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Hepatitis_D
Hepatitis D
8,804,829
**Hepatitis D** is a type of [viral](/wiki/Viral_disease "Viral disease") [hepatitis](/wiki/Hepatitis "Hepatitis")[[1]](#cite_note-1) caused by the **hepatitis delta virus** (**HDV**), a small [particle](/wiki/Particle "Particle") that are alike to [viroid](/wiki/Viroid "Viroid") and virusoid.[[2]](#cite_note-pmid14708706-2)[[3]](#cite_note-3) HDV is one of five known [hepatitis](/wiki/Hepatitis "Hepatitis") viruses: [A](/wiki/Hepatitis_A "Hepatitis A"), [B](/wiki/Hepatitis_B "Hepatitis B"), [C](/wiki/Hepatitis_C "Hepatitis C"), D, and [E](/wiki/Hepatitis_E "Hepatitis E"). HDV is considered to be a satellite because it can appear if the [hepatitis B virus](/wiki/Hepatitis_B "Hepatitis B") (HBV) is present.[[4]](#cite_note-4) ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["Hepatitis (Viral) NIDDK"](https://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/liver-disease/viral-hepatitis). *The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases*. Retrieved 2020-06-19. 2. [↑](#cite_ref-pmid14708706_2-0) Farci P (2003). "Delta hepatitis: an update". *Journal of Hepatology*. **39** (Suppl 1): S212–9. [doi](/wiki/Doi_(identifier) "Doi (identifier)"):[10.1016/s0168-8278(03)00331-3](https://doi.org/10.1016%2Fs0168-8278%2803%2900331-3). [PMID](/wiki/PMID_(identifier) "PMID (identifier)") [14708706](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/14708706). 3. [↑](#cite_ref-3) Magnius L, Taylor J, Mason WS, Sureau C, Dény P, Norder H (December 2018). ["ICTV Virus Taxonomy Profile: Deltavirus"](https://doi.org/10.1099%2Fjgv.0.001150). *The Journal of General Virology*. **99** (12): 1565–1566. [doi](/wiki/Doi_(identifier) "Doi (identifier)"):[10.1099/jgv.0.001150](https://doi.org/10.1099%2Fjgv.0.001150). [PMID](/wiki/PMID_(identifier) "PMID (identifier)") [30311870](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30311870). 4. [↑](#cite_ref-4) Makino S, Chang MF, Shieh CK, Kamahora T, Vannier DM, Govindarajan S, Lai MM (1987). "Molecular cloning and sequencing of a human hepatitis delta (delta) virus RNA". *Nature*. **329** (6137): 343–6. [Bibcode](/wiki/Bibcode_(identifier) "Bibcode (identifier)"):[1987Natur.329..343M](https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1987Natur.329..343M). [doi](/wiki/Doi_(identifier) "Doi (identifier)"):[10.1038/329343a0](https://doi.org/10.1038%2F329343a0). [PMID](/wiki/PMID_(identifier) "PMID (identifier)") [3627276](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/3627276). [S2CID](/wiki/S2CID_(identifier) "S2CID (identifier)") [4368061](https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:4368061). *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [medicine](/wiki/Category:Medicine_stubs "Category:Medicine stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hepatitis_D&action=edit)*.
