit.",
"\"river drum\").",
"The Chinese name for Altair is thus ''Hé Gǔ èr'' (; lit.",
"\"river drum two\", meaning the \"second star of the drum at the river\").",
"However, Altair is better known by its other names: ''Qiān Niú Xīng'' ( / ) or ''Niú Láng Xīng'' (), translated as the ''cowherd star''.",
"These names are an allusion to a love story, ''The Cowherd and the Weaver Girl'', in which Niulang (represented by Altair) and his two children (represented by β Aquilae and γ Aquilae) are separated from respectively their wife and mother Zhinu (represented by Vega) by the Milky Way.",
"They are only permitted to meet once a year, when magpies form a bridge to allow them to cross the Milky Way.The people of Micronesia called Altair ''Mai-lapa'', meaning \"big/old breadfruit\", while the Māori people called this star ''Poutu-te-rangi'', meaning \"pillar of heaven\".In Western astrology, the star was ill-omened, portending danger from reptiles.This star is one of the asterisms used by Bugis sailors for navigation, called ''bintoéng timoro'', meaning \"eastern star\".A group of Japanese scientists sent a radio signal to Altair in 1983 with the hopes of contacting extraterrestrial life.NASA announced ''Altair'' as the name of the Lunar Surface Access Module (LSAM) on December 13, 2007.The Russian-made Beriev Be-200 Altair seaplane is also named after the star."
],
[
"Visual companions",
"The bright primary star has the multiple star designation WDS 19508+0852A and has several faint visual companion stars, WDS 19508+0852B, C, D, E, F and G. All are much more distant than Altair and not physically associated."
],
[
"See also",
"* Lists of stars* List of brightest stars* List of nearest bright stars* Historical brightest stars* List of most luminous stars"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* Star with Midriff Bulge Eyed by Astronomers, JPL press release, July 25, 2001.",
"* Spectrum of Altair* Imaging the Surface of Altair, University of Michigan news release detailing the CHARA array direct imaging of the stellar surface in 2007.",
"* PIA04204: Altair, NASA.",
"Image of Altair from the Palomar Testbed Interferometer.",
"* Altair, ''SolStation''.",
"* Secrets of Sun-like star probed, ''BBC News'', June 1, 2007.",
"* Astronomers Capture First Images of the Surface Features of Altair , ''Astromart.com''* Image of Altair from Aladin."
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Australian Broadcasting Corporation"
],
[
"Introduction",
"The '''Australian Broadcasting Corporation''' ('''ABC''') is the national broadcaster of Australia.",
"It is principally funded by direct grants from the Australian Government and is administered by a government-appointed board.",
"The ABC is a publicly-owned body that is politically independent and fully accountable, with its charter enshrined in legislation, the ''Australian Broadcasting Corporation Act 1983''.",
"ABC Commercial, a profit-making division of the corporation, also helps to generate funding for content provision.The ABC was established as the '''Australian Broadcasting Commission''' on 1 July 1932 by an act of federal parliament.",
"It effectively replaced the Australian Broadcasting Company, a private company established in 1924 to provide programming for A-class radio stations.",
"The ABC was given statutory powers that reinforced its independence from the government and enhanced its news-gathering role.",
"Modelled after the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), which is funded by a television licence, the ABC was originally financed by consumer licence fees on broadcast receivers.",
"However, the licence fees soon proved to be insufficient due to Australia's small population compared with the vast area to be serviced and the need for individual divisions in each state such that by 1949 the Chifley government decided that the ABC would be directly funded by the government.",
"Licence fees however continued to be collected until 1947, however they were subsumed into the government's general revenue.",
"Later funding was supplemented with commercial activities related to its core broadcasting mission.",
"The ABC adopted its current name in 1983.The ABC provides radio, television, online, and mobile services throughout metropolitan and regional Australia.",
"ABC Radio operates four national networks, a large number of ABC Local Radio stations, several digital stations, and the international service Radio Australia.",
"ABC Television operates five free-to-air channels, as well as the ABC iview streaming service and the ABC Australia satellite channel.",
"News and current affairs content across all platforms is produced by the news division.The postal address of the ABC in every Australian capital city is PO Box 9994, as a tribute to the record-breaking batting average of Australian cricketer Sir Donald Bradman."
],
[
"History",
"===Origins===After public radio stations were established independently in the state capitals from 1924, a licensing scheme administered by the Postmaster-General's Department was established, allowing certain stations (with \"Class A\" licences\") government funding, albeit with restrictions placed on their advertising content.",
"In 1928, the government established the National Broadcasting Service to take over the 12 A-Class licences as they came up for renewal, and contracted the Australian Broadcasting Company, a private company established in 1924, to supply programs to the new national broadcaster.After it became politically unpopular to continue to allow the Postmaster-General to run the National Broadcasting Service, the government established the Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC) on 1 July 1932, under the ''Australian Broadcasting Commission Act 1932''.",
"to take over the Australian Broadcasting Company and run the National Broadcasting Service.The ABC became informally referred to as \"Aunty\", originally in imitation of the British Broadcasting Corporation's nickname.",
"The structure and programming was broadly modelled on the BBC, and programs not created in Australia were mostly bought in from the BBC.In 1940 one of the ABC Board's most prominent members, Dick Boyer, was appointed to the ABC, becoming chairman on 1 April 1945.Today known for the continuing series of Boyer Lectures initiated by him in 1959, he had a good but not too close working relationship with Sir Charles Moses (general manager 1935–1965), and remained chair until his retirement in 1961.He was determined to maintain the autonomy of the ABC.===War years===In 1942, ''The Australian Broadcasting Act'' was passed, giving the ABC the power to decide when, and in what circumstances, political speeches should be broadcast.",
"Directions from the minister about whether or not to broadcast any matter now had to be made in writing, and any exercise of the power had to be mentioned in the commission's annual report.===1950–2000===The first broadcast of ABC TV, presented by leftJames Dibble, reading the first ABC News television bulletin in NSW, 1956The ABC commenced television broadcasting in 1956.ABN-2 in Sydney was inaugurated by prime minister Robert Menzies on 5 November 1956, with the first broadcast presented by Michael Charlton, and James Dibble reading the first television news bulletin.",
"Television relay facilities were not in place until the early 1960s, so news bulletins had to be sent to each capital city by teleprinter, to be prepared and presented separately in each city.",
"In 1975, colour television was permanently introduced into Australia, and within a decade, the ABC had moved into satellite broadcasting, greatly enhancing its ability to distribute content nationally.Also in 1975, the ABC introduced a 24-hour-a-day AM rock station in Sydney, 2JJ (Double Jay), which was eventually expanded into the national Triple J FM network.",
"A year later, a national classical music network was established on the FM band, broadcasting from Adelaide.",
"It was initially known as ABC-FM (later ABC Classic FM) – referring both to its \"fine music programming and radio frequency\".ABC budget cuts began in 1976 and continued until 1998, the largest cuts (calculated by the ABC as 25% in real terms) coming between 1985 and 1996.The ''Australian Broadcasting Corporation Act 1983'' changed the name of the organisation to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, effective 1 July 1983.Although funded and owned by the government, the ABC remains editorially independent as ensured by the 1983 Act.",
"At the same time, the newly formed corporation underwent significant restructuring, including a split into separate television and radio divisions, and ABC Radio was restructured significantly again in 1985.Geoffrey Whitehead was managing director of the ABC at this time.",
"Following his resignation in 1986, David Hill (at the time chair of the ABC Board) took over his position and local production trebled from 1986 to 1991.Ultimo Centre – the ABC's national headquarters in SydneyLive television broadcasts of selected parliamentary sessions started in 1990, and by the early 1990s, all major ABC broadcasting outlets moved to 24-hour-a-day operation.In 1991, the ABC helped launch Australian children's music band The Wiggles, under the ABC music label.In 1991, the corporation's Sydney radio and orchestral operations moved to a new building, the ABC Ultimo Centre, in the inner-city suburb of Ultimo.",
"In Melbourne, the ABC Southbank Centre was completed in 1994.In 1992, Australian children's television series ''Bananas in Pyjamas'' first aired.International television service ABC Australia was established in 1993, while at the same time Radio Australia increased its international reach.",
"Reduced funding in 1997 for Radio Australia resulted in staff and programming cuts.The ABC Multimedia Unit was established in July 1995 to manage the new ABC website, which was launched in August.The ABC was registered on the Australian Business Register as a Commonwealth Government Entity on 1 November 1999.===2000s–2010s===In 2001, digital television commenced (see Online, below).",
"At the same time, the ABC's multimedia division was renamed \"ABC New Media\", becoming an output division of the ABC alongside television and radio.In 2002, the ABC launched ABC Asia Pacific, the replacement for the defunct Australia Television International operated previously by the Seven Network.",
"A digital radio service, ABC DiG, was also launched in November that year.On 8 February 2008, ABC TV was rebranded as ABC1, and a new channel for children, ABC3, was funded and announced by the Rudd government in June.",
"A new online video-on-demand service launched in July of the same year, titled ABC iview.ABC News 24, now known as ABC News, a channel dedicated to news, launched on 22 July 2010.On 20 July 2014, ABC1 reverted to its original name of ABC TV.In November 2014, a cut of $254 million (4.6% ) to funding over the following five years together with the additional unfunded cost of the news channel meant that the ABC would have to shed about 10% of its staff, around 400 people.",
"There were several programming changes, with regional and local programming losing out to national programs, and the Adelaide TV production studio had to close.In November 2016, the ABC announced that ABC News 24, ABC NewsRadio, as well as its online and digital news brands, would be rebranded under a unified ABC News brand, which was launched on 10 April 2017.Michelle Guthrie took over from managing director Mark Scott, whose second five-year contract finished in April 2016.Between July 2017 and June 2018, the whole of the ABC underwent an organisational restructure, after which the Radio and Television Divisions were no longer separate entities each under a director, instead being split across several functional divisions, with different teams producing different genres of content for television, radio and digital platforms.",
"The Entertainment & Specialist (E&S) team focussed on comedy, kids' programs, drama, Indigenous-related programs, music, other entertainment and factual content; the new ABC Specialist team created content across the arts, science, religion & ethics, education and society & culture; while the Regional & Local team focussed on regional and local content.Around 23 September 2018, Guthrie was sacked.",
"A leadership crisis ensued after allegations arose that ABC Chair, Justin Milne, had, according to the MEAA, engaged in \"overt political interference in the running of the ABC that is in clear breach of the ABC charter and the role of the chairperson\" by interfering in editorial and staffing matters.",
"After pressure for an independent inquiry or statement from Milne, or his resignation, following meetings by ABC staff in various locations, on 27 September Milne resigned.In February 2019, after the roles of ABC chair and managing director had been vacant for over four months, Ita Buttrose was named chair.",
"Buttrose named David Anderson as managing director in May 2019.On 5 June 2019, Australian Federal Police (AFP) raided the headquarters of the ABC looking for articles written in 2017 about alleged misconduct by Australian special forces in Afghanistan, later dubbed the Afghan Files.",
"The raid was countered by lawyers for the ABC in litigation against the AFP, challenging the examination of over 9,200 documents, including internal emails.",
"In February 2020 the case was dismissed by the federal court.",
"In June 2020, the AFP sent a brief of evidence to the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions (CDPP), the federal public prosecutor, recommending charges be laid against journalist Dan Oakes for breaking the Afghan Files story, but in October 2020, the CDPP dropped the case.===2020s===In June 2020, the ABC announced it needed to cut 229 jobs, a number of programs, and reduce its travel and production budgets after the Turnbull government's announcement of a freeze to indexation of its budget in 2018 this was estimated at the time to cost the ABC over three years, however the actual appropriation did not decrease and the ABC chair was quoted as saying it would actually increase \"but by a reduced amount\".In all, over a five-year period, there were 737 redundancies, a further 866 resignations and 203 retirements, but the total number of staff only fell by 313 due to the ABC hiring 650 staff over that period.In June 2021, the ABC announced its plan to move around 300 staff to offices in Parramatta, in a plan which would see 75% of journalists and producers moving out of the Ultimo building by 2025 in order to reduce costs.",
"Rental from some of the vacant space in the city centre would earn additional income to offset the ongoing effects of the significant funding cuts since 2014 and the recent indexation freeze.In December 2021 the ABC announced that, in addition to the 83 additional positions already established, it was to create an additional \"50-plus\" new jobs in regional Australia as a result of commercial agreements with digital platforms flowing from the Morrison government's News Media Bargaining Code."
],
[
"Lissajous curve logo",
"The ABC logo is one of the most recognisable logos in Australia.",
"In the early years of television, the ABC had been using Lissajous curves as fillers between programmes.",
"In July 1963, the ABC conducted a staff competition to create a new logo for use on television, stationery, publications, microphone badges and ABC vehicles.",
"In 1965, ABC graphics designer Bill Kennard submitted a design representing a Lissajous display, as generated when a sine wave signal is applied to the \"X\" input of an oscilloscope and another at three times the frequency at the \"Y\" input.",
"The letters \"ABC\" were added to the design and it was adopted as the ABC's official logo.",
"Kennard was presented with £25 (about AU$715 in 2021) for his design.On 19 October 1974, the Lissajous curve design experienced its first facelift with the line thickened to allow for colour to be used.",
"It would also be treated to the 'over and under' effect, showing the crossover of the line in the design.",
"To celebrate its 70th anniversary on 1 July 2002, the ABC adopted a new logo, which was created by (Annette) Harcus Design in 2001.This logo used a silver 3D texture but the crossover design was left intact and was then used across the ABC's media outlets.",
"After the on-air revival of the 1974 logo since 2014, the ABC gradually reinstated the classic symbol.",
"The most recent change happened in February 2018, with a new logotype and brand positioning under its tagline, ''Yours''.",
"The 2002 silver logo is no longer in use by the corporation."
],
[
"Governance and structure",
"The operations of the ABC are governed by a board of directors, consisting of a managing director, five to seven directors, and until 2006, a staff-elected director.",
"The managing director is appointed by the board for a period of up to five years, but is eligible for renewal.",
"The authority and guidelines for the appointment of directors is provided for in the ''Australian Broadcasting Corporation Act 1983''.Appointments to the ABC Board made by successive governments have often resulted in criticism of the appointees' political affiliation, background, and relative merit.",
"Past appointments have associated directly with political parties – five of fourteen appointed chairmen have been accused of political affiliation or friendship, include Richard Downing and Ken Myer (both of whom publicly endorsed the Australian Labor Party at the 1972 election), as well as Sir Henry Bland.",
"David Hill was close to Neville Wran, while Donald McDonald was considered to be a close friend of John Howard.From 2003 the Howard government made several controversial appointments to the ABC Board, including prominent ABC critic Janet Albrechtsen, Ron Brunton, and Keith Windschuttle.During their 2007 federal election campaign, Labor announced plans to introduce a new system, similar to that of the BBC, for appointing members to the board.",
"Under the new system, candidates for the ABC Board would be considered by an independent panel established \"at arm's length\" from the Communications Minister.",
"If the minister chose someone not on the panel's shortlist, they would be required to justify this to parliament.",
"The ABC chairman would be nominated by the prime minister and endorsed by the leader of the opposition.A new merit-based appointment system was announced on 16 October 2008, in advance of the new triennial funding period starting in 2009.In 2013 the Coalition government introduced a merit based system for appointing the board based on the recommendations of a nominations panel.",
"However, the panel was ultimately only advisory, with almost all of the board members in 2018 directly appointed by the Communications minister, despite some being rejected by the panel or not being considered at all.",
"board members are: Name Functional roleStart of termNotes / reference Ita Buttrose Chair 7 March 2019 Term ends 6 March 2024 David Anderson Managing director 6 May 2019 First term ended 1 July 2023Second term ends 30 June 2028 Laura Tingle Staff-elected director 1 May 2023 Term ends 30 April 2028 Nicolette Maury 16 October 2023 Term ends 15 October 2028 Peter Lewis 2 October 2014 First term ended 1 October 2019Second term ends 1 October 2024 Georgie Somerset 23 February 2017 Term ends 22 Feb 2022 Louise McElvogue 16 October 2023 Term ends 15 October 2028 Mario D'Orazio 13 May 2021 Term ends 12 May 2026 Peter Tonagh Deputy Chair 13 May 2021 Term ends 12 May 2026As of July 2020 there were 3,730 employees, down from 4,649 in 2019."
],
[
"Funding",
"The ABC is primarily funded by the Australian government, in addition to some revenue received from commercial offerings and its retail outlets.",
"The ABC's funding system is set and reviewed every three years.Until 1948, the ABC was funded directly by radio licence fees; amendments were also made to the ''Australian Broadcasting Act'' that meant the ABC would receive its funding directly from the federal government.",
"Licence fees remained until 1973, when they were abolished by the Whitlam Labor government, on the basis that the near-universality of television and radio services meant that public funding was a fairer method of providing revenue for government-owned radio and television broadcasters.In 2014, the ABC absorbed A$254 million in federal budget deficits.Since the 2018 budget handed down by then-Treasurer Scott Morrison, the ABC has been subject to a pause of indexation of operation funding, saving the federal government a total of A$83.7 million over 3 years.",
"In fiscal year 2016–17, the ABC received A$861 million in federal funding, which increased to $865 million per year from 2017 to 2018 to 2018–19, representing a cut in funding of $43 million over three years when accounting for inflation.",
"In 2019–20, the federal budget forecast funding of $3.2 billion over three years ($1.06 billion per year) for the ABC.",
"The ''Enhanced Newsgathering Fund'', a specialised fund for regional and outer-suburban news gathering set up in 2013 by the Gillard government, currently sits at $44 million over three years, a reduction of $28 million per year since the 2016 Australian federal election.",
"This came after speculation that the fund would be removed, to which ABC Acting managing director David Anderson wrote to Communications Minister Mitch Fifield expressing concerns.However, despite the cuts made by Prime Minister Tony Abbott and Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull and the freeze introduced by Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Communications Minister Mitch Fifield, the ABC itself has published financial data that shows an increase in the taxpayer appropriation to the ABC of 10% '''in real terms''' (i.e.",
"above inflation) between 1998 and 2021.The term \"where your 8 cents a day goes\", coined in the late 1980s during funding negotiations, is often used in reference to the services provided by the ABC.",
"It was estimated that the cost of the ABC per head of population per day was 7.1 cents a day, based on the corporation's 2007–08 \"base funding\" of ."
],
[
"Services",
"===Radio===ABC Brisbane headquarters in South BankThe ABC operates 54 local radio stations, in addition to four national networks and international service Radio Australia.",
"In addition, DiG Radio (rebranded as Double J in 2014) launched on digital platforms in 2002, and later spinning off ABC Country and ABC Jazz.ABC Local Radio is the corporation's flagship radio station in each broadcast area.",
"There are 54 individual stations, each with a similar format consisting of locally presented light entertainment, news, talk back, music, sport and interviews, in addition to some national programming such as ''AM'', ''PM'', ''The World Today'', sporting events and ''Nightlife''.",
"the ABC operates 15 radio networks, variously available on AM and FM as well as on digital platforms and the internet.",
"* Radio National – A generalist station, also known as RN, broadcasting more than 60 special interest programmes per week covering a range of topics including music, comedy, book readings, radio dramas, poetry, science, health, the arts, religion, social history and current affairs.",
"* ABC NewsRadio – A news based service, also known as ABC News on Radio, broadcasting federal parliamentary sittings and news on a 24/7 format with updates on the quarter-hour.",
"Broadcast's news content produced by the ABC itself, as well as programmes relayed from ABC Radio Australia, the BBC World Service, NPR, Deutsche Welle, Radio Netherlands and CNN Radio.",
"* ABC Classic – A classical music based station, formerly known as ABC Classic FM.",
"It also plays some jazz and world music.",
"ABC Classic was the ABC's first FM radio service.",
"It was originally known simply as \"ABC FM\", and for a short time \"ABC Fine Music\".",
"* Triple J – A youth-oriented radio network, with a strong focus on alternative and independent music (especially Australian artists); it is targeted at people aged 18–35.The ABC also operates several stations only available online and on digital platforms:* ABC Classic 2 – a sister station to ABC Classic, focussing on performances by Australian artists.",
"Only available on streaming platforms.",
"* Double J – a Triple J sister station, focussed on an older audience to Triple J.",
"* Triple J Unearthed – a Triple J sister station, playing unsigned and independent Australian talent.",
"* Triple j Hottest - a Triple J sister station, playing tracks from the past 30 years of Triple J Hottest 100 countdowns.",
"* ABC Jazz – A station exclusively dedicated to Jazz from Australia and the world.",
"* ABC Country – An exclusively country music station, mainly focussing on Australian country music.",
"* ABC Grandstand – Since November 2020 merged to ABC Sport.",
"* ABC Extra – A temporary special events station.",
"* ABC Kids – Children's based programming, and a sister station to the ABC Kids television channel.There is also ABC Radio Australia, the international radio station of the ABC (see below).====ABC Listen app====The ABC Radio app was launched in 2012.This was replaced by the ABC Listen app in September 2017, which included 45 ABC radio stations and audio networks.===Television===The ABC operates five national television channels:* ABC TV (formerly ABC1 from 2008 to 2014), the corporation's original television service, receives the bulk of funding for television and shows first-run comedy, drama, documentaries, and news and current affairs.",
"In each state and territory a local news bulletin is shown at 7pm nightly.",
"* ABC TV Plus (formerly ABC2 and ABC Comedy), launched in 2005, shows comedic content in addition to some repeats from ABC TV of which the amount has decreased gradually since ABC TV Plus's inception.",
"It is not a 24-hour channel, but is broadcast daily from 7:30pm to around 3am the following night.",
"The channel shares airspace with the ABC Kids programming block from 5am to 7:30pm.",
"* ABC Me (originally ABC3) became a fully fledged channel on 4 December 2009, but has been part of the electronic guide line-up since 2008, broadcasting an ABC1 simulcast until 4 December 2009, then an ABC Radio simulcast and teaser graphic until its official launch.",
"It is broadcast from 6am to around 10pm on weekdays and 6am to 2am the next day on weekends, and consists of a broad range programmes aimed at a young audience aged 6–15, with a core demographic of 8–12.",
"* ABC Kids (formerly ABC For Kids on 2 and ABC 4 Kids) is a preschool children's block featuring children's programming aimed at the 0 to 5 age groups.",
"ABC Kids broadcasts during ABC TV Plus downtime, from 5am to 7:30pm daily.",
"* ABC News (originally ABC News 24), a 24-hour news channel, featuring the programming from ABC News and Current Affairs, selected programs from the BBC World News channel, coverage of the Federal Parliament's Question Time, documentaries and factual, arts programming and state or national election coverage.Although the ABC's headquarters in Sydney serve as a base for program distribution nationally, ABC Television network is composed of eight state and territory based stations, each based in their respective state capital and augmented by repeaters:* ABN (Sydney)* ABV (Melbourne)* ABQ (Brisbane)* ABS (Adelaide)* ABW (Perth)* ABT (Hobart)* ABC (Canberra)* ABD (Darwin)The eight ABC stations carry opt outs for local programming.",
"In addition to the nightly 7pm news, the stations also broadcast weekly state editions of ''7.30'' on Friday evenings (until 5 December 2014), state election coverage and in most areas, live sport on Saturday afternoons.There is also ABC Australia, the international TV service of the ABC (see below).Southbank, Melbourne===Online and digital==='''ABC Online''' is the name given to the online services of the ABC, which have evolved to cover a large network of websites including those for ABC News, its various television channels, ABC radio; podcasts; SMS, mobile apps and other mobile phone services; vodcasts and video-on-demand through ABC iView.The official launch of ABC Online, then part of the ABC's Multimedia Unit, was on 14 August 1995, charged with developing policy for the ABC's work in web publishing.",
"At first it relied upon funding allocation to the corporation's TV and radio operations, but later began to receive its own.",
"The ABC provided live, online election coverage for the first time in 1996, and limited news content began to be provided in 1997.This unit continued until 2000, when the New Media division was formed, bringing together the ABC's online output as a division similar to television or radio.",
"In 2001 the New Media division became New Media and Digital Services, reflecting the broader remit to develop content for digital platforms such as digital television, becoming an \"output division\" similar to Television or Radio.",
"In addition to ABC Online, the division also had responsibility over the ABC's two digital television services, Fly TV and the ABC Kids channel, until their closure in 2003.ABC TV Plus, a digital-only free-to-air television channel, launched on 7 March 2005, as ABC2.Unlike its predecessors the new service was not dependent on government funding, instead running on a budget of per year.",
"Minister for Communications Helen Coonan inaugurated the channel at Parliament House three days later.",
"Genre restrictions limiting the types of programming the channel could carry were lifted in October 2006 – ABC TV Plus (then ABC2) was henceforth able to carry programming classified as comedy, drama, national news, sport, and entertainment.In conjunction with the ABC's radio division, New Media and Digital Services implemented the ABC's first podcasts in December 2004.By mid-2006 the ABC had become an international leader in podcasting with over fifty podcast programmes delivering hundreds of thousands of downloads per week, including trial video podcasts of ''The Chaser's War on Everything'' and jtv.In February 2007, the New Media & Digital Services division was dissolved and divided up among other areas of the ABC.",
"It was replaced by a new Innovation division, to manage ABC Online and investigate new technologies for the ABC.In 2008, Crikey reported that certain ABC Online mobile sites in development were planned to carry commercial advertising.",
"Screenshots, developed in-house, of an ABC Radio Grandstand sport page include advertising for two private companies.",
"''Media Watch'' later revealed that the websites were to be operated by ABC Commercial and distinguished from the main, advertising-free, mobile website by a distinct logo.In 2015 the Innovation Division was replaced with the Digital Network Division.",
"Angela Clark was head from 2012 until at least the end of financial year 2015/6, but by 2017 she was gone, and the Digital Network fell into the Technology division under the Chief Technology Officer.In May 2017, Helen Clifton was appointed to the new role of Chief Digital and Information Officer, which continues .In December 2019, a refreshed ABC homepage was launched.",
"ABC News is one of Australia's largest and most-visited web sites; from its position as 11th most popular in the country in 2008, in recent years up to 2021 it has maintained top position in the rankings.In June 2023, the broadcaster released its five-year plan, outlining that it would move its resources away from radio and television, and instead dedicate these resources to improving and promoting its digital platforms.===International===ABC International is responsible for its international operations, which include the internationally broadcast Radio Australia, the Asia-Pacific TV channel ABC Australia, and its ABC International Development (ABCID) branch.In June 2012 Lynley Marshall, former head of ABC Commercial, was appointed CEO of ABC International, filling a role left empty by the retirement of Murray Green.",
"At the time, it was intended that Radio Australia, ABC Australia and ABC News would work together more closely ABC International was at this time a division of the ABC, but it has not been represented as a separate division in the organisational structure of the ABC since 2016, after Marshall's departure in February 2017.There were fears of job losses in the division after the huge budget cuts in 2014, as well as an earlier termination of a contract with the Department of Foreign Affairs, one year into the 10-year contract.On 24 May 2021, Claire Gorman was appointed to an expanded role to manage both the International Strategy and the International Development teams.ABC Australia is an international satellite television service operated by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, funded by advertising and grants from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.",
"Aimed at the Asia-Pacific region, the service broadcasts a mixture of English language programming, including general entertainment, sport, and current affairs.Radio Australia is an international satellite and internet radio service with transmissions aimed at South-East Asia and the Pacific Islands, although its signals are also audible in many other parts of the world.",
"It features programmes in various languages spoken in these regions, including Mandarin, Indonesian, Vietnamese, Khmer and Tok Pisin.",
"Before 31 January 2017 Radio Australia broadcast short-wave radio signals.",
"Radio Australia bulletins are also carried on WRN Broadcast, available via satellite in Europe and North America.ABC International Development, or ABCID, is a media development unit that promotes public interest journalism and connects with local media in the region.",
"ABCID employs local people in Papua New Guinea and many Pacific countries.",
"The team \"provides expertise, training, technical and program support to partner organisations\", by working with a variety of organisations, including international development donors, for example through the through the Pacific Media Assistance Scheme (PACMAS)."
],
[
"Independence and impartiality",
"Under the ''Australian Broadcasting Corporation Act 1983'', the ABC Board is bound to \"maintain the independence and integrity of the Corporation\" and to ensure that \"the gathering and presentation by the Corporation of news and information is accurate and impartial according to the recognized standards of objective journalism\".The ABC's editorial policy on impartiality requires it to take \"no editorial stance other than its commitment to fundamental democratic principles including the rule of law, freedom of speech and religion, parliamentary democracy and non-discrimination\".",
"The ABC follows the following \"hallmarks of impartiality\": \"a balance that follows the weight of evidence, fair treatment, open-mindedness and opportunities over time for principal relevant perspectives on matters of contention to be expressed\".The editorial policy on diversity also requires the broadcaster \"to present, over time, content that addresses a broad range of subjects from a diversity of perspectives reflecting a diversity of experiences, presented in a diversity of ways from a diversity of sources\".",
"However, it also notes that this \"does not require that every perspective receives equal time, nor that every facet of every argument is presented\"."
],
[
"ABC Commercial",
"The commercial arm of the ABC was established in 1974 under the name Enterprises as a self-funding unit, marketing products relating to the ABC's activities.",
"It was renamed in 2007 to ABC Commercial, The aim of ABC Commercial was \"to create, market and retail high quality consumer products which reflect and extend the scope of the ABC's activities\".",
"At this time it comprised the ABC Shop, ABC Consumer Publishing and Content Sales, ABC Resource Hire, and ABC Content Services (Archives).ABC Commercial was registered as a business name under Australian Broadcasting Corporation in April 2007 and continues to exist .",
"It includes ABC Music, a leading independent record label; ABC Events, which stages concerts and other events; and publishing and licensing activities by ABC Books, ABC Audio, ABC Magazines and ABC Licensing.ABC Shop Online was wound up at the end of 2018, along with the in-store ABC Centres.",
"In early 2019, ABC Commercial split from the Finance division and became an independent business unit of the ABC.In the financial year 2018–2019, ABC Commercial turned a profit of , which was invested in content production.The ABC Studios and Media Production hires out some of the ABC studios and sound stages, operating as part of ABC Commercial.",
"The studios for hire are in Sydney (Studios 21, 22, 16), Melbourne (31), Adelaide (51B) and Perth (61)."