Hepatitis D is a type of viral hepatitis[1] caused by the hepatitis delta virus (HDV), a small particle that are alike to viroid and virusoid.[2][3] HDV is one of five known hepatitis viruses: A, B, C, D, and E. HDV is considered to be a satellite because it can appear if the hepatitis B virus (HBV) is present.[4] References ↑ "Hepatitis (Viral) NIDDK". The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. Retrieved 2020-06-19. ↑ Farci P (2003). "Delta hepatitis: an update". Journal of Hepatology. 39 (Suppl 1): S212–9. doi:10.1016/s0168-8278(03)00331-3. PMID 14708706. ↑ Magnius L, Taylor J, Mason WS, Sureau C, Dény P, Norder H (December 2018). "ICTV Virus Taxonomy Profile: Deltavirus". The Journal of General Virology. 99 (12): 1565–1566. doi:10.1099/jgv.0.001150. PMID 30311870. ↑ Makino S, Chang MF, Shieh CK, Kamahora T, Vannier DM, Govindarajan S, Lai MM (1987). "Molecular cloning and sequencing of a human hepatitis delta (delta) virus RNA". Nature. 329 (6137): 343–6. Bibcode:1987Natur.329..343M. doi:10.1038/329343a0. PMID 3627276. S2CID 4368061. This short article about medicine can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
564,837
École_nationale_supérieure_de_mécanique_et_d'aérotechnique
École nationale supérieure de mécanique et d'aérotechnique
7,847,356
École nationale supérieure de mécanique et d'aérotechnique| Type | Public, Graduate engineering school | | Established | 1948 | | Location | Chasseneuil-du-Poitou, [France](/wiki/France "France")[46°39′36.346″N 0°21′40.287″E / 46.66009611°N 0.36119083°E / 46.66009611; 0.36119083](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=%C3%89cole_nationale_sup%C3%A9rieure_de_m%C3%A9canique_et_d%27a%C3%A9rotechnique&params=46_39_36.346_N_0_21_40.287_E_region:FR_type:edu) | | Campus | Futuroscope | | Affiliations | [Groupement des écoles d'aéronautique](/wiki/Groupement_des_%C3%A9coles_d%27a%C3%A9ronautique "Groupement des écoles d'aéronautique") | | Website | [http://www.ensma.fr](https://www.ensma.fr) | The **École nationale supérieure de mécanique et d'aérotechnique** is a renowned graduate engineering school in France. It is in a campus of the *Futuroscope*.[[1]](#cite_note-1) Its different curricula lead to the following French & European degrees : * *Ingénieur ENSMA* (ENSMA Graduate engineer Masters level program) * [Master of Science](/wiki/Master_of_Science "Master of Science") & PhD doctorate studies Academic activities and industrial applied research are performed mainly in French and English languages. Students from a dozen of nationalities participate to the different curricula at ENSMA. ## Famous ex-student * [Lionel Guérin](/wiki/Lionel_Gu%C3%A9rin "Lionel Guérin"), French Chief executive officer and politician[[2]](#cite_note-2) ## Research labs Research activities at ENSMA relate to the following topics: * *Institut PPrime* (Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science and Energy Sciences)[[3]](#cite_note-3) * Computer Science and Automatic Control for Systems. ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) (in French)[L'ENSMA : Ecole nationale supérieure de mécanique et d'aérotechnique](https://m.gralon.net/articles/enseignement-et-formation/ecole/l-ensma-ecole-nationale-superieure-de-mecanique-et-d-aerotechnique-4811.html) 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2) (in French)[Lionel Guérin](http://www.lechotouristique.com/carnet-des-decideurs/guerin-lionel,54320) 3. [↑](#cite_ref-3) [Institut PPrime](https://www.pprime.fr/?q=en) ## Further reading Wikimedia Commons has media related to ***[École nationale supérieure de mécanique et d'aérotechnique](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/%C3%89cole_nationale_sup%C3%A9rieure_de_m%C3%A9canique_et_d%27a%C3%A9rotechnique "commons:École nationale supérieure de mécanique et d'aérotechnique")***. * [Official website](https://www.ensma.fr/)
École nationale supérieure de mécanique et d'aérotechnique| Type | Public, Graduate engineering school | | Established | 1948 | | Location | Chasseneuil-du-Poitou, France46°39′36.346″N 0°21′40.287″E / 46.66009611°N 0.36119083°E / 46.66009611; 0.36119083 | | Campus | Futuroscope | | Affiliations | Groupement des écoles d'aéronautique | | Website | http://www.ensma.fr | The École nationale supérieure de mécanique et d'aérotechnique is a renowned graduate engineering school in France. It is in a campus of the Futuroscope.[1] Its different curricula lead to the following French & European degrees : Ingénieur ENSMA (ENSMA Graduate engineer Masters level program) Master of Science & PhD doctorate studies Academic activities and industrial applied research are performed mainly in French and English languages. Students from a dozen of nationalities participate to the different curricula at ENSMA. Famous ex-student Lionel Guérin, French Chief executive officer and politician[2] Research labs Research activities at ENSMA relate to the following topics: Institut PPrime (Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science and Energy Sciences)[3] Computer Science and Automatic Control for Systems. References ↑ (in French)L'ENSMA : Ecole nationale supérieure de mécanique et d'aérotechnique ↑ (in French)Lionel Guérin ↑ Institut PPrime Further reading Wikimedia Commons has media related to École nationale supérieure de mécanique et d'aérotechnique. Official website
268,686
British_Navy
British Navy
2,478,354
Redirect to: * [Royal Navy](/wiki/Royal_Navy "Royal Navy")
Redirect to: Royal Navy
722,463
Princess_Vajira
Princess Vajira
8,944,073
| | | | --- | --- | | | This article **is an [orphan](/wiki/Wikipedia:Orphan "Wikipedia:Orphan"), as no other articles [link to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:Whatlinkshere&target=Princess_Vajira&namespace=0)**. Please [introduce links](/wiki/Help:Link "Help:Link") to this page from [related articles](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special%3ASearch&redirs=1&search=Princess+Vajira&fulltext=Search&ns0=1&title=Special%3ASearch&advanced=1&fulltext=Princess+Vajira); try the [Find link tool](https://edwardbetts.com/find_link?lang=simple&q=Princess_Vajira) for suggestions. *(May 2020)* | | Vajira | | --- | | Empress of Maghda Kingdom | | Spouse(s) | Ajatashatru | | Religion | Buddhism | The **princess Vajira**, also known as **Vajirakumari**, was [empress](/wiki/Empress "Empress") of Kingdom Magadha, having been the main spouse of the emperor Ajatashatru that reigned in the period 493 BC-461 BC.[[1]](#cite_note-:0-1) Mother of the successor of his husband, the emperor *Udayibhadra*.[[2]](#cite_note-2) Vajira was appointed princess of the Kingdom of Kosala, ancient indian kingdom. Came from a family that descended of Mathavia Videgha and was daughter of the kings Pasenadi and *Mallika*.[[3]](#cite_note-3) ## Life ### Birth *Vajira* Or *Vajirakumari* was daughter of the main queen of Pasenadi, Mallika. According to the tradition of Pali, his mother was a beautiful daughter of the main manufacturer of garlands of Kosala.[[4]](#cite_note-Wayman-4) When Vajira was born, his father was apparently disappointed when hearing that the baby was a girl, but [Buddha](/wiki/Gautama_Buddha "Gautama Buddha") ensured him that the women sometimes are wiser than the men.[[1]](#cite_note-:0-1) ### Marriage After a war between Ajatashatru and Prasenadi, in a peace treaty Prasenajit married his daughter Vajira to him. Vajira marrieged aged seventeen years old, with Ajatashatru.[[5]](#cite_note-5) ## References 1. ↑ [1.0](#cite_ref-:0_1-0) [1.1](#cite_ref-:0_1-1) Sen, Sailendra Nath (1999). *Ancient Indian history and civilization* (Second ed.). New Delhi: New Age International. p. 113. [ISBN](/wiki/ISBN_(identifier) "ISBN (identifier)") [978-81-224-1198-0](/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-81-224-1198-0 "Special:BookSources/978-81-224-1198-0"). 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2) Mukherjee, Hemchandra Raychaudhuri. With a commentary by B. N. (2005). *Political History of Ancient India : From the accession of Parikshit to the extinction of the Gupta dynasty* (6. impression. ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 190. [ISBN](/wiki/ISBN_(identifier) "ISBN (identifier)") [978-0-19-564376-3](/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-0-19-564376-3 "Special:BookSources/978-0-19-564376-3"). 3. [↑](#cite_ref-3) Jayapalan, N. (2001). *History of India*. New Delhi: Atlantic. p. 52. [ISBN](/wiki/ISBN_(identifier) "ISBN (identifier)") [978-81-7156-928-1](/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-81-7156-928-1 "Special:BookSources/978-81-7156-928-1"). 4. [↑](#cite_ref-Wayman_4-0) Wayman, Alex & Hideko Wayman, Hideko (1990). *The lion's roar of Queen Srimala : a Buddhist scripture on the Tathagatagarbha theory* (1. Indian ed.). Motilal Banarsidass Publ. p. 3. [ISBN](/wiki/ISBN_(identifier) "ISBN (identifier)") [978-81-208-0731-0](/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-81-208-0731-0 "Special:BookSources/978-81-208-0731-0"). 5. [↑](#cite_ref-5) Tripathi, Rama Shankar., Rama Shankar (1992). [*History of ancient India*](https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/43826343). Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass. [ISBN](/wiki/ISBN_(identifier) "ISBN (identifier)") [978-81-208-0017-5](/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-81-208-0017-5 "Special:BookSources/978-81-208-0017-5"). [OCLC](/wiki/OCLC_(identifier) "OCLC (identifier)") [43826343](https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/43826343).