],
[
"Orchestras",
"Up until the installation of disc recording equipment in 1935, all content broadcast on the ABC was produced live, including music.",
"For this purpose, the ABC established broadcasting orchestras in each state, and in some centres also employed choruses and dance bands.",
"This became known as the ABC Concert Music Division, which was controlled by the Federal Director of Music – the first of whom was W. G. James.In 1997, the ABC divested all ABC orchestras from the Concerts department of the ABC into separate subsidiary companies, allied to a service company known as Symphony Australia, and on 1 January 2007 the orchestras were divested into independent companies.",
"The six state orchestras are:* Adelaide Symphony Orchestra* Melbourne Symphony Orchestra* Queensland Symphony Orchestra* Sydney Symphony Orchestra* Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra* West Australian Symphony Orchestra"
],
[
"ABC Friends",
"'''ABC Friends''', formerly '''Friends of the ABC''' ('''FABC'''), consists of independent organisations in each state and territory, under an umbrella organisation established in December 2016, ABC Friends National Inc.",
"In 1976, three independent groups were formed: Aunty's Nieces and Nephews in Melbourne, Friends of the ABC (NSW) Inc. (now ABC Friends NSW & ACT) and Friends of the ABC (SA) (since 2007/2008, ABC Friends SA/NT).",
"The groups were formed by citizens who were concerned about government threats to make deep cuts to the ABC's budget.",
"Historian Ken Inglis wrote that \"The Friends were in the line of those people who had affirmed over the years that the ABC was essential to the nation\".",
"Over the years, independent state organisations were established, run by committees, and in January 2014 the name of each was changed to ABC Friends.The objectives of ABC Friends National are stated as follows:"
],
[
"Controversies",
"===Defamation===The ABC lost a defamation case against Heston Russell, where they withdrew a truth defence and opted for the case to be heard under a public interest defence.In the landmark ruling, Justice Lee awarded Heston $390,000 in addition to interest and damages.",
"Estimates of legal expenses ranged between $1.2 million and $3 million.",
"The broadcaster did not take up an earlier settlement offer of $99,000 and removal of the published articles.",
"The ABC Managing Director, David Anderson, who took home a six-figure pay rise shortly after the defamation case loss, outlined in senate estimates that he would not apologise to Russell for the false reporting.Recordings of Willacy's interviews that formed part of the defamation case were garnished as part of the legal discovery process.",
"They were made available to Ben Fordham's 2GB radio program.In December 2023, Antoinette Lattouf was hired for five days to fill in for Sarah Macdonald on ABC Radio Sydney and then sacked three days later due to her outspoken activism on the Israel-Gaza conflict by reposting a Human Rights Watch story covering alleged actions taken by Israeli soldiers in Gaza.",
"Two days later Lattouf initiated law action with the Fair Work Commission against the ABC for alleged racial discrimination.",
"ABC members of the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance voted no confidence in Anderson partly due to WhatsApp messages that had come to light from a pro-Israel lobby group known as \"Lawyers for Israel\".",
"The next day the ABC Board voted unanimous confidence in Anderson.===Perceived bias===External critics have complained in particular of left-wing political bias at the broadcaster, citing a prominence of Labor Party-connected journalists hosting masthead political programs or a tendency to favour \"progressive\" over \"conservative\" political views on issues such as immigration, asylum seekers, the republic, multiculturalism, Indigenous reconciliation, feminism, environmentalism, and same-sex marriage.In December 2013, former judge and ABC chair James Spigelman announced that four independent audits would be conducted each year in response to the allegations of bias in the reporting of news and current affairs.",
"ABC Friends have observed that: \"Most of the complaints about bias in the ABC have come from the government of the day – Labor or Liberal.",
"Significantly both parties have been far less hostile to the ABC when in opposition\".====Reviews and investigations====Reviews of the ABC are regularly commissioned and sometimes not released.Both internal and external research has been conducted on the question of bias at the ABC.",
"These include the following:*A 2004 Roy Morgan media credibility survey found that journalists regarded ABC Radio as the most accurate news source in the country and the ABC as the second \"most politically biased media organisation in Australia\".",
"*A 2013 University of the Sunshine Coast study of the voting intentions of journalists found that 73.6% of ABC journalists supported Labor or the Greens – with 41% supporting the Greens (whereas only around 10% of people in the general population voted Green).",
"*At the 2016 federal election, a study commissioned by the ABC and conducted by Isentia compiled share-of-voice data and found that the ABC devoted 42.6% of election coverage to the Coalition government (this compares to the 42.04% vote received by the Coalition in the House of Representatives (HOR)), 35.9% to the Labor opposition (34.73% HOR), 8% to the Greens(10.23% HOR), 3.1% to independents (1.85% HOR), 2.2% to the Nick Xenophon Team (1.85% HOR) and 8.1% to the rest.",
"However, the ABC itself notes the \"significant limitations around the value of share of voice data\" as \"duration says nothing about tone or context\".",
"*In December 2020, the Board commissioned its 19th editorial review by an independent reviewer, which found that the ABC's news coverage of lead-up to the 2019 Australian election was \"overwhelmingly positive and unbiased\", although it also found that specific episodes of ''The Drum'' and ''Insiders'' reflected too narrow a range of viewpoints.",
"The government forced the publication of the report after Coalition senator James McGrath raised a motion in the Senate, which led to ABC Chair Ita Buttrose and managing director David Anderson writing to the president of the Senate, Scott Ryan, to express their concerns about the use of the such powers, which went against the public interest.===Relationships with government===Labor prime minister Bob Hawke considered the ABC's coverage of the 1991 Gulf War to be biased.",
"In 1996, conservative opposition leader John Howard refused to have Kerry O'Brien of the ABC moderate the television debates with Labor prime minister Paul Keating because Howard saw O'Brien as biased against the Coalition.Liberal Prime Minister Tony Abbott perceived the ABC to be left wing and hostile to his government, while Malcolm Turnbull enjoyed better relations with the national broadcaster.",
"Turnbull's successor, Scott Morrison, once again presided over \"strained\" relations between the government and the ABC.",
"Under Morrison's leadership, an investigation was launched into the ABC and its complaints-handling process—a decision which was criticised by Ita Buttrose as \"political interference\".",
"The inquiry was abandoned the following June.===Specific topics=======The Catholic Church and George Pell====The ABC's coverage of the issue of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church received praise and criticism.",
"The Melbourne Press Club presented the 2016 Quill for Coverage of an Issue or Event for the report ''George Pell and Sexual Abuse in the Catholic Church'', and the 2016 Golden Quill award to Louise Milligan and Andy Burns for their extensive coverage of Cardinal George Pell's evidence given at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.The ABC ''Media Watch'' program of 20 April 2020 noted that the ABC had been accused of leading a \"witch hunt\" against Cardinal Pell.",
"''Media Watch'' reported that, following his acquittal, Pell said the ABC gave an \"overwhelming presentation of one view and only one view\".",
"Media Watch also canvassed other criticisms including from ''The Australian'' newspaper's editor-at-large Paul Kelly, who charged the ABC with having run a \"sustained campaign against Pell\".",
"Media Watch also offered criticism of its own, noting Louise Milligan and the ''Four Corners'' program had failed to canvass any of Pell's defence from the trial and \"lined up witnesses condemning Pell\", while social media commentary by Barrie Cassidy and Quentin Dempster had undermined the presumption of innocence.",
"Margaret Simons similarly noted in ''The Guardian'' that \"there has been some social media activity by ABC journalists that looks very much like lobbying against Pell...\"====Environmentalism====Planet Slayer was an ABC website run by scientist Bernie Hobbs to teach children about the environment in around 2008/9.It included a \"Greenhouse Calculator\" which aimed to help children to work out their carbon footprint by providing an estimate of the age a person needs to die if they are not to use more than their fair share of the Earth's resources.",
"Victorian Liberal senator Mitch Fifield criticised a cartoon series on the site for portraying those who eat meat, loggers, and workers in the nuclear industry as \"evil\".",
"ABC managing director Mark Scott said the site was not designed to offend anyone, but instead have children think about environmental issues."
],
[
"See also",
"* History of broadcasting in Australia* Timeline of Australian radio"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"* Cater, Nick ''The Lucky Culture and the Rise of an Australian Ruling Class '' (2013) pp 199–228* Curgenven, Geoffrey.",
"''Dick Boyer, an Australian humanist'' (Bolton, 1967) (Dick Boyer was chair of the ABC Board from 1940 until his death in 1961.",
")* Inglis, K. S. ''This is the ABC – the Australian Broadcasting Commission 1932 – 1983'' (2006) * Inglis, K. S. ''Whose ABC?",
"The Australian Broadcasting Corporation 1983–2006'' (2006)* Moran, Albert, and Chris Keating.",
"''The A to Z of Australian Radio and Television'' (Scarecrow Press, 2009)* Semmler, Clement.",
"''The ABC: Aunt Sally and Sacred Cow'' (1981)"
],
[
"External links",
"* * ''Australian Broadcasting Corporation Act 1983''"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Alexandria"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Alexandria''' ( ; ; , Coptic: Ⲣⲁⲕⲟϯ - Rakoti or ⲁⲗⲉⲝⲁⲛⲇⲣⲓⲁ) is the second largest city in Egypt and the largest city on the Mediterranean coast.",
"It lies at the western edge of the Nile River delta.",
"Founded in by Alexander the Great, Alexandria grew rapidly and became a major centre of Hellenic civilization, eventually replacing Memphis, in present-day Greater Cairo, as Egypt's capital.",
"Called the \"Bride of the Mediterranean\" internationally, Alexandria is a popular tourist destination and an important industrial centre due to its natural gas and oil pipelines from Suez.The city extends about along the northern coast of Egypt and is the largest city on the Mediterranean, the second-largest in Egypt (after Cairo), the fourth-largest city in the Arab world, the ninth-largest city in Africa, and the ninth-largest urban area in Africa.The city was founded originally in the vicinity of an Egyptian settlement named Rhacotis (that became the Egyptian quarter of the city).",
"Alexandria grew rapidly, becoming a major centre of Hellenic civilisation and replacing Memphis as Egypt's capital during the reign of the Ptolemaic pharaohs who succeeded Alexander.",
"It retained this status for almost a millennium, through the period of Roman and Eastern Roman rule until the Muslim conquest of Egypt in 641 AD, when a new capital was founded at Fustat (later absorbed into Cairo).Alexandria was best known for the Lighthouse of Alexandria (''Pharos''), one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World; its Great Library, the largest in the ancient world; and the Catacombs of Kom El Shoqafa, one of the Seven Wonders of the Middle Ages.",
"Alexandria was the intellectual and cultural centre of the ancient Mediterranean for much of the Hellenistic age and late antiquity.",
"It was at one time the largest city in the ancient world before being eventually overtaken by Rome.The city was a major centre of early Christianity and was the centre of the Patriarchate of Alexandria, which was one of the major centres of Christianity in the Eastern Roman Empire.",
"In the modern world, the Coptic Orthodox Church and the Greek Orthodox Church of Alexandria both lay claim to this ancient heritage.",
"By 641, the city had already been largely plundered and lost its significance before re-emerging in the modern era.",
"From the late 18th century, Alexandria became a major centre of the international shipping industry and one of the most important trading centres in the world, both because it profited from the easy overland connection between the Mediterranean and Red Seas and the lucrative trade in Egyptian cotton."
],
[
"History",
"===Ancient era===Radiocarbon dating of seashell fragments and lead contamination show human activity at the location during the period of the Old Kingdom (27th–21st centuries BC) and again in the period 1000–800 BC, followed by the absence of activity after that.",
"From ancient sources it is known there existed a trading post at this location during the time of Rameses the Great for trade with Crete, but it had long been lost by the time of Alexander's arrival.",
"A small Egyptian fishing village named Rhakotis (Egyptian: , 'That which is built up') existed since the 13th century BC in the vicinity and eventually grew into the Egyptian quarter of the city.",
"Just east of Alexandria (where Abu Qir Bay is now), there were in ancient times marshland and several islands.",
"As early as the 7th century BC, there existed important port cities of Canopus and Heracleion.",
"The latter was recently rediscovered underwater.Alexandria was founded by Alexander the Great in April 331 BC as (), as one of his many city foundations.",
"After he captured the Egyptian Satrapy from the Persians, Alexander wanted to build a large Greek city on Egypt's coast that would bear his name.",
"He chose the site of Alexandria, envisioning the building of a causeway to the nearby island of Pharos that would generate two great natural harbours.",
"Alexandria was intended to supersede the older Greek colony of Naucratis as a Hellenistic centre in Egypt and to be the link between Greece and the rich Nile valley.",
"A few months after the foundation, Alexander left Egypt and never returned to the city during his life.leftAfter Alexander's departure, his viceroy Cleomenes continued the expansion.",
"The architect Dinocrates of Rhodes designed the city, using a Hippodamian grid plan.",
"Following Alexander's death in 323 BC, his general Ptolemy Lagides took possession of Egypt and brought Alexander's body to Egypt with him.",
"Ptolemy at first ruled from the old Egyptian capital of Memphis.",
"In 322/321 BC he had Cleomenes executed.",
"Finally, in 305 BC, Ptolemy declared himself Pharaoh as Ptolemy I Soter (\"Savior\") and moved his capital to Alexandria.Although Cleomenes was mainly in charge of overseeing Alexandria's early development, the and the mainland quarters seem to have been primarily Ptolemaic work.",
"Inheriting the trade of ruined Tyre and becoming the centre of the new commerce between Europe and the Arabian and Indian East, the city grew in less than a generation to be larger than Carthage.",
"In one century, Alexandria had become the largest city in the world and, for some centuries more, was second only to Rome.",
"It became Egypt's main Greek city, with Greek people from diverse backgrounds.The Septuagint, a Greek version of the Tanakh, was produced there.",
"The early Ptolemies kept it in order and fostered the development of its museum into the leading Hellenistic centre of learning (Library of Alexandria, which faced destruction during Caesar's siege of Alexandria in 47 BC), but were careful to maintain the distinction of its population's three largest ethnicities: Greek, Egyptian and Jewish.",
"By the time of Augustus, the city grid encompassed an area of , and the total population during the Roman principate was around 500,000–600,000, which would wax and wane in the course of the next four centuries under Roman rule.According to Philo of Alexandria, in the year 38 AD, disturbances erupted between Jews and Greek citizens of Alexandria during a visit paid by King Agrippa I to Alexandria, principally over the respect paid by the Herodian nation to the Roman emperor, which quickly escalated to open affronts and violence between the two ethnic groups and the desecration of Alexandrian synagogues.",
"This event has been called the Alexandrian pogroms.",
"The violence was quelled after Caligula intervened and had the Roman governor, Flaccus, removed from the city.The Lighthouse of Alexandria on coins minted in Alexandria in the second century (1: reverse of a coin of Antoninus Pius, and 2: reverse of a coin of Commodus)In 115 AD, large parts of Alexandria were destroyed during the Kitos War, which gave Hadrian and his architect, Decriannus, an opportunity to rebuild it.",
"In 215 AD, the emperor Caracalla visited the city and, because of some insulting satires that the inhabitants had directed at him, abruptly commanded his troops to put to death all youths capable of bearing arms.",
"On 21 July 365 AD, Alexandria was devastated by a tsunami (365 Crete earthquake), an event annually commemorated years later as a \"day of horror\".===Islamic era===In 619, Alexandria fell to the Sassanid Persians.",
"The city was mostly uninjured by the conquest and a new palace called ''Tarawus'' was erected in the eastern part of the city, later known as Qasr Faris, \"fort of the Persians\".",
"Although the Byzantine emperor Heraclius recovered it in 629, in 641 the Arabs under the general 'Amr ibn al-'As invaded it during the Muslim conquest of Egypt, after a siege that lasted 14 months.",
"The first Arab governor of Egypt recorded to have visited Alexandria was Utba ibn Abi Sufyan, who strengthened the Arab presence and built a governor's palace in the city in 664–665.In reference to Alexandria, Ibn Battuta speaks of a number of Muslim saints that resided in the city.",
"One such saint was Imam Borhan Oddin El Aaraj, who was said to perform miracles.",
"Another notable figure was Yaqut al-'Arshi, a disciple of Abu Abbas El Mursi.",
"Ibn Battuta also writes about Abu 'Abdallah al-Murshidi, a saint that lived in the Minyat of Ibn Murshed.",
"Although al-Murshidi lived in seclusion, Ibn Battuta writes that he was regularly visited by crowds, high state officials, and even by the Sultan of Egypt at the time, al-Nasir Muhammad.",
"Ibn Battuta also visited the Pharos lighthouse on two occasions: in 1326 he found it to be partly in ruins and in 1349 it had deteriorated to the point that it was no longer possible to enter.Alexandria in the late 18th century, by Luigi MayerDuring the Middle Ages, the Mamluk Sultanate provided amenities for European merchants to stay in the port cities of Alexandria and Damietta, so hotels were built and placed at the merchants' disposal so that they could live according to the pattern they were accustomed to in their country.",
"Alexandria lost much of its importance in international trade after Portuguese navigators discovered a new sea route to India in the late 15th century.",
"This reduced the amount of goods that needed to be transported through the Alexandrian port, as well as the Mamluks' political power.",
"After the Battle of Ridaniya in 1517, the city was conquered by the Ottoman Turks and remained under Ottoman rule until 1798.Alexandria lost much of its former importance to the Egyptian port city of Rosetta during the 9th to 18th centuries, and it only regained its former prominence with the construction of the Mahmoudiyah Canal in 1820.Map of the city in the 1780s, by Louis-François CassasAlexandria figured prominently in the military operations of Napoleon's expedition to Egypt in 1798.French troops stormed the city on 2 July 1798, and it remained in their hands until the arrival of a British expedition in 1801.The British won a considerable victory over the French at the Battle of Alexandria on 21 March 1801, following which they besieged the city, which fell to them on 2 September 1801.Muhammad Ali, the Ottoman governor of Egypt, began rebuilding and redevelopment around 1810 and, by 1850, Alexandria had returned to something akin to its former glory.",
"Egypt turned to Europe in their effort to modernize the country.",
"Greeks, followed by other Europeans and others, began moving to the city.",
"In the early 20th century, the city became a home for novelists and poets.British naval forces (1882)In July 1882, the city came under bombardment from British naval forces and was occupied.In July 1954, the city was a target of an Israeli bombing campaign that later became known as the Lavon Affair.",
"On 26 October 1954, Alexandria's Mansheya Square was the site of a failed assassination attempt on Gamal Abdel Nasser.Europeans began leaving Alexandria following the 1956 Suez Crisis that led to an outburst of Arab nationalism.",
"The nationalization of property by Nasser, which reached its highest point in 1961, drove out nearly all the rest."