| | | | --- | --- | | | This article is an orphan, as no other articles link to it. Please introduce links to this page from related articles; try the Find link tool for suggestions. (May 2020) | | Vajira | | --- | | Empress of Maghda Kingdom | | Spouse(s) | Ajatashatru | | Religion | Buddhism | The princess Vajira, also known as Vajirakumari, was empress of Kingdom Magadha, having been the main spouse of the emperor Ajatashatru that reigned in the period 493 BC-461 BC.[1] Mother of the successor of his husband, the emperor Udayibhadra.[2] Vajira was appointed princess of the Kingdom of Kosala, ancient indian kingdom. Came from a family that descended of Mathavia Videgha and was daughter of the kings Pasenadi and Mallika.[3] Life Birth Vajira Or Vajirakumari was daughter of the main queen of Pasenadi, Mallika. According to the tradition of Pali, his mother was a beautiful daughter of the main manufacturer of garlands of Kosala.[4] When Vajira was born, his father was apparently disappointed when hearing that the baby was a girl, but Buddha ensured him that the women sometimes are wiser than the men.[1] Marriage After a war between Ajatashatru and Prasenadi, in a peace treaty Prasenajit married his daughter Vajira to him. Vajira marrieged aged seventeen years old, with Ajatashatru.[5] References ↑ 1.0 1.1 Sen, Sailendra Nath (1999). Ancient Indian history and civilization (Second ed.). New Delhi: New Age International. p. 113. ISBN 978-81-224-1198-0. ↑ Mukherjee, Hemchandra Raychaudhuri. With a commentary by B. N. (2005). Political History of Ancient India : From the accession of Parikshit to the extinction of the Gupta dynasty (6. impression. ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 190. ISBN 978-0-19-564376-3. ↑ Jayapalan, N. (2001). History of India. New Delhi: Atlantic. p. 52. ISBN 978-81-7156-928-1. ↑ Wayman, Alex & Hideko Wayman, Hideko (1990). The lion's roar of Queen Srimala : a Buddhist scripture on the Tathagatagarbha theory (1. Indian ed.). Motilal Banarsidass Publ. p. 3. ISBN 978-81-208-0731-0. ↑ Tripathi, Rama Shankar., Rama Shankar (1992). History of ancient India. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-0017-5. OCLC 43826343.
774,203
R_(programming_language)
R (programming language)
9,083,204
R| | | R terminal | | [Paradigms](/wiki/Programming_paradigm "Programming paradigm") | Multi-paradigm: Array programming, [object-oriented](/wiki/Object-oriented_programming "Object-oriented programming"), [imperative](/wiki/Imperative_programming "Imperative programming"), [functional](/wiki/Functional_programming "Functional programming") | | Designed by | Ross Ihaka and Robert Gentleman ([statistician](/wiki/Statistician "Statistician")) | | [Developer](/wiki/Software_developer "Software developer") | R Core Team[[1]](#cite_note-1) | | First appeared | August 1993; 30 years ago (1993-08)[[2]](#cite_note-Interface98-2) | | [Stable release](/wiki/Software_release_life_cycle "Software release life cycle") | 4.3.2[[3]](#cite_note-wikidata-7c23627b5618cc302c9bbb60878536df04724134-v3-3)  (codename "Dark and Stormy Night; Holding the Windsock; Arbor Day; See Things Now; Taking Off Again; Bunny-Wunnies Freak Out; Lost Library Book; Camp Pontanezen; Kick Things; Bird Hippie; One Push-Up; One Push-Up; Innocent and Trusting; Shortstop Beagle; Already Tomorrow; Beagle Scouts") / 31 October 2023; 7 days ago (31 October 2023) | | [License](/wiki/Software_license "Software license") | [GNU GPL v2](/wiki/GNU_GPL#Version_2 "GNU GPL")[[4]](#cite_note-4) | | [Filename extensions](/wiki/Filename_extension "Filename extension") | * .r * .rdata * .rds * .rda | | Website | [www.r-project.org](https://www.r-project.org) | | Influenced by | | * Common Lisp * [Scheme](/wiki/Scheme_(programming_language) "Scheme (programming language)")[[2]](#cite_note-Interface98-2) * XLispStat | | Influenced | | [Julia](/wiki/Julia_(programming_language) "Julia (programming language)")[[5]](#cite_note-Introduction-5) | | * [R Programming](https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/R_Programming "wikibooks:R Programming") at Wikibooks | **R** is a [programming language](/wiki/Programming_language "Programming language") and [free software](/wiki/Free_software "Free software") environment for [statistics](/wiki/Statistics "Statistics").[[6]](#cite_note-6)[[7]](#cite_note-7)[[8]](#cite_note-8)[[9]](#cite_note-9)[[10]](#cite_note-10)[[11]](#cite_note-11) R is a language built for a specific purpose. It is strictly designed for statistical analysis. The algorithms for many statistical models are devised in R. Precisely R is the language of Statistical Analyzers. It’s an [open source](/wiki/Open_source "Open source") and the best suite for the statisticians to develop statistical softwares. R is putting utmost efforts to walk parallelly to Python. ## Usage in other areas The R language was originally made for statistics. But today, it is also used in many scientific fields including [ecology](/wiki/Ecology "Ecology").[[12]](#cite_note-12)[[13]](#cite_note-13) ## Development history A list of changes in R releases is maintained in various "news" files at CRAN (Comprehensive R Archive Network).[[14]](#cite_note-RNews-14) Some highlights are listed below for several major releases. | Release | Date | Description | | --- | --- | --- | | 0.16 | | This is the last test version. | | 0.49 | 1997-04-23 | This is the oldest [source](/wiki/Source_code "Source code") release which is currently available on CRAN.[[15]](#cite_note-15) CRAN is started on this date, with 3 mirrors that initially hosted 12 packages.[[16]](#cite_note-16) | | 0.60 | 1997-12-05 | R becomes an official part of the [GNU Project](/wiki/GNU_Project "GNU Project"). The code is hosted and maintained on CVS. | | 0.65.1 | 1999-10-07 | First versions of update.packages and install.packages functions for downloading and installing packages from CRAN.