],
[
"Geography",
"Lake MarioutAlexandria is located in the country of Egypt, on the southern coast of the Mediterranean.",
"It is in the Far West Nile delta area.",
"Its a densely populated city, its core areas belie its large administrative area.Region(Population)Areakm2Densityper km2(2020) 1996 2020 proj*Alexandria, 14 kisms (contiguous)2,199,0004,439,000203.5721,805Notes:2020 CAPMAS projection based on 2017 revised census figures, may differ significantly from 2017 census preliminary tabulations.",
"The 14 kisms were reported simply as ''Alexandria city'' by CAPMAS in 2006 but given explosive growth definitions, likely informal, may have changed or may be set to change.",
"Same area with 12 kisms existed in 1996.Kisms are considered 'fully urbanized'===Climate===Alexandria has a hot steppe climate (Köppen climate classification: BSh), formerly hot desert climate (Köppen climate classification: BWh).",
"Like the rest of Egypt's northern coast, the prevailing north wind, blowing across the Mediterranean, gives the city a less severe climate than the desert hinterland.",
"Rafah and Alexandria are the wettest places in Egypt; the other wettest places are Rosetta, Baltim, Kafr el-Dawwar, and Mersa Matruh.",
"The city's climate is influenced by the Mediterranean Sea, moderating its temperatures, causing variable rainy winters and moderately hot and slightly prolonged summers that, at times, can be very humid; January and February are the coolest months, with daily maximum temperatures typically ranging from and minimum temperatures that could reach .Alexandria experiences violent storms, rain and sometimes sleet and hail during the cooler months; these events, combined with a poor drainage system, have been responsible for occasional flooding in the city in the past though they rarely occur anymore.",
"July and August are the hottest and driest months of the year, with an average daily maximum temperature of .The average annual rainfall is around but has been as high as Port Said, Kosseir, Baltim, Damietta and Alexandria have the least temperature variation in Egypt.The highest recorded temperature was on 30 May 1961, and the coldest recorded temperature was on 31 January 1994.+Alexandria mean sea temperatureJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec==== Climate change ====A 2019 paper published in PLOS One estimated that under Representative Concentration Pathway 4.5, a \"moderate\" scenario of climate change where global warming reaches ~ by 2100, the climate of Alexandria in the year 2050 would most closely resemble the current climate of Gaza City.",
"The annual temperature would increase by , and the temperature of the warmest and the coldest month by and .",
"According to Climate Action Tracker, the current warming trajectory appears consistent with , which closely matches RCP 4.5.Due to its location on a Nile river delta, Alexandria is one of the most vulnerable cities to sea level rise in the entire world.",
"According to some estimates, hundreds of thousands of people in its low-lying areas may already have to be relocated before 2030.The 2022 IPCC Sixth Assessment Report estimates that by 2050, Alexandria and 11 other major African cities (Abidjan, Algiers, Cape Town, Casablanca, Dakar, Dar es Salaam, Durban, Lagos, Lomé, Luanda and Maputo) would collectively sustain cumulative damages of US$65 billion for the \"moderate\" climate change scenario RCP 4.5 and US$86.5 billion for the high-emission scenario RCP 8.5, while RCP 8.5 combined with the hypothetical impact from marine ice sheet instability at high levels of warming would involve up to US$137.5 billion in damages.",
"Additional accounting for the \"low-probability, high-damage events\" may increase aggregate risks to US$187 billion for the \"moderate\" RCP4.5, US$206 billion for RCP8.5 and US$397 billion under the high-end ice sheet instability scenario.",
"In every single estimate, Alexandria alone bears around half of these costs.",
"Since sea level rise would continue for about 10,000 years under every scenario of climate change, future costs of sea level rise would only increase, especially without adaptation measures."
],
[
"Ancient layout",
"Macedonian Army, shown on the Alexander SarcophagusGreek Alexandria was divided into three regions:;Rhakotis:Rhakotis (from Coptic , \"Alexandria\") was the old city that was absorbed into Alexandria.",
"It was occupied chiefly by Egyptians.",
":;Brucheum:Brucheum was the Royal or Greek quarter and formed the most magnificent portion of the city.",
"In Roman times, Brucheum was enlarged by the addition of an official quarter, making four regions in all.",
"The city was laid out as a grid of parallel streets, each of which had an attendant subterranean canal.",
";;Jewish quarter:The Jewish quarter was the northeast portion of the city.Engraving by L. F. Cassas of the Canopic Street in Alexandria, Egypt, made in 1784Two main streets, lined with colonnades and said to have been each about wide, intersected in the centre of the city, close to the point where the Sema (or Soma) of Alexander (his Mausoleum) rose.",
"This point is very near the present mosque of Nebi Daniel; the line of the great East–West \"Canopic\" street is also present in modern-day Alexandria, having only slightly diverged from the line of the modern Boulevard de Rosette (now Sharae Fouad).",
"Traces of its pavement and canal have been found near the Rosetta Gate, but remnants of streets and canals were exposed in 1899 by German excavators outside the east fortifications, which lie well within the area of the ancient city.One of the pair of Cleopatra's Needles in Alexandria, which were relocated to London and New York in the late 19th centuryAlexandria consisted originally of little more than the island of Pharos, which was joined to the mainland by a mole and called the (\"seven stadia\"—a ''stadium'' was a Greek unit of length measuring approximately ).",
"The end of this abutted on the land at the head of the present Grand Square, where the \"Moon Gate\" rose.",
"All that now lies between that point and the modern \"Ras al-Tin\" quarter is built on the silt which gradually widened and obliterated this mole.",
"The Ras al-Tin quarter represents all that is left of the island of Pharos, the site of the actual lighthouse having been weathered away by the sea.",
"On the east of the mole was the Great Harbour, now an open bay; on the west lay the port of Eunostos, with its inner basin Kibotos, now vastly enlarged to form the modern harbour.In Strabo's time (latter half of the 1st century BC), the principal buildings were as follows, enumerated as they were to be seen from a ship entering the Great Harbour.#The Royal Palaces, filling the northeast angle of the town and occupying the promontory of Lochias, which shut in the Great Harbour on the east.",
"Lochias (the modern Pharillon) has almost entirely disappeared into the sea, together with the palaces, the \"Private Port\", and the island of Antirrhodus.",
"There has been a land subsidence here, as throughout the northeast coast of Africa.#The Great Theater, on the modern Hospital Hill near the Ramleh station.",
"This was used by Julius Caesar as a fortress, where he withstood a siege from the city mob after he took Egypt after the battle of Pharsalus.#The Poseidon, or Temple of the Sea God, close to the theater#The Timonium built by Marc Antony#The Emporium (Exchange)#The Apostases (Magazines)#The Navalia (Docks), lying west of the Timonium, along the seafront as far as the mole#Behind the Emporium rose the Great Caesareum, by which stood the two great obelisks which became known as \"Cleopatra's Needles\" and were transported to New York City and London.",
"This temple became, in time, the Patriarchal Church, though some ancient remains of the temple have been discovered.",
"The actual Caesareum, the parts not eroded by the waves, lies under the houses lining the new seawall.#The Gymnasium and the Palaestra are both inland, near the Boulevard de Rosette in the eastern half of the town; sites unknown.#The Temple of Saturn; site unknown.#The Mausolea of Alexander (Soma) and the Ptolemies in one ring-fence, near the point of intersection of the two main streets.#The Musaeum with its famous Library and theater in the same region; site unknown.#The Serapeum of Alexandria, the most famous of all Alexandrian temples.",
"Strabo tells that this stood in the west of the city; and recent discoveries go far as to place it near \"Pompey's Pillar\", which was an independent monument erected to commemorate Diocletian's siege of the city.The names of a few other public buildings on the mainland are known, but there is little information as to their actual position.",
"None, however, are as famous as the building that stood on the eastern point of Pharos island.",
"There, The Great Lighthouse, one of the Seven Wonders of the World, reputed to be high, was situated.",
"The first Ptolemy began the project, and the second Ptolemy (Ptolemy II Philadelphus) completed it, at a total cost of 800 talents.",
"It took 12 years to complete and served as a prototype for all later lighthouses in the world.",
"The light was produced by a furnace at the top and the tower was built mostly with solid blocks of limestone.",
"The Pharos lighthouse was destroyed by an earthquake in the 14th century, making it the second longest surviving ancient wonder, after the Great Pyramid of Giza.",
"A temple of Hephaestus also stood on Pharos at the head of the mole.In the 1st century, the population of Alexandria contained over 180,000 adult male citizens, according to a census dated from 32 AD, in addition to a large number of freedmen, women, children and slaves.",
"Estimates of the total population range from 216,000 to 500,000, making it one of the largest cities ever built before the Industrial Revolution and the largest pre-industrial city that was not an imperial capital."
],
[
"Cityscape",
"Due to the constant presence of war in Alexandria in ancient times, very little of the ancient city has survived into the present day.",
"Much of the royal and civic quarters sank beneath the harbour and the rest has been built over in modern times.=== Pompey's Pillar ===Pompey's Pillar\"Pompey's Pillar\", a Roman triumphal column, is one of the best-known ancient monuments still standing in Alexandria today.",
"It is located on Alexandria's ancient acropolis—a modest hill located adjacent to the city's Arab cemetery—and was originally part of a temple colonnade.",
"Including its pedestal, it is 30 m (99 ft) high; the shaft is of polished red granite, in diameter at the base, tapering to at the top.",
"The shaft is high and made out of a single piece of granite.",
"Its volume is and weight approximately 396 tons.",
"Pompey's Pillar may have been erected using the same methods that were used to erect the ancient obelisks.",
"The Romans had cranes but they were not strong enough to lift something this heavy.",
"Roger Hopkins and Mark Lehrner conducted several obelisk erecting experiments including a successful attempt to erect a 25-ton obelisk in 1999.This followed two experiments to erect smaller obelisks and two failed attempts to erect a 25-ton obelisk.",
"\"Pompey's Pillar\" is a misnomer, as it has nothing to do with Pompey, having been erected in 293 for Diocletian, possibly in memory of the rebellion of Domitius Domitianus.",
"The structure was plundered and demolished in the 4th century when a bishop decreed that Paganism must be eradicated.",
"Beneath the acropolis itself are the subterranean remains of the Serapeum, where the mysteries of the god Serapis were enacted and whose carved wall niches are believed to have provided overflow storage space for the ancient Library.",
"In more recent years, many ancient artifacts have been discovered from the surrounding sea, mostly pieces of old pottery.=== Catacombs of Kom El Shoqafa ===Catacombs of Kom El ShoqafaAlexandria's catacombs, known as ''Kom El Shoqafa'', are a short distance southwest of the pillar, consist of a multi-level labyrinth, reached via a large spiral staircase and featuring dozens of chambers adorned with sculpted pillars, statues, and other syncretic Romano-Egyptian religious symbols, burial niches, and sarcophagi, as well as a large Roman-style banquet room, where memorial meals were conducted by relatives of the deceased.",
"The catacombs were long forgotten by the citizens until they were discovered by accident in 1900.=== Kom El Deka ===Roman AmphitheaterThe most extensive ancient excavation currently being conducted in Alexandria is known as Kom El Deka.",
"It has revealed the ancient city's well-preserved theater, and the remains of its Roman-era baths.===Temple of Taposiris Magna===Side view of The Temple of Taposiris MagnaThe temple was built in the Ptolemy era and dedicated to Osiris, which finished the construction of Alexandria.",
"It is located in Abusir, the western suburb of Alexandria in Borg el Arab city.",
"Only the outer wall and the pylons remain from the temple.",
"There is evidence to prove that sacred animals were worshiped there.",
"Archaeologists found an animal necropolis near the temple.",
"Remains of a Christian church show that the temple was used as a church in later centuries.",
"Also found in the same area are remains of public baths built by the emperor Justinian, a seawall, quays and a bridge.",
"Near the beach side of the area, there are the remains of a tower built by Ptolemy II Philadelphus.",
"The tower was an exact scale replica of the destroyed Alexandrine Pharos Lighthouse.=== Citadel of Qaitbay ===Citadel of QaitbayCitadel of Qaitbay is a defensive fortress located on the Mediterranean sea coast.",
"It was established in 1477 AD (882 AH) by the mamluk Sultan Al-Ashraf Sayf al-Din Qa'it Bay.",
"The Citadel is located on the eastern side of the northern tip of Pharos Island at the mouth of the Eastern Harbour.",
"It was erected on the exact site of the famous Lighthouse of Alexandria, which was one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.",
"It was built on an area of 17,550 square metres."
],
[
"Excavation",
"Persistent efforts have been made to explore the antiquities of Alexandria.",
"Encouragement and help have been given by the local Archaeological Society and by many individuals.",
"Excavations were performed in the city by Greeks seeking the tomb of Alexander the Great without success.The past and present directors of the museum have been enabled from time to time to carry out systematic excavations whenever opportunity is offered; D. G. Hogarth made tentative researches on behalf of the Egypt Exploration Fund and the Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies in 1895; and a German expedition worked for two years (1898–1899).",
"But two difficulties face the would-be excavator in Alexandria: lack of space for excavation and the underwater location of some areas of interest.Since the great and growing modern city stands immediately over the ancient one, it is almost impossible to find any considerable space in which to dig, except at enormous cost.",
"Cleopatra VII's royal quarters were inundated by earthquakes and tsunami, leading to gradual subsidence in the 4th century AD.",
"This underwater section, containing many of the most interesting sections of the Hellenistic city, including the palace quarter, was explored in 1992 and is still being extensively investigated by the French underwater archaeologist Franck Goddio and his team.",
"It raised a noted head of Caesarion.",
"These are being opened up to tourists, to some controversy.",
"The spaces that are most open are the low grounds to northeast and southwest, where it is practically impossible to get below the Roman strata.The most important results were those achieved by Dr. G. Botti, late director of the museum, in the neighborhood of \"Pompey's Pillar\", where there is a good deal of open ground.",
"Here, substructures of a large building or group of buildings have been exposed, which are perhaps part of the Serapeum.",
"Nearby, immense catacombs and ''columbaria'' have been opened which may have been appendages of the temple.",
"These contain one very remarkable vault with curious painted reliefs, now artificially lit and open to visitors.The objects found in these researches are in the museum, the most notable being a great basalt bull, probably once an object of cult in the Serapeum.",
"Other catacombs and tombs have been opened in Kom El Shoqafa (Roman) and Ras El Tin (painted).The German excavation team found remains of a Ptolemaic colonnade and streets in the north-east of the city, but little else.",
"Hogarth explored part of an immense brick structure under the mound of Kom El Deka, which may have been part of the Paneum, the Mausolea, or a Roman fortress.The making of the new foreshore led to the dredging up of remains of the Patriarchal Church; and the foundations of modern buildings are seldom laid without some objects of antiquity being discovered."