[[17]](#cite_note-17) | | 1.0 | 2000-02-29 | The developers declared that it is stable enough for production use.[[18]](#cite_note-18) | | 1.4 | 2001-12-19 | S4 methods are introduced and the first version for [Mac OS X](/wiki/MacOS "MacOS") is made available soon after. | | 1.8 | 2003-10-08 | Introduced a flexible condition handling mechanism for signalling and handling condition objects. | | 2.0 | 2004-10-04 | Introduced fast loading of data with minimal expense of system memory. | | 2.1 | 2005-04-18 | Support for [UTF-8](/wiki/UTF-8 "UTF-8") encoding. They also started of internationalization and localization for different languages. | | 2.6.2 | 2008-02-08 | Last version to support Windows 95, 98, Me and NT 4.0[[19]](#cite_note-19) | | 2.11 | 2010-04-22 | Support for Windows 64 bit systems. | | 2.12.2 | 2011-02-25 | Last version to support [Windows 2000](/wiki/Windows_2000 "Windows 2000")[[20]](#cite_note-20) | | 2.13 | 2011-04-14 | Adding a new compiler function that allows speeding up functions by converting them to byte-code. | | 2.14 | 2011-10-31 | Added mandatory namespaces for packages. Added a new parallel package. | | 2.15 | 2012-03-30 | New load balancing functions. Improved serialization speed for long vectors. | | 3.0.0 | 2013-04-03 | Support for numeric index values 231 and larger on 64 bit systems. | | 3.3.3 | 2017-03-06 | Last version to support Microsoft [Windows XP](/wiki/Windows_XP "Windows XP"). | | 3.4.0 | 2017-04-21 | Just-in-time compilation (JIT) of functions and loops to byte-code enabled by default. | | 3.5.0 | 2018-04-23 | Packages byte-compiled on installation by default. Compact internal representation of integer sequences. Added a new serialization format to support compact internal representations. | | 3.6.0 | 2019-04-26 | | | 4.0.0 | 2020-04-24 | | ## Communities R has local communities worldwide for users to share ideas and learn.[[21]](#cite_note-21)[[22]](#cite_note-22) There are a growing number of R events bringing its users together, such as conferences (e.g. [useR!](#useR!_conferences), WhyR?, conectaR, SatRdays)[[23]](#cite_note-23)[[24]](#cite_note-24) and other meetups.[[25]](#cite_note-25) ## useR! conferences The official annual gathering of R users is called "useR!".[[26]](#cite_note-R_2019-26) The first such event was useR! 2004 in May 2004, [Vienna](/wiki/Vienna "Vienna"), [Austria](/wiki/Austria "Austria").[[27]](#cite_note-27) After skipping 2005, the useR! conference has been held annually.[[28]](#cite_note-28) Subsequent conferences have included:[[26]](#cite_note-R_2019-26) * useR! 2006, Vienna, Austria * useR! 2007, Ames, Iowa, USA * useR! 2008, Dortmund, [Germany](/wiki/Germany "Germany") * useR! 2009, [Rennes](/wiki/Rennes "Rennes"), [France](/wiki/France "France") * useR! 2010, Gaithersburg, [Maryland](/wiki/Maryland "Maryland"), USA * useR! 2011, Coventry, [United Kingdom](/wiki/United_Kingdom "United Kingdom") * useR! 2012, Nashville, [Tennessee](/wiki/Tennessee "Tennessee"), USA * useR! 2013, Albacete, [Spain](/wiki/Spain "Spain") * useR! 2014, [Los Angeles](/wiki/Los_Angeles "Los Angeles"), California, USA * useR! 2015, Aalborg, [Denmark](/wiki/Denmark "Denmark") * useR! 2016, Stanford, California, USA * useR! 2017, [Brussels](/wiki/Brussels "Brussels"), [Belgium](/wiki/Belgium "Belgium") * useR! 2018, [Brisbane](/wiki/Brisbane "Brisbane"), [Australia](/wiki/Australia "Australia") * useR! 2019, Toulouse, France Future conferences planned are as