],
[
"Places of worship",
"===Islam===Abu al-Abbas al-Mursi MosqueThe most famous mosque in Alexandria is Abu al-Abbas al-Mursi Mosque in Bahary.",
"Other notable mosques in the city include Ali ibn Abi Talib mosque in Somouha, Bilal mosque, al-Gamaa al-Bahari in Mandara, Hatem mosque in Somouha, Hoda el-Islam mosque in Sidi Bishr, al-Mowasah mosque in Hadara, Sharq al-Madina mosque in Miami, al-Shohadaa mosque in Mostafa Kamel, Al Qa'ed Ibrahim Mosque, Yehia mosque in Zizinia, Sidi Gaber mosque in Sidi Gaber, Sidi B esher mosque, Rokay el-Islam mosque in Elessway, Elsadaka Mosque in Sidibesher Qebly, Elshatbi mosque and Sultan mosque.Alexandria is the base of the Salafi movements in Egypt.",
"Al-Nour Party, which is based in the city and overwhelmingly won most of the Salafi votes in the 2011–12 parliamentary election, supports the president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.===Christianity===Saint Mark's Coptic Orthodox CathedralSaint Catherine's Latin Catholic CathedralAlexandria was once considered the third-most important see in Christianity, after Rome and Constantinople.",
"Until 430, the Patriarch of Alexandria was second only to the bishop of Rome.",
"The Church of Alexandria had jurisdiction over most of the continent of Africa.",
"After the Council of Chalcedon in AD 451, the Alexandrian Church split between the Miaphysites and the Melkites.",
"The Miaphysites went on to constitute what is known today as the Coptic Orthodox Church.",
"The Melkites went on to constitute what is known today as the Greek Orthodox Church of Alexandria.",
"In the 19th century, Catholic and Protestant missionaries converted some of the adherents of the Orthodox churches to their respective faiths.Today the Patriarchal seat of the Pope of the Coptic Orthodox Church is Saint Mark Cathedral (though in practice the Patriarch has long resided in Cairo).",
"The most important Coptic Orthodox churches in Alexandria include Pope Cyril I Church in Cleopatra, Saint George's Church in Sporting, Saint Mark & Pope Peter I Church in Sidi Bishr, Saint Mary Church in Assafra, Saint Mary Church in Gianaclis, Saint Mina Church in Fleming, Saint Mina Church in Mandara and Saint Takla Haymanot's Church in Ibrahimeya.The most important Eastern Orthodox churches in Alexandria are Agioi Anárgyroi Church, Church of the Annunciation, Saint Anthony Church, Archangels Gabriel & Michael Church, Taxiarchon Church, Saint Catherine Church, Cathedral of the Dormition in Mansheya, Church of the Dormition, Prophet Elijah Church, Saint George Church, Saint Joseph Church in Fleming, Saint Joseph of Arimathea Church, Saint Mark & Saint Nektarios Chapel in Ramleh, Saint Nicholas Church, Saint Paraskevi Church, Saint Sava Cathedral in Ramleh, Saint Theodore Chapel and the Russian church of Saint Alexander Nevsky in Alexandria, which serves the Russian speaking community in the city.The Apostolic Vicariate of Alexandria in Egypt-Heliopolis-Port Said has jurisdiction over all Latin Catholics in Egypt.",
"Member churches include Saint Catherine Church in Mansheya and Church of the Jesuits in Cleopatra.",
"The city is also the nominal see of the Melkite Greek Catholic titular Patriarchate of Alexandria (generally vested in its leading Patriarch of Antioch) and the actual cathedral see of its Patriarchal territory of Egypt, Sudan and South Sudan, which uses the Byzantine Rite, and the nominal see of the Armenian Catholic Eparchy of Alexandria (for all Egypt and Sudan, whose actual cathedral is in Cairo), a suffragan of the Armenian Catholic Patriarch of Cilicia, using the Armenian Rite.",
"The Saint Mark Church in Shatby, founded as part of Collège Saint Marc, is multi-denominational and holds liturgies according to Latin Catholic, Coptic Catholic and Coptic Orthodox rites.In antiquity Alexandria was a major centre of the cosmopolitan religious movement called Gnosticism (today mainly remembered as a Christian heresy).===Judaism===Eliyahu Hanavi SynagogueAlexandria's Jewish community declined rapidly following the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, after which negative reactions towards Zionism among Egyptians led to Jewish residents in the city, and elsewhere in Egypt, being perceived as Zionist collaborators.",
"Most Jewish residents of Egypt moved to the newly settled Israel, France, Brazil and other countries in the 1950s and 1960s.",
"The community once numbered 50,000 but is now estimated at below 50.The most important synagogue in Alexandria is the Eliyahu Hanavi Synagogue."
],
[
"Education",
"===Colleges and universities===Collège Saint MarcAlexandria has a number of higher education institutions.",
"Alexandria University is a public university that follows the Egyptian system of higher education.",
"Many of its faculties are internationally renowned, most notably its Faculty of Medicine & Faculty of Engineering.",
"In addition, the Egypt-Japan University of Science and Technology in New Borg El Arab city is a research university set up in collaboration between the Japanese and Egyptian governments in 2010.The Arab Academy for Science, Technology & Maritime Transport is a semi-private educational institution that offers courses for high school, undergraduate level, and postgraduate students.",
"It is considered the most reputable university in Egypt after the AUC American University in Cairo because of its worldwide recognition from board of engineers at UK & ABET in US.",
"Université Senghor is a private French university that focuses on the teaching of humanities, politics and international relations, which mainly recruits students from the African continent.",
"Other institutions of higher education in Alexandria include Alexandria Institute of Technology (AIT) and Pharos University in Alexandria.In September 2023, The Greek University of Patras announced that it is opening a branch in Alexandria, in a first-of-its-kind move by a Greek higher education institution.",
"The Greek university of Patras branch will operate two departments, one Greek-speaking and one English-speaking in the subjects of Greek culture, Greek language and Greek philosophy.===Schools===Lycée Français d'AlexandrieAlexandria has a long history of foreign educational institutions.",
"The first foreign schools date to the early 19th century, when French missionaries began establishing French charitable schools to educate the Egyptians.",
"Today, the most important French schools in Alexandria run by Catholic missionaries include Collège de la Mère de Dieu, Collège Notre Dame de Sion, Collège Saint Marc, Écoles des Soeurs Franciscaines (four different schools), École Girard, École Saint Gabriel, École Saint-Vincent de Paul, École Saint Joseph, École Sainte Catherine, and Institution Sainte Jeanne-Antide.",
"As a reaction to the establishment of French religious institutions, a secular (laic) mission established Lycée el-Horreya, which initially followed a French system of education, but is currently run by the Egyptian government.",
"The only school in Alexandria that completely follows the French educational system is Lycée Français d'Alexandrie (École Champollion).",
"It is usually frequented by the children of French expatriates and diplomats in Alexandria.",
"The Italian school is the Istituto \"Don Bosco\".English-language schools in Alexandria are the most popular; those in the city include: Riada American School, Riada Language School, Alexandria Language School, Future Language School, Future International Schools (Future IGCSE, Future American School and Future German school), Alexandria American School, British School of Alexandria, Egyptian American School, Pioneers Language School, Egyptian English Language School, Princesses Girls' School, Sidi Gaber Language School, Zahran Language School, Taymour English School, Sacred Heart Girls' School, Schutz American School, Victoria College, El Manar Language School for Girls (previously called Scottish School for Girls), Kawmeya Language School, El Nasr Boys' School (previously called British Boys' School), and El Nasr Girls' College (previously called English Girls' College).There are only two German schools in Alexandria which are Deutsche Schule der Borromärinnen (DSB of Saint Charles Borromé) and Neue Deutsche Schule Alexandria, which is run by Frau Sally Hammam.The Montessori educational system was first introduced in Alexandria in 2009 at Alexandria Montessori.===Women===Around the 1890s, twice the percentage of women in Alexandria knew how to read compared to the same percentage in Cairo.",
"As a result, specialist women's publications like ''al-Fatāh'' by Hind Nawal, the country's first women's journal, appeared."
],
[
"Transport",
"===Airports===Borg El Arab International AirportThe city's principal airport is currently Borg El Arab Airport, which is located about away from the city centre.From late 2011, El Nouzha Airport (Alexandria International Airport) was to be closed to commercial operations for two years as it underwent expansion, with all airlines operating out of Borg El Arab Airport from then onwards, where a brand new terminal was completed there in February 2010.In 2017, the government announced that Alexandria International Airport will shut down permanently and will no longer reopen.===Port===Alexandria portAlexandria has four ports; namely the Western Port also known as ''Alexandria Port'', which is the main port of the country that handles about 60% of the country's exports and imports, Dekhela Port west of the Western Port, the Eastern Port which is a yachting harbour, and Abu Qir Port at the northern east of the governorate.",
"It is a commercial port for general cargo and phosphates.===Highways===*International Coastal Road (Mersa Matruh – Alexandria – Port Said)*Cairo–Alexandria desert road (Alexandria – Cairo – , 6–8 lanes)*Cairo-Alexandria Agriculture Road (Alexandria – Cairo)*Mehwar El Ta'meer – (Alexandria – Borg El Arab)===Rail===Misr Railway StationAlexandria's intracity commuter rail system extends from Misr Station (Alexandria's primary intercity railway station) to Abu Qir, parallel to the tram line.",
"The commuter line's locomotives operate on diesel, as opposed to the overhead-electric tram.Alexandria plays host to two intercity railway stations: the aforementioned Misr Station (in the older Manshia district in the western part of the city) and Sidi Gaber railway station (in the district of Sidi Gaber in the centre of the eastern expansion in which most Alexandrines reside), both of which also serve the commuter rail line.",
"Intercity passenger service is operated by Egyptian National Railways.===Trams===An Alexandria tramAn extensive tramway network was built in 1860 and is the oldest in Africa.",
"The network begins at the El Raml district in the west and ends in the Victoria district in the east.===Metro===Construction of the Alexandria Metro was due to begin in 2020 at a cost of $1.05 billion."
],
[
"Culture",
"===Libraries===The Bibliotheca AlexandrinaThe Royal Library of Alexandria, in Alexandria, Egypt, was once the largest library in the world.",
"It is generally thought to have been founded at the beginning of the 3rd century BC, during the reign of Ptolemy II of Egypt.",
"It was likely created after his father had built what would become the first part of the library complex, the temple of the Muses—the Museion, Greek ''Μουσείον'' (from which the Modern English word ''museum'' is derived).It has been reasonably established that the library, or parts of the collection, were destroyed by fire on a number of occasions (library fires were common and replacement of handwritten manuscripts was very difficult, expensive, and time-consuming).",
"To this day the details of the destruction (or destructions) remain a lively source of controversy.The Bibliotheca Alexandrina was inaugurated in 2002, near the site of the old Library.===Museums===The Alexandria National Museum was inaugurated 31 December 2003.It is located in a restored Italian style palace in Tariq El Horreya Street (formerly Rue Fouad), near the centre of the city.",
"It contains about 1,800 artifacts that narrate the story of Alexandria and Egypt.",
"Most of these pieces came from other Egyptian museums.",
"The museum is housed in the old Al-Saad Bassili Pasha Palace, who was one of the wealthiest wood merchants in Alexandria.",
"Construction on the site was first undertaken in 1926.The Graeco-Roman Museum was the city's main archeological museum, focused on artifacts from its Greco-Roman period.",
"It was opened in 1892 and was closed in 2005 for extensive renovations and expansion.",
"The museum re-opened to the public in October 2023.Other museums in the city include the Cavafy Museum, the Museum of Fine Arts, and the Royal Jewelry Museum.===Theaters===Alexandria Opera House hosts performances of classical music, Arabic music, ballet, and opera.Sayed Darwish Theater"
],
[
"Sports",
"Alexandria StadiumThe main sport that interests Alexandrians is football, as is the case in the rest of Egypt and Africa.",
"Alexandria Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium in Alexandria, Egypt.",
"It is currently used mostly for football matches and was used for the 2006 African Cup of Nations.",
"The stadium is the oldest stadium in Egypt, being built in 1929.The stadium holds 20,000 people.",
"Alexandria was one of three cities that participated in hosting the African Cup of Nations in January 2006, which Egypt won.",
"Sea sports such as surfing, jet-skiing and water polo are practiced on a lower scale.",
"The Skateboarding culture in Egypt started in this city.",
"The city is also home to the Alexandria Sporting Club, which is especially known for its basketball team, which traditionally provides the country's national team with key players.",
"The city hosted the AfroBasket, the continent's most prestigious basketball tournament, on four occasions (1970, 1975, 1983, 2003).Alexandria has four stadiums:*Alexandria Stadium*Borg El Arab Stadium*El Krom Stadium*Harras El Hodoud StadiumOther less popular sports like tennis and squash are usually played in private social and sports clubs, like:*Alexandria Sporting Club – in \"Sporting\"*Smouha Sporting Club – in \"Smouha\"*Al Ittihad Alexandria Club*Olympic Club*Haras El Hodoud SC Club*Koroum Club*Lagoon Resort Courts*Alexandria Country clubAlexandria is also known as the yearly starting point of Cross Egypt Challenge and a huge celebration is conducted the night before the rally starts after all the international participants arrive to the city.",
"Cross Egypt Challenge is an international cross-country motorcycle and scooter rally conducted throughout the most difficult tracks and roads of Egypt."
],
[
"Twin towns and sister cities",
"The Italian consulate in Saad Zaghloul SquareAlexandria is twinned with:*Almaty, Kazakhstan*Baltimore, United States*Bratislava, Slovakia*Catania, Italy*Cleveland, United States*Constanța, Romania*Durban, South Africa*Incheon, South Korea*Kazanlak, Bulgaria*Limassol, Cyprus*Novi Sad, Serbia*Odesa, Ukraine*Paphos, Cyprus*Port Louis, Mauritius*Saint Petersburg, Russia*Shanghai, China*Thessaloniki, Greece"
],
[
"See also",
"*Baucalis*History of the Jews in Alexandria*Cultural tourism in Egypt*List of cities and towns in Egypt*List of cities founded by Alexander the Great*Of Alexandria*Alexandria on the Indus*Alexandrian Kings"
],
[
"Notes"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Further reading",
"*A. Bernand, ''Alexandrie la Grande'' (1966)*A. Bernard, E. Bernand, J. Yoyotte, F. Goddio, et al., ''Alexandria, the submerged royal quarters'', Periplus Publishing Ltd., London 1998, *A. J. Butler, ''The Arab Conquest of Egypt'' (2nd.",
"ed., 1978)* *P.-A.",
"Claudel, ''Alexandrie.",
"Histoire d'un mythe'' (2011)*A.",
"De Cosson, ''Mareotis'' (1935)*J.-Y.",
"Empereur, ''Alexandria Rediscovered'' (1998)*E. M. Forster, ''Alexandria A History and a Guide'' (1922) (reprint ed.",
"M. Allott, 2004)*P. M. Fraser, ''Ptolemaic Alexandria'' (1972)*Franck Goddio, David Fabre (eds), ''Egypt's Sunken Treasures'', Prestel Vlg München, 2008 (2nd edition), Exhibition Catalogue, *M. Haag, ''Alexandria: City of Memory'' (2004) 20th-century social and literary history*M. Haag, ''Vintage Alexandria: Photographs of the City 1860–1960'' (2008)*M. Haag, ''Alexandria Illustrated''*R. Ilbert, I. Yannakakis, ''Alexandrie 1860–1960'' (1992)*R. Ilbert, ''Alexandrie entre deux mondes'' (1988)*Judith McKenzie et al., ''The Architecture of Alexandria and Egypt, 300 B.C.–A.D.",
"700.''",
"(Pelican History of Art, Yale University Press, 2007)*Philip Mansel, ''Levant: Splendour and Catastrophe on the Mediterranean'', London, John Murray, 11 November 2010, hardback, 480 pages, , New Haven, Yale University Press, 24 May 2011, hardback, 470 pages, *Don Nardo, ''A Travel Guide to Ancient Alexandria'', Lucent Books.",
"(2003)*D. Robinson, A. Wilson (eds), ''Alexandria and the North-Western Delta'', Oxford 2010, Oxford Centre for Maritime Archaeology, *V. W. Von Hagen, ''The Roads that Led to Rome'' (1967)"
],
[
"External links",
"*** Details on the archaïc port with a pdf of Gaston Jondet's report, 1916* Map of Alexandria, ca.1930, Eran Laor Cartographic Collection, The National Library of Israel.",
"* Photos of Alexandria at the American Center of Research"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Alexandria, Indiana"
],
[
"Introduction",
"'''Alexandria''' is a city in Monroe Township, Madison County, Indiana, United States.",
"It is about northeast of Indianapolis.",
"According to the 2020 census, its population was 5,149, nearly unchanged from 2010."
],
[
"History",
"Historical marker about Indiana's First Interurban Railway line.Alexandria was platted in 1836, when it was certain that the Indiana Central Canal would be extended to that point.",
"It was incorporated as a town in 1898.In 1898, Indiana's first Interurban railway line began operating between Alexandria and Anderson."
],
[
"Geography",
"Alexandria is located in northern Madison County.",
"Indiana State Road 9 passes through the east side of the city, leading south to Anderson, the county seat, and north to Marion.",
"State Road 28 crosses the northern tip of Alexandria, leading west to Elwood and east to Albany.According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Alexandria has a total area of , all land.",
"Pipe Creek crosses the city south of its center, flowing southwest to join the White River at Perkinsville."
],
[
"Demographics",
"Alexandria is part of the Indianapolis–Carmel–Anderson metropolitan statistical area.===2010 census===As of the census of 2010, there were 5,145 people, 2,113 households, and 1,362 families living in the city.",
"The population density was .",
"There were 2,507 housing units at an average density of .",
"The racial makeup of the city was 97.4% White, 0.3% African American, 0.1% Native American, 0.2% Asian, 0.8% from other races, and 1.1% from two or more races.",
"Hispanic or Latino people of any race were 1.7% of the population.Of the 2,113 households 33.6% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 42.2% were married couples living together, 15.7% had a female householder with no husband present, 6.6% had a male householder with no wife present, and 35.5% were non-families.",
"30.1% of households were one person and 12.8% were one person aged 65 or older.",
"The average household size was 2.41 and the average family size was 2.95.The median age was 38.2 years.",
"25.6% of residents were under the age of 18; 8.8% were between the ages of 18 and 24; 24.8% were from 25 to 44; 25.1% were from 45 to 64; and 15.6% were 65 or older.",
"The gender makeup of the city was 47.8% male and 52.2% female.===2000 census===As of the census of 2000, there were 6,260 people, 2,481 households, and 1,654 families living in the city.",
"The population density was .",
"There were 2,704 housing units at an average density of .",
"The racial makeup of the city was 98.10% White, 0.46% Black or African American, 0.08% Native American, 0.11% Asian, 0.02% Pacific Islander, 0.43% from other races, and 0.80% from two or more races.",
"0.99% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.Of the 2,481 households 33.9% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 49.0% were married couples living together, 12.7% had a female householder with no husband present, and 33.3% were non-families.",
"28.9% of households were one person and 13.1% were one person aged 65 or older.",
"The average household size was 2.48 and the average family size was 3.04.The age distribution was 27.8% under the age of 18, 8.9% from 18 to 24, 28.0% from 25 to 44, 19.5% from 45 to 64, and 15.9% 65 or older.",
"The median age was 35 years.",
"For every 100 females, there were 91.4 males.",
"For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 87.4 males.The median household income was $35,359 and the median family income was $42,731.Males had a median income of $30,529 versus $23,384 for females.",
"The per capita income for the city was $15,578.About 4.2% of families and 7.0% of the population were below the poverty line, including 4.1% of those under age 18 and 15.0% of those age 65 or over."
],
[
"Government",
"The city council consists of seven members.",
"Five members are elected from individual districts, and two are elected at large.",
"The city is governed by a \"strong\" mayor system that appoints two council members and/or city residents to serve at the mayor's pleasure on the board of public works and safety.",
"The chief financial officer is the clerk-treasurer.",
"The clerk-treasurer and mayor are full-time elected officials."
],
[
"Transportation",
"===Airport===Alexandria Airport is a public use airport located southeast of the central business district of Alexandria."
],
[
"Education",
"Alexandria Community School Corporation operates the public schools.The town has a lending library, the Alexandria-Monroe Public Library."
],
[
"Notable people",
"*Joey Feek, country singer*Bill Gaither, gospel singer/songwriter*Danny Gaither, gospel singer*Gloria Gaither, author/lyricist, gospel singer*Robert L. Rock, politician"
],
[
"Gallery",
"File:Clock in Alexandria, Indiana.jpg|Clock in Alexandria, IndianaFile:Fountain in park in Alexandria.jpg|Fountain in park in AlexandriaFile:The Commons Theatre in Alexandria Indiana.jpg|The Commons Theatre in Alexandria IndianaFile:Harrison Street, Alexandria, Indiana (74009).jpg|Harrison Street in Alexandria, circa 1930-1945File:Beulah Park Swimming Pool, Alexandria, Indiana (74010).jpg|Beulah Park Swimming Pool in Alexandria, circa 1930-1945File:Welcome to Alexandria.jpg|Welcome to Alexandria"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"** Alexandria Monroe Chamber of Commerce"
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Alexandria, Louisiana"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Alexandria Welcome Sign on Louisiana Highway 28 West.Rotary International Clock (1916), with Alexandria City Hall (constructed 1963) in the background'''Alexandria''' is the ninth-largest city in the state of Louisiana and is the parish seat of Rapides Parish, Louisiana, United States.",
"It lies on the south bank of the Red River in almost the exact geographic center of the state.",
"It is the principal city of the Alexandria metropolitan area (population 153,922) which encompasses all of Rapides and Grant parishes.",
"Its neighboring city is Pineville.",
"In 2010, the population was 47,723, an increase of 3 percent from the 2000 census."
],
[
"History",
"Aerial view, 1945Located along the Red River, the city of Alexandria was originally home to a community which supported activities of the adjacent French trader outpost of ''Post du Rapides''.",
"The area developed as an assemblage of traders, Caddo people, and merchants in the agricultural lands bordering the mostly unsettled areas to the north and providing a link from the south to the El Camino Real and then larger settlement of Natchitoches, the oldest permanent settlement in the Louisiana Purchase.Alexander Fulton, a businessman from Washington County, near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, received a land grant from Spain in 1762, and the first organized settlement was made at some point in the 1780s.",
"In 1805, Fulton and business partner Thomas Harris Maddox laid out the town plan and named the town in Fulton's honor.",
"The earliest deed that survives for an Alexandria resident is from June 24, 1801, when a William Cochren, who identifies himself as \"Slave master of the Southern Americas\", sold a tract of land across the Red River to a William Murrey.That same year, Fulton was appointed coroner in Rapides Parish by territorial Governor William C.C.",
"Claiborne.",
"Alexandria was incorporated as a town in 1818 and received a city charter in 1832.In 1942, Alexandria was the site of the Lee Street Riot, an incident of racial violence that occurred between mostly civilians and military police.",
"Witnesses state that as many as 20 people may have been killed, however the official report indicates that 3 soldiers were critically injured, and does not mention any deaths."
],
[
"Geography and climate",
"Alexandria is located at and has an elevation of .According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of , of which 26.4 square miles (68.4 km2) is land and 0.6 square mile (1.5 km2) (2.15%) is water.Trees are reflected in Bayou Rapides east of MacArthur Drive in AlexandriaAlexandria gas station awning damaged by Hurricane RitaAlexandria is on a level plain in the center of the Louisiana Longleaf Pine forests, in which pine is interspersed with various hardwoods.",
"A number of small bayous, such as Bayou Rapides, Bayou Robert, and Hynson Bayou, meander throughout the city.",
"In the immediate vicinity of the city, cotton, sugar, alfalfa, and garden vegetables are cultivated.The climate is humid subtropical with some continental influence in the winter.",
"Summers are consistently hot and humid, whereas winters are mild, with occasional cold snaps.",
"On average, the first freeze occurs in early to mid November and the last freeze occurs in early to mid March.",
"The area receives plentiful rainfall year-round, with thunderstorms possible throughout the year.",
"Some storms can be severe, especially during the spring months.",
"According to 'Cities Ranked and Rated' (Bert Sperling and Peter Sander), Alexandria reports an average of 69 days per year with thunder reported, which is nearly double the national average.",
"Snowfall is rare, with measurable snow having occurred 27 times since 1895.The heaviest snowfall event took place February 12–13, 1960, when 9.1\" of snow fell.Tropical storms and hurricanes affect Alexandria from time to time, but rarely cause severe damage, unlike areas closer to the coast.",
"In September 2005, Hurricane Rita moved inland and affected Alexandria and surrounding areas, causing widespread power outages and damaging the roofs of some structures.",
"The most recent hurricane, Gustav in 2008, caused widespread flooding, knocked over trees and power lines leading to power outages, and damaged structures.",
"Some low-lying Alexandria neighborhoods had substantial flooding from Gustav, leaving several feet of water in houses."
],
[
"Demographics",
"===2020 census===+Alexandria racial composition Race Number Percentage Black or African American (non-Hispanic) 24,745 54.65% White (non-Hispanic) 16,537 36.53% Other/Mixed 1,571 3.47% Hispanic or Latino 1,275 2.82% Asian 977 2.16% Native American 156 0.34% Pacific Islander 14 0.03%As of the 2020 United States census, there were 45,275 people, 17,920 households, and 10,933 families residing in the city.===2010 census===As of the census of 2010, there were 47,723 people, 17,816 households, and 11,722 families residing in the city.",
"The population density was 1,754.6/sq mi (677.5/km2).",
"There were 19,806 housing units at an average density of .",
"The racial makeup of the city was 38.32% White, 57.25% Black, 1.25% Native American, 1.85% Asian, 0.14% Pacific Islander, 1.03% from other races, and 1.09% from two or more races.",
"6.98% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.There were 17,816 households, out of which 31.9% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 38.5% were married couples living together, 23.2% had a female householder with no husband present, and 34.2% were non-families.",
"30.4% of all households were made up of individuals, and 12.1% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older.",
"The average household size was 2.50 and the average family size was 3.13.In the city, the population was spread out, with 28.1% under the age of 18, 9.2% from 18 to 24, 26.2% from 25 to 44, 21.4% from 45 to 64, and 15.1% who were 65 years of age or older.",
"The median age was 36 years.",
"For every 100 females, there were 83.5 males.",
"For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 77.7 males.The median income for a household in the city was $26,097, and the median income for a family was $31,978.Males had a median income of $29,456 versus $20,154 for females.",
"The per capita income for the city was $16,242.About 23.2% of families and 27.4% of the population were below the poverty line, including 37.7% of those under age 18 and 18.5% of those age 65 or over."
],
[
"Religion",
"St. Francis Xavier Cathedral in downtown AlexandriaSanctuary of Pentecostal Church in AlexandriaBaptist Church on Jackson Street in downtown AlexandriaLike many other southern cities, the largest single church denomination in the Alexandria area is Southern Baptist.",
"Large congregations include the Emmanuel Baptist Church and Calvary Baptist Church.",
"Alexandria is the headquarters of the Louisiana Baptist Convention.",
"Alexandria also has a significant number of Methodists, Presbyterians, Episcopalians, and Pentecostals.A significant Catholic population is also present, a result of the large Catholic Acadian French population which resides in and around Alexandria, many from neighboring Avoyelles Parish.",
"Alexandria is the headquarters for the Diocese of Alexandria.Alexandria has a small, though active Jewish community which dates back to the mid-19th century.",
"Jews have held positions in local government, civic organizations, education, and medicine.",
"At one time, many large businesses in the downtown were Jewish-owned.",
"The Jewish community in Alexandria maintains two synagogues, which are approximately two blocks apart: Congregation Gemiluth Chassodim (Reform) and B'nai Israel Traditional Synagogue (Conservative)."
],
[
"Annual cultural events and festivals",
"===Mardi Gras===Mardi Gras float in the AMGA Krewes Parade in Alexandria.Though Alexandria is north of the Cajun cultural area, the city recognizes Mardi Gras as an official holiday.",
"The annual Mardi Gras Krewes Parade – occurring on the Sunday before Mardi Gras – on Texas Avenue is a major cultural festivity in the area.",
"It is featured as a family-oriented event, and parade goers can enjoy over 20 New Orleans style floats, high school and college marching bands, as well as appearances by local celebrities.",
"In addition to the main Sunday parade, the College Cheerleaders & Classic Cars Parade, which was established in 2008, takes place downtown on the Friday before Mardi Gras, the Children's Parade takes place downtown on the Saturday before Mardi Gras, and the Krewe of Provine Parade is held on Fat Tuesday, processing along Coliseum Boulevard.",
"All the events are organized by the Alexandria Mardi Gras Association (AMGA).",
"The Krewe Parade can attract from 120,000 to 150,000; the Children's parade, up to 40,000 to 50,000, and the College Cheerleaders & Classic Cars, about 5,000 to 15,000 people.===Alex River Fête===Booth venues at the annual Alex River Fête in downtown Alexandria.An annual three-day festival is held in downtown Alexandria around late April and early May.",
"The festival, established in 2013, was created around a former successful stand-alone event, the Louisiana Dragon Boat Races.",
"It features the race and other former stand-alone events such as Dinner on the Bricks and the ArtWalk (now Art Fête) along with various booth venues, food, and live music, as well as the Kids Fête and Classic Car Fête.===Alex Winter Fête===Ice rink at the annual Alex Winter Fête in downtown Alexandria.An annual three day festival held in downtown Alexandria around early December.",
"Launched in 2015, the festival first year drew about double the anticipated crowd of 15,000.The festival, like the Alex River Fête, feature booth venues, food, and live music but also features an ice rink.",
"In January 2017, the Alex Winter Fête was voted Festival of the Year by the Louisiana Travel Promotion Association.===Former events=======Cenlabration====Begun in the late 1980s, Cenlabrationwas one of the largest festivals in Central Louisiana (Cenla).",
"The name comes from Central Louisiana (\"LA\") Celebration, and reflects local culture and heritage, as well as serving as a means of celebrating Labor Day as the end of summer.As many as three stages support a particular type of music, including Cajun and zydeco, blues and jazz, and Country music.",
"In addition there are arts and crafts booths for local artists to sell their wares.",
"In the Children's Village, children can participate in arts and crafts, listen to storytellers, play games with clowns, or watch a play.",
"The festival has plenty of carnival rides available as well.",
"Cenlabration ends with a large fireworks display.The festival ran for 20 years until cancellation due to finances.",
"The city ended its annual support of $40,000 because of budget constraints.====RiverFest====In 2002, representatives of local government, businesses, organizations, and community formed the nonprofit organization River Cities Cultural Alliance, Inc. to promote tourism and the arts through a celebration of Central Louisiana's diverse cultural heritage.",
"The nonprofit served to organize and put on RiverFest: Heritage and Arts on the Red.",
"More than ten thousand festival-goers attending the event.RiverFest was held in downtown Alexandria and on the Alexandria and Pineville levees.",
"The festival features the work of visual artists from across the South, food booths exemplifying southern cuisine, a variety of children's activities, three outdoor stages with a wide range of music, dance, and theatrical performances, and a literary component with readings and panel discussions by Louisiana authors and scholars.RiverFest was canceled in 2007.====Que'in on the Red====An annual barbecue festival launched in 2006, the festival was held on the levee near downtown Alexandria and was well known for its big-name entertainment.",
"The event was cancelled in 2012 due to its high cost and the city deciding against continued support of $100,000 annually."
],
[
"Museums",
"The Alexandria Museum of Art is located downtown along the Red River.An historic former Rapides Bank and Trust Company building houses part of the Alexandria Museum of Art to the left in photo.Alexandria Daily Town Talk'' buildingArna Bontemps African American Museum in downtown AlexandriaThe Alexandria Museum of Art was founded in 1977 and occupies an historic Rapides Bank Building on the banks of the Red River.",
"The building was built c. 1898 and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.",
"The museum opened to the public in March 1998.In 1998, the Alexandria Museum of Art expanded and constructed its grand foyer and offices as an annex to the Rapides Bank Building.",
"In 1999, the Alexandria Museum of Art was honored as an Outstanding Arts Organization in the Louisiana Governor's Arts Awards.",
"In 2007, the Alexandria Museum of Art entered into a collaborative endeavor agreement with Louisiana State University of Alexandria (LSUA).",
"The Alexandria Museum of Art now also serves as a downtown campus for LSUA classes, and is host to multidisciplinary community events, including concerts and recitals, lectures, yoga classes, Second Saturday Markets, and Museum Afterhours.The Louisiana History Museum is located downtown on the bottom floor of the former library.",
"A small facility, it showcases the history of all Louisiana, with emphasis on the central portion of the state, Rapides Parish, and Alexandria.",
"Major exhibit areas concern Native Americans, Louisiana geography, politics, health care, farming, and the impact of war.The T.R.E.E.",
"House Children's Museum and Arna Bontemps African American Museum are located within the Cultural Arts District.The Kent Plantation House in Alexandria, completed by 1800, was located on a Spanish land grant.",
"It is the oldest standing structure in Central Louisiana, one of only two buildings in the city to survive the burning of 1864 by Union troops fleeing after having been defeated at the Battle of Mansfield in DeSoto Parish.",
"The house has been moved from its original location but is still located on part of the first land grant.",
"It is open for tours daily except Sundays at 9, 10, and 11 a.m. and 1, 2, and 3 p.m.",
"The tour is led by costumed docents and includes the house furnished in period pieces, some belonging to the original family, and all nine outbuildings, including an 1840-50s sugar mill, blacksmith shop, barn, two slave cabins, open-hearth kitchen, and milk house."