follows:[[26]](#cite_note-R_2019-26)[[29]](#cite_note-29) * useR! 2020, St. Louis, Missouri, USA (Canceled) * useR! 2021, [Zurich](/wiki/Zurich "Zurich"), [Switzerland](/wiki/Switzerland "Switzerland") ## *The R Journal* *The R Journal* is the open access [refereed](/wiki/Academic_journal "Academic journal") journal of the R project. It features articles on the use and development of the R language. ## Basic syntax The following examples illustrate the basic [syntax](/wiki/Syntax "Syntax") of the language and use of the [command-line interface](/wiki/Command-line_interface "Command-line interface"). In R, the generally preferred[[30]](#cite_note-30) [assignment operator](/wiki/Assignment_(computer_science) "Assignment (computer science)") is an arrow made from two characters `<-`. Although `=` can be used instead.[[31]](#cite_note-31) ``` > x <- 1:6 # Create vector. > y <- x^2 # Create vector by formula. > print(y) # Print the vector’s contents. [1] 1 4 9 16 25 36 > mean(y) # Arithmetic mean of vector. [1] 15.16667 > var(y) # Sample variance of vector. [1] 178.9667 > model <- lm(y ~ x) # Linear regression model y = A + B \* x. > print(model) # Print the model’s results. Call: lm(formula = y ~ x) Coefficients: (Intercept) x -9.333 7.000 > summary(model) # Display an in-depth summary of the model. Call: lm(formula = y ~ x) Residuals: 1 2 3 4 5 6 3.3333 -0.6667 -2.6667 -2.6667 -0.6667 3.3333 Coefficients: Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|) (Intercept) -9.3333 2.8441 -3.282 0.030453 \* x 7.0000 0.7303 9.585 0.000662 \*\*\* --- Signif. codes: 0 ‘\*\*\*’ 0.001 ‘\*\*’ 0.01 ‘\*’ 0.05 ‘.’ 0.1 ‘ ’ 1 Residual standard error: 3.055 on 4 degrees of freedom Multiple R-squared: 0.9583, Adjusted R-squared: 0.9478 F-statistic: 91.88 on 1 and 4 DF, p-value: 0.000662 > par(mfrow = c(2, 2)) # Create a 2 by 2 layout for figures. > plot(model) # Output diagnostic plots of the model. ``` ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) Hornik, Kurt (November 26, 2015). ["R FAQ"](https://cran.r-project.org/doc/FAQ/R-FAQ.html#What-is-R_003f). *The Comprehensive R Archive Network*. 2.1 What is R?. Retrieved 2018-08-05. 2. ↑ [2.0](#cite_ref-Interface98_2-0) [2.1](#cite_ref-Interface98_2-1) Ihaka, Ross (1998). [*R : Past and Future History*](https://www.stat.auckland.ac.nz/~ihaka/downloads/Interface98.pdf) (PDF). *Interface '98* (Technical report). Statistics Department, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand. 3. [↑](#cite_ref-wikidata-7c23627b5618cc302c9bbb60878536df04724134-v3_3-0) Peter Dalgaard (31 October 2023). ["R 4.3.2 is released"](https://hypatia.math.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-announce/2023/000697.html). Retrieved 2 November 2023. 4. [↑](#cite_ref-4) ["R license"](https://www.r-project.org/COPYING). r-project. Retrieved 2018-08-05. 5. [↑](#cite_ref-Introduction_5-0) ["Introduction"](https://web.archive.org/web/20180620172516/https://docs.julialang.org/en/stable/manual/introduction/#man-introduction-1#man-introduction-1). *The Julia Manual*. Archived from [the original](https://docs.julialang.org/en/stable/manual/introduction/#man-introduction-1) on 20 June 2018. Retrieved 5 August 2018. 6. [↑](#cite_ref-6) Crawley, M. J. (2012). The R book. John Wiley & Sons. 7. [↑](#cite_ref-7) Dalgaard, P. (2008). Introductory statistics with R. Springer. 8. [↑](#cite_ref-8) Maronna, R. A., Martin, R. D., & Yohai, V. J. (2019). Robust statistics: theory and methods (with R). John Wiley & Sons. 9. [↑](#cite_ref-9) Ugarte, M. D., Militino, A. F., & Arnholt, A. T. (2008). Probability and Statistics with R. CRC Press. 