],
[
"Performing arts",
"The performing arts are centered in the Alexandria Cultural Arts District in the downtown.",
"Located within a few blocks of each other are three performance venues: Coughlin-Saunders Performing Arts Center, the Hearn Stage, and the Riverfront Amphitheater.The Coughlin-Saunders Performing Arts Center is the home of the Rapides Symphony Orchestra, which has performed in Alexandria since 1968.The center hosts the Performing Arts Series of the Arts Council of Central Louisiana, the Red River Chorale (an auditioned community chorus), and presentations of numerous local theater groups.",
"The land for the center was donated by ''The Alexandria Town Talk'' newspaper, owned by the Gannett Company of McLean, Virginia.Businesswoman Jacqueline Seagall Caplan (1935–2016) was the president of the Arts Council of Central Louisiana and the chairman of the group's executive committee when the Coughlin-Saunders Performing Arts Center opened in 2004.She predicted that Coughlin-Saunders would in time \"provide a place people can point to and say it's theirs.",
"... Until now, we've never had a performing arts center where every type of performing art can come.",
"\"The Hearn Stage is a black box theater for smaller productions.",
"The Arts Council provides day-to-day management of both the Coughlin-Saunders Center and the Hearn Stage.The Riverfront Amphitheater hosts each April a \"Jazz on the River\" music festival, sponsored by the Arna Bontemps African American Museum.",
"The Rapides Symphony holds an annual fall Pops concert in the amphitheater.",
"In recent years, the amphitheater has welcomed musical guests in conjunction with the springtime Dragonboat Races sponsored by the Alexandria Museum of Art.The spring and fall seasons also feature Downtown Rocks, a free outdoor concert series in nearby Fulton Park."
],
[
"Sports",
"Rapides Parish Coliseum on Louisiana Highway 28Entrance to the former Bringhurst Field (1933–2013)Alexandria was home to the Alexandria Aces, a summer college league baseball team.",
"The Aces were champions in various leagues in 1997, 1998, 2006, and 2007.They played their home games at Bringhurst Field.",
"Due to lack of repairs on the stadium, combined with the aging of it caused interest in the team to drop, with much of the wooden stands being barricaded.",
"The remaining games of the 2013 season were canceled in mid-July because of low attendance, which averaged fewer than two hundred per game.",
"The stadium's office and clubhouse were destroyed by a fire in 2014 and were subsequently torn down.",
"In 2017, it was decided that the stadium would become a green space, open to the public and welcome news to those concerned about the building's future.",
"The scoreboard and outfield walls have been removed, but most of the stadium is still intact.",
"In 1974, a Little League team from Alexandria won the Louisiana state championship.Alexandria had a minor league ice hockey team, the Alexandria Warthogs.",
"They played their home games at the Rapides Parish Coliseum.A professional indoor football team, the Louisiana Rangers, played their home games at the Rapides Parish Coliseum.",
"They played in the Central District of the Southern American Football League, and the Southern Conference of the National Indoor Football League (NIFL).",
"The team was owned by a Lafayette business group before moving in 2003 to Beaumont, Texas.Soccer has also become a growing interest in the area.",
"The Crossroads Soccer Association has had multiple youth teams achieve success in various travel soccer leagues.",
"One of the earliest teams to do so was the then- U-14 Crossroads Pride soccer team, winning the 2012 Louisiana Soccer Association State Cup.Also run by Crossroads is Alexandria's first amateur soccer team, Central Louisiana FC (formerly called Pool Boys FC and Alexandria Pool Boys FC).",
"They are a founding member of the Gulf Coast Premier League, playing their games at Johnny Downs Sports Complex and Louisiana Christian University's Wildcat Stadium in neighboring Pineville.",
"Central Louisiana FC runs both men's and women's amateur teams, as well as a developmental team that competes in the GCL2, the Gulf Coast Premier League's second division.Nearby is Bringhurst Golf Course, popularly known as \"the nation's oldest par-three course.\"",
"A full-scale renovation was completed in mid-2010.In addition to Bringhurst, named for the late industrialist R.W.",
"Bringhurst, Alexandria is home to four other golf courses: Oak Wing, The Links on the Bayou, at LSUA, and Alexandria Golf and Country Club.Alexandria was also home to the Cenla Derby Dames, a roller derby team that operates under the Women's Flat Track Derby Association.",
"The Dames played their home games at the Rapides Parish Coliseum."
],
[
"Notable people",
"* Anna Margaret – singer, actress* Emmanuel Arceneaux – Canadian football player* Jay Aldrich – Major League Baseball player* John Ardoin – music critic for ''The Dallas Morning News''* Louis Berry – first African-American to practice law in Alexandria; civil rights advocate* Chris Boniol - American football player* Arna Bontemps – African American poet and member of Harlem Renaissance* Thomas \"Bud\" Brady – state representative (1976-1988) from La Salle Parish; thereafter a real estate appraiser in Alexandria* Bubby Brister – Quarterback Pittsburgh Steelers, Philadelphia Eagles, New York Jets, Denver Broncos, and Minnesota Vikings* Markel Brown – guard in the Israeli Basketball Premier League* Arthur H. Butler – Marine Corps Major General and Navy Cross recipient* D. J. Chark - American football player* Carl B.",
"Close – state representative (1944-1947) and mayor of Alexandria (1947-1953)* Luther F. Cole – associate justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court from 1986 to 1992, former state representative from East Baton Rouge Parish; born in Alexandria* Clifford Ann Creed – golfer; winner of eleven LPGA Tour events* Israel \"Bo\" Curtis – African-American Democrat member of the Louisiana House of Representatives from District 26 from 1992 to 2008* Cleveland Dear – U.S. representative from 1933 to 1937, district attorney, and state district court judge* Demar Dotson - American football player * C. H. \"Sammy\" Downs – attorney and politician* James R. Eubank – Alexandria lawyer; member of the Louisiana House of Representatives for Rapides Parish in 1952; died in office at the age of thirty-seven* Steve Gainer – Cinematographer and Director* H. N. Goff – state representative from Rapides Parish, 1952–1956; insurance agent in Alexandria* Layon Gray – Playwright and director of the Off-Broadway hit play Black Angels Over Tuskegee.",
"The story of the Tuskegee Airmen.",
"* Lawrence Preston Joseph Graves – Roman Catholic bishop of Alexandria from 1973 to 1982* Charles Pasquale Greco – Roman Catholic bishop of Alexandria from 1946 to 1973* Jeff Hall – first African-American mayor of Alexandria, 2018-2022; state representative for District 26 in Rapides Parish, 2015-2018* Eric Johanson – blues rock musician* Josh Johnson – comedian.",
"* Catherine D. Kimball – former Chief Justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court* Maxie Lambright – football coach for Louisiana Tech University, 1967–1978; coached at Bolton High School in Alexandria, 1955 to 1958* D.L.",
"Lang - Poet Laureate of Vallejo, California* John Leglue - NFL player* F.A.",
"Little, Jr. – retired judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana* George S. Long – former U.S. representative* Gillis William Long – former U.S. representative* Jay Luneau – lawyer and state senator, effective January 2016 * Gerald Archie Mangun – late pastor of the Pentecostal Church, the largest congregation in Alexandria* Rod Masterson – actor* Terry Alan \"Tet\" Mathews – former Major League Pitcher, Born 1964 died 2012.Pitched for Texas Rangers, Florida Marlins, Baltimore Orioles, and Kansas City Royals* Warren Morris – Major League Baseball player* Craig Nall – National Football League player* J. Tinsley Oden – mathematician* Jewel Prestage – first African-American woman to earn a Ph.D. in political science, former Dean of the School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs at Southern University.",
"* Juan Pierre – Major League Baseball player* Ed Rand – state representative from 1960 to 1964* Joe Ray – contemporary visual artist* Joseph E. Ransdell – U.S.",
"Senator from Louisiana, 1913-1931 * Slater Rhea – Singer and TV personality on national TV in China.",
"* Jalen Richard - NFL player* Sterling Ridge – Arizona legislator* Alvin Benjamin Rubin – federal judge, 1966-1991* Bill Schroll – National Football League player* Gustav Anton von Seckendorff – author, actor and declaimer* William Tecumseh Sherman – first superintendent; Louisiana State Seminary of Learning & Military Academy (later to become LSU)* Russ Springer – Major League Baseball player for 18 years* Grove Stafford, Sr. – Alexandria lawyer and state senator from 1940 to 1948* Leroy Augustus Stafford – planter and Confederate brigadier general mortally wounded in the Battle of the Wilderness in 1864* Lloyd George Teekell – state representative from 1953 to 1960 and 9th Judicial District Court judge from 1979 to 1990* Jeff R. Thompson – former state representative for Bossier Parish; judge of the 26th Judicial District Court since 2015; born in Alexandria in 1965* Cullen Washington Jr. – contemporary abstract painter.",
"* Muse Watson – actor* James Madison Wells – 19th century governor of Louisiana* Rebecca Wells – author, actor, and playwright, best known for Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood* Joanne Lyles White – humanitarian, philanthropist; founder and first president of the Louisiana Speech League* J. Robert Wooley – Louisiana insurance commissioner from 2000 to 2006, was reared in Alexandria, where his father was a principal at the Louisiana Special Education Center there."
],
[
"Media",
"===Newspapers===The Alexandria Town Talk'' offices are located downtown on Third Street.Established March 17, 1883, '''''The Alexandria Town Talk''''' is a daily newspaper for Alexandria-Pineville and the thirteen parishes which comprise central Louisiana.",
"The newspaper was owned by the family of the late Jane Wilson Smith and Joe D. Smith, Jr., until March 1996, when it was sold to Central Newspapers.",
"In August 2000, the Gannett Company acquired the Central Newspapers properties, including ''The Town Talk''.",
"The name of the paper on its inaugural issue was the ''Alexandria Daily Town Talk''.",
"Although it has since been shorted to the current ''The Town Talk'', it is still frequently referred to by long-time residents as the ''Daily Town Talk''.===Television===Alexandria is served by local television stations KALB-TV (NBC / CBS), WNTZ (Fox), KLAX-TV (ABC), KLPA (PBS/LPB), and KBCA (The CW).",
"KALB is the oldest television station in central Louisiana.=== Radio ==="
],
[
"Parks and outdoor attractions",
"Greenery at Alexandria Zoo===Alexandria Zoological Park===The Alexandria Zoological Park is a zoo first opened to the public in 1926.Owned by the City of Alexandria and operated by the Division of Public Works, it is home to about 500 animals and includes an award-winning Louisiana Habitat exhibit.",
"The zoo is accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) and takes part in about 20 Species Survival Plans (SSP) as part of its conservation efforts.=== Cotile Lake Recreation Area ===Cotile Lake is a man-made impoundment located in the uplands approximately west-northwest of Alexandria, Louisiana.",
"The lake is approximately in size and was completed in October 1965.The Louisiana Wild Life and Fisheries Commission stocked this impoundment with the proper species and number of game fish in 1965–66 shortly after its completion date.",
"The recreational facilities include a large area cleared and zoned for swimming with complete bath house facilities nearby.",
"There is a water skiing area that is cleared and snagged for safety of the skiers.",
"The picnic and camping areas are modern and complete.",
"There is also space available for campers.=== Indian Creek Lake and Recreation Area ===Encompasses a lake, of developed recreation facilities and a primitive camping area all within the Alexander State Forest.",
"The lake, located in central Louisiana, was constructed as a joint venture of the Louisiana Forestry Commission, the Rapides Parish Police Jury, and the Lower West Red River Soil and Water Conservation District as a reservoir for agricultural irrigation in times of need and for recreation purposes.The recreation area camping area contains 109 campsites with conventional full utility hookups, 3 beaches for swimming, bath houses, a boat launch, and 75 picnic sites.",
"A covered pavilion within the developed area provides for groups up to 100 people.",
"The recreation area is open year-round and operates on user fees.=== Kisatchie National Forest ===Alexandria sits in the middle of the Kisatchie National Forest.",
"Ranger districts are north, northwest, west and southwest of the city.",
"An abundance of large timberlands and forest nurseries, as well as lake and recreation areas, are within a short driving distance."
],
[
"Other points of interest",
"Entrance sign to Alexandria Memorial GardensThe Hotel Bentley (2014 photo).",
"*Alexandria Memorial Gardens – large cemetery on U.S. Highway 165 south.",
"Other cemeteries are also available in Pineville.",
"*Alexandria Levee Park – a park located downtown, adjacent to the Red River, that serves as the grounds for some local festivals.",
"It contains an amphitheatre that is used for concerts.",
"*Alexandria Mall – the local shopping mall located on Masonic Drive, established 1973*Alexandria Riverfront Center – convention center located downtown*Bringhurst Field – home of the Alexandria Aces*Bringhurst Park – contains the Alexandria Zoo, Bringhurst Field, a playground, a golf course and tennis courts*Hotel Bentley – historic hotel built in 1908*Inglewood Plantation – plantation located south of Alexandria*Kent Plantation House – French colonial plantation house*Masonic Home – a now defunct orphanage in south Alexandria completed in 1924.",
"*Rapides Parish Coliseum – a multi-purpose arena used for sporting events, conventions and other events"
],
[
"Military",
"=== Louisiana National Guard ===Alexandria is home to both Headquarters and Company B of the 199th Brigade Support Battalion (BSB).",
"The 199th BSB is the logistical component of the 256th Infantry Brigade that served in Operation Iraqi Freedom from October 2004 until September 2005.The 199th BSB provides supply and transportation (Company A), medical (Company C) and maintenance (Company B) support and services that keep the 256th Brigade operational.",
"The battalion also has units located in Jonesboro, Winnfield, Colfax, and St. Martinville, Louisiana.=== England Air Force Base ===Alexandria served as the home of England Air Force Base from its origins as an emergency airstrip for Esler Regional Airport until its closure.",
"England AFB was officially closed on December 15, 1992, pursuant to the Defense Base Closure and Realignment Act (Public Law 101–510) and recommendations of the Defense Secretary's Commission on Base Realignment and Closure.",
"The base now serves as Alexandria International Airport (see below)."
],
[
"Economy",
"Tallest building in Alexandria across Third Street from City Hall.According to Census ACS 1-year survey for 2016, the per capita income of Alexandria was $23,962.This is $1,702 lower than the Louisiana average for per capita income in the same period.",
"That figure is at $31,128 nationally.",
"The Alexandria workforce consists of about 55,000 residents.",
"Union Tank Car Company has recently located a plant northwest of Alexandria near the airport creating hundreds of jobs.",
"Expansions at the Procter & Gamble plant and the construction of a PlastiPak plant in nearby Pineville have also created a number of new jobs for the area.",
"Sundrop Fuels Inc., a Colorado-based biofuels start-up, plans to construct an over 1,200 acre plant just southwest of Alexandria in Rapides Station area.",
"The facility will serve as the headquarters for the company because aside from the plant itself, Sundrop has also bought Cowboy Town, an abandon entertainment venue that sits inside the surrounding land that was purchased, to house their offices and their maintenance and fabrication operations.In 2007, Inc. Magazine rated Alexandria as the 77th best place in which to conduct business out of the 393 U.S. cities ranked, a significant increase from its ranking as No.",
"276 in 2006.Among other Louisiana cities, Alexandria ranked second, following only Baton Rouge, which ranked 59th nationally.===Healthcare===The modern Rapides Regional Medical Center began in 1903 as \"Alexandria Sanitarium\".Pineville, Louisiana.Alexandria is home to two major hospitals: Rapides Regional Medical Center, a former Baptist hospital is located downtown.",
"Christus St. Frances Cabrini Hospital was opened in 1950 and is located at the corner of Masonic Drive and Texas Avenue.",
"Both hospitals have undergone expansion.Additionally, located just across the Red River in Pineville, the Veteran's Affairs Medical Center at Alexandria serves central Louisiana and surrounding areas.Meanwhile, in 2013, the state allocated $15 million to move the medical services long provided at no or minimal charge at the Huey P. Long Medical Center in Pineville to the former hospital at England Park at the site of the closed England Air Force Base.===Port of Alexandria===In the early 19th century, the Port of Alexandria brought goods to the area and shipped cotton and other local products to the rest of the country.",
"A ferry connected the cities of Alexandria and Pineville until a bridge was built across the Red in 1900.Today, Port facilities include: a 40-ton crane for off-loading, a warehouse, 13,600-ton bulk fertilizer warehouse, a 3,400-ton bulk fertilizer dome structure and a 5,000-ton dome which was added in January 2005.The petroleum off-loading facility includes two tanks, one tank capable of handling two barges and five truck off-loading simultaneously.",
"There is also a general cargo dock with access to rail and a hopper barge unloading dock with conveyor system.Today's modern facilities and the Port's central location with its connection to the Mississippi River provide excellent opportunities for importers and exporters.===Alexandria International Airport===New terminal at AEXAlexandria International Airport (AEX) is a regional airport, providing flights to Atlanta, Dallas/Ft.",
"Worth, and Houston.",
"In 2006 a new-state-of-the-art passenger terminal was dedicated.",
"Alexandria is served by American and Delta.====Current military use====Formerly known as England AFB until 1992, Alexandria International Airport additionally has numerous international charter airlines using the airport in the transport of military personnel attached to the United States Army base at Fort Johnson .",
"A new military personnel terminal opened in 2007."
],
[
"Government and politics",
"=== Local government ======= History ====Following the Civil War, all public records in Alexandria had been destroyed.",
"On September 29, 1868, the city was granted a new charter with a government consisting of a Mayor, Treasurer, and Justice of the Peace.",
"Nine aldermen represented the four wards of the city – two from each ward and one elected at-large.In 1912, the Lawrason Act established Alexandria municipal government in a strong mayor format, where the mayor was also the Commissioner of Public Health and Safety (Police, Fire, Sanitation).",
"There were separate Commissioners of Streets and Parks and Finance and Utilities, elected citywide.",
"Those positions were discontinued in 1977.==== Today ====Alexandria has a mayoral-council system of government.",
"The Mayor serves as the executive branch of the local government.",
"The City Council serves as the legislative branch.",
"The five districts of the city are represented on the council; in addition there are two council members elected to serve as at-large representatives of the city.The Alexandria Court has a limited jurisdiction, consisting of the citizens of Wards 1, 2 and 8 in Rapides Parish.",
"Within those boundaries the court has the power to hear and decide both criminal and civil cases, rule in civil cases and hand down judgment for punishment in criminal cases.=== Area politics ===Overall, the people of the Alexandria area tend to be conservative.",
"Even though the majority typically elects Republicans in national elections, they vote for Democrats in local elections, many of which are not contested by the GOP.=== United States Congressional district ===From 1913 to 1993, Alexandria served as the seat of Louisiana's Eighth Congressional district.",
"A Democratic seat, it was held by the Long family for nearly half of its existence, from 1953 to 1987, broken only by the two terms of Harold B. McSween and three terms of Republican Clyde Holloway of Forest Hill.",
"The seat was removed after the 1990 census indicated Louisiana no longer had the population to support it.",
"The district was split among the Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Congressional districts.",
"Alexandria is now in the Fifth district and was represented from 2003 to 2013 by Rodney Alexander, a Democrat-turned-Republican.",
"From November 2013 to January 2015 the representative is Vance McAllister of Ouachita Parish.",
"Since March 2021, the Fifth has been represented by Julia Letlow of Start in Richland Parish."
],
[
"Education",
"===Colleges and universities===Louisiana State University at Alexandria off U.S. Highway 71 southEntrance to Southern Baptist-affiliated Louisiana Christian University in PinevilleSituated south of the city, Louisiana State University at Alexandria (or LSUA) is a regional campus of the state's flagship university system, Louisiana State University.",
"From its establishment in 1959, the campus offered only two-year degrees; students seeking baccalaureate degrees had to commute or move to the main campus in Baton Rouge in order to gain a four-year degree.",
"After 1976, students could either commute or telecommute in order to attend upper-level courses, including graduate classes.",
"In 2002, following approval by the Louisiana State University Board of Supervisors and the Louisiana Board of Regents the Louisiana Legislature passed legislation allowing LSUA to offer baccalaureate degrees.A four-year degree is also attainable through Southern Baptist-affiliated Louisiana Christian University in Pineville, founded in 1906.Alexandria also has one of the Region 6 Louisiana Technical College campuses.=== Primary and secondary schools ===Bolton High School in the Alexandria Garden DistrictHoly Savior Menard Central High School on Louisiana Highway 28 WestRapides Parish School Board operates public schools.Alexandria has three public high schools: Bolton High School, Alexandria Senior High School, and Peabody Magnet High School.",
"In addition, there are two private high schools: the Roman Catholic Holy Savior Menard Central High School, and Grace Christian."
],
[
"Transportation",
"=== Roads ===Alexandria serves as the crossroads of Louisiana.",
"To reach either Shreveport or Monroe from the southern portion of the state, the easiest method of travel takes the driver through Alexandria.",
"Likewise, if a visitor is to head from the northern portion of the state to the Cajun portions of the state (Lake Charles and Lafayette), or the greater metropolitan areas of either Baton Rouge or New Orleans, the easiest method of travel involves driving down Interstate 49 through Alexandria.In addition to I-49, travelers can follow Louisiana 1 up to Alexandria from Baton Rouge and points south.",
"Also, Highway 167 could be taken from Opelousas north to Ruston, crossing through Alexandria at one of the few bridges over the Red River in central Louisiana.",
"Highways 165 and 71 also link Alexandria and points south with the northern and southern portions of the state via the Curtis-Coleman bridge.There are talks about a 50-80 mile, 4 lane beltway to encircle Alexandria and Pineville, and an East-West Interstate (I14) connecting Natchez, MS and Jasper, TX called the Gulf Coast Strategic Highway.",
"As of now, they are in the planning stages of development.=== Bridges ===Three road bridges cross the Red River in the Alexandria area.",
"They are:*The '''Purple Heart Memorial Bridge'''.",
"Part of the Alexandria-Pineville Expressway (also referred to as the Cottingham Expressway), it connects Interstate 49 to Highway 167 by crossing the Red River from downtown Alexandria to Pineville.",
"It replaced the Fulton Street Bridge and has six lanes of traffic.",
"Designed by the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development (LADOTD), the bridge cost $15.9 million in federal and state funds.",
"The northbound portion was completed in 1995, the southbound in 1998.Jackson Street Bridge*The '''U.S.",
"165 Business Bridge''' (alternatively, the '''Gillis Long Bridge''', the '''Red River Bridge''' or the '''Jackson Street Bridge''') connecting downtown Pineville with the business district in Alexandria.",
"It is a two-lane vertical-lift bridge with a sidewalk/bikepath on either side.",
"The bridge is named after U.S. Representative Gillis Long, who represented Louisiana's Eighth Congressional District.",
"It was built in 1985 to replace the '''Murray Street Bridge'''.",
"*The '''Curtis-Coleman (Fort Buhlow) Bridge''' A new four-lane (two lanes in each direction) bridge was built beside the aging OK Allen Bridge and opened in May, 2016.At that time US 165 will be completely four-laned for most of its traverse of Louisiana.",
"It was demolished on September 26, 2015.Former bridges include:*The '''Murray Street Bridge'''.",
"One of the first bridges in Alexandria.",
"A two-lane steel truss swing bridge, it decayed over time, finally being demolished in 1983.The approach on the Alexandria side was turned into a river overlook as part of the Alexandria Levee Park.",
"*The '''Fulton Street Bridge'''.",
"Named after Fulton Street which it connected with Highway 167.Technically part of the Alexandria-Pineville Expressway, it was a four-lane steel vertical-lift bridge.",
"It was demolished in 1994 to make way for the Purple Heart Memorial Bridge.",
"*The '''Oscar K. Allen Bridge''' connected Highway 165/71 on both sides of the Red River.",
"It was a two-lane K-truss type bridge, named after Governor Oscar K. Allen.",
"It was built in 1936 to connect Alexandria to the (former) Fort Buhlow.",
"It was replaced by the Curtis-Coleman (Fort Buhlow) Bridge next to it.There are two railroad bridges over the Red River in Alexandria.",
"One is located near the Buhlow area north of the OK Allen bridge.",
"The other is south of the Purple Heart Memorial Bridge.=== Mass transit ===Regional mass transit is handled by '''ATRANS''' (Alexandria Transportation Authority).For those leaving or arriving at the city by bus, Greyhound Lines has a terminal downtown.=== Airports ===Alexandria is served by the Alexandria International Airport and the Esler Regional Airport in Pineville.=== Rail ===Alexandria does not have Amtrak service, nor a commuter rail system.",
"The Kansas City Southern (''Southern Belle'') and the Missouri Pacific (since absorbed by Union Pacific) (''Louisiana Eagle'' and ''Louisiana Daylight'') operated train stations in the area in the early part of the 20th century but passenger services ended in the 1960s and the stations have closed."
],
[
"Surrounding cities and towns",
"Rapides Parish*Ball*Boyce*Cheneyville*Deville*Forest Hill*Lecompte*Pineville*Tioga*WoodworthGrant Parish*Colfax*Creola*Dry Prong*Pollock*Prospect"
],
[
"Gallery",
"File:Red River at Alexandria, LA IMG 1134.JPG|Scenic view of the Red River of the South taken from levee in AlexandriaFile:Downtown Third Street in Alexandria, LA IMG_4316.JPG|Another view of Third Street in AlexandriaFile:Christmas chapel, Alexandria, LA IMG_4311.JPG|Christmas chapel is a seasonal exhibit near Alexandria City Hall.File:Louisiana State Office Building, Alexandria, LA IMG_4267.JPG|Louisiana State Office Building in AlexandriaFile:Health and Human Services, Alexandria, LA IMG_4317.JPG|Human Services in Alexandria occupies a former financial institution building at 429 Murray Street downtown.File:Missouri Pacific station, Alexandria, LA IMG 1138.JPG|Former Missouri Pacific Railroad depot in downtown historic districtFile:Rapides Parish Courthouse (lower view) IMG 1142.JPG|Lower view of Rapides Parish Courthouse in AlexandriaFile:Alexandria LA watertower.png|Water tower of Alexandria, LA"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"External links",
"* City of Alexandria : Government and community services.",
"* The Town Talk : Alexandria's Local Daily Newspaper.",
"* Visit Alexandria : Business Directory."
]
] | wikipedia |
[
[
"Alexandria Troas"
],
[
"Introduction",
"Coin (Didrachm) of Alexandreia, 102-66 BC.",
"Obverse: Laureate head of Apollo.",
"Reverse: Apollo Smintheus standing right, quiver over shoulder, holding bow, arrow, and patera, ΑΠΟΛΛΩΝΟΣ ΣΜΙΝΘΕΩΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΕΩΝ ΑΡΧΑΓΟΡΟΥ in exergue.",
"'''Alexandria Troas''' (\"Alexandria of the Troad\"; ; ) is the site of an ancient Greek city situated on the Aegean Sea near the northern tip of Turkey's western coast, the area known historically as Troad, a little south of Tenedos (modern Bozcaada).",
"It is located southeast of modern Dalyan, a village in the Ezine district of Çanakkale Province.",
"The site sprawls over an estimated ; among the few structures remaining today are a ruined bath, an odeon, a theatre, gymnasium complex and a recently uncovered stadion.",
"The circuit of the old walls can still be traced."
],
[
"History",
"===Hellenistic===According to Strabo, this site was first called Sigeia (Σιγία); around 306 BC Antigonus refounded the city as the much-expanded Antigonia Troas by settling the people of five other towns in Sigeia, including the once influential city of Neandreia.",
"It did not receive its name until its name was changed by Lysimachus to Alexandria Troas, in 301 BC, in memory of Alexander III of Macedon (Pliny merely states, in his view, that the name changed from Antigonia to Alexandria).",
"However, Pliny's view is not correct, because the city continued being called Alexandria Troas, and so is also stated in the 4th-5th c. AD Tabula Peutingeriana.",
"As the chief port of north-west Asia Minor, the place prospered greatly in Roman times, becoming a \"free and autonomous city\" as early as 188 BC, and the existing remains sufficiently attest its former importance.",
"In its heyday the city may have had a population of about 100,000.Strabo mentions that a Roman colony was created at the location in the reign of Augustus, named Colonia Alexandria Augusta Troas (called simply Troas during this period).",
"Augustus, Hadrian and the rich grammarian Herodes Atticus contributed greatly to its embellishment; the aqueduct still preserved is due to the latter.",
"Julius Caesar and Constantine considered making Troas the capital of the Roman Empire.===Roman===In Roman times, it was a significant port for travelling between Anatolia and Europe.",
"According to the account in the Acts of the Apostles, Paul of Tarsus sailed for Europe for the first time from Alexandria Troas and returned there from Europe (it was there that the episode of the raising of Eutychus is said to have occurred).",
"Ignatius of Antioch also paused at this city before continuing to his martyrdom at Rome.===Byzantine===Several of its later bishops are known: Marinus in 325; Niconius in 344; Sylvanus at the beginning of the 5th century; Pionius in 451; Leo in 787; Peter, friend of the Patriarch Ignatius, and adversary to Michael, in the ninth century.",
"In the 10th century Troas is given as a suffragan of Cyzicus and distinct from the famous Troy (Heinrich Gelzer, ''Ungedruckte ... Texte der Notitiae episcopatuum'', 552; ''Georgii Cyprii descriptio orbis romani'', 64); it is not known when the city was destroyed and the diocese disappeared.",
"The bishopric remains a titular see of the Catholic Church under the name Troas, vacant since 1971.Troas is also a titular see of the Eastern Orthodox Church under the Ecumenical Patriarchate.",
"Bishop Savas (Zembillas) of Troas served as hierarch from 2002 to 2011, and then became Metropolitan Savas (Zembillas) of Pittsburgh in the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America.===Ottoman===Karasid Turkomans settled in the area of the Troad in the 14th century.",
"Their ''beylik'' was conquered by the Ottomans in 1336.The ruins of Alexandria Troas came to be known among the Turks as ''Eski Stambul'', the \"Old City\".",
"The site's stones were much plundered for building material (for example Mehmed IV took columns to adorn his Yeni Valide Mosque in Istanbul).",
"As of the mid-18th century the site served as \"a lurking place for bandetti\".===Modern===By 1911, the site had been overgrown with Vallonea oaks and much plundered, but the circuit of the old walls could still be traced, and in several places they were fairly well preserved.",
"They had a circumference of about ten kilometres, and were fortified with towers at regular intervals.Remains of an ancient bath and gymnasium complex can be found within this area; this building is locally known as ''Bal Saray'' (Honey Palace) and was originally endowed by Herodes Atticus in the year 135.Trajan built an aqueduct which can still be traced.",
"The harbour had two large basins, now almost choked with sand.",
"It is the subject of an early twenty-first century study by German archaeologists digging and surveying at the site.",
"Their excavation uncovered the remains of a large stadium dating to about 100 BC."
],
[
"See also",
"* List of ancient Greek cities"
],
[
"References"
],
[
"Bibliography",
"*Feuser, Stefan, ''Der Hafen von Alexandria Troas'' (Bonn: Dr. Rudolf Habelt, 2009) (Asia Minor Studien, 63)."
],
[
"External links"
]
] | wikipedia |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.