10. [↑](#cite_ref-10) Bruce, P., Bruce, A., & Gedeck, P. (2020). Practical Statistics for Data Scientists: 50+ Essential Concepts Using R and Python. O'Reilly Media. 11. [↑](#cite_ref-11) Kruschke, J. (2014). Doing Bayesian data analysis: A tutorial with R, JAGS, and Stan. Academic Press. 12. [↑](#cite_ref-12) Borcard, D., Gillet, F., & Legendre, P. (2018). Numerical ecology with R. Springer. 13. [↑](#cite_ref-13) Bolker, B. M. (2008). Ecological models and data in R. Princeton University Press. 14. [↑](#cite_ref-RNews_14-0) Changes in versions 3.0.0 onward: ["R News"](https://cran.r-project.org/src/base/NEWS). *cran.r-project.org*. Retrieved 2014-07-03. Earlier change logs (by major release number): * ["NEWS"](https://cran.r-project.org/src/base/NEWS). *cran.r-project.org*. Retrieved 2020-06-28. * ["NEWS.3"](https://cran.r-project.org/src/base/NEWS.3). *cran.r-project.org*. Retrieved 2020-06-28. * ["NEWS.2"](https://cran.r-project.org/src/base/NEWS.2). *cran.r-project.org*. Retrieved 2017-04-08. * ["NEWS.1"](https://cran.r-project.org/src/base/NEWS.1). *cran.r-project.org*. Retrieved 2017-04-08. * ["NEWS.0"](https://cran.r-project.org/src/base/NEWS.0). *cran.r-project.org*. Retrieved 2017-04-08. 15. [↑](#cite_ref-15) ["Index of /src/base/R-0"](https://cran.r-project.org/src/base/R-0/). 16. [↑](#cite_ref-16) ["ANNOUNCE: CRAN"](https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-announce/1997/000001.html). 17. [↑](#cite_ref-17) <https://cran.r-project.org/src/base/NEWS.0> 18. [↑](#cite_ref-18) Peter Dalgaard. ["R-1.0.0 is released"](https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-announce/2000/000127.html). Retrieved 2009-06-06. 19. [↑](#cite_ref-19) <https://cran-archive.r-project.org/bin/windows/base/old/2.7.0/CHANGES.R-2.7.0> 20. [↑](#cite_ref-20) ["R FAQ"](https://cran.r-project.org/bin/windows/base/rw-FAQ.html#How-do-I-install-R-for-Windows_003f). Retrieved 2020-03-20. 21. [↑](#cite_ref-21) ["Local R User Group Directory"](http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/local-r-groups.html). *Revolutions Blog*. Retrieved 12 May 2018. 22. [↑](#cite_ref-22) [*A list of R conferences and meetings*](https://jumpingrivers.github.io/meetingsR/index.html). *Jumping Rivers*. Retrieved 12 May 2018. 23. [↑](#cite_ref-23) ["official website of WhyR? conference"](http://whyr.pl/). *WhyR?*. Retrieved 26 June 2019. 24. [↑](#cite_ref-24) ["SatRdays listing"](https://satrdays.org/). *SatRdays*. Retrieved 26 June 2019. 25. [↑](#cite_ref-25) ["R Project for Statistical Computing"](https://www.meetup.com/topics/r-project-for-statistical-computing/). *Meetup*. Retrieved 12 May 2018. 26. ↑ [26.0](#cite_ref-R_2019_26-0) [26.1](#cite_ref-R_2019_26-1) [26.2](#cite_ref-R_2019_26-2) ["R: Conferences"](https://www.r-project.org/conferences/). *r-project.org*. 2019-11-01. Retrieved 2019-11-19. 27. [↑](#cite_ref-27) ["useR! 2004 - The R User Conference"](https://web.archive.org/web/20130914003125/http://www.ci.tuwien.ac.at/Conferences/useR-2004/). 27 May 2004. Archived from [the original](http://www.ci.tuwien.ac.at/Conferences/useR-2004/) on 2013-09-14. Retrieved 2018-09-09. 28. [↑](#cite_ref-28) R Project (9 August 2013). ["R-related Conferences"](https://www.r-project.org/conferences). Retrieved 2019-08-15. 29. [↑](#cite_ref-29) ["UseR! 2021 - The R User Conference"](https://user2021.r-project.org/). Retrieved 2020-03-23. 30. [↑](#cite_ref-30) most used assignment operator in R is `<-` * R Development Core Team. ["Writing R Extensions"](https://cran.r-project.org/doc/manuals/R-exts.html#Tidying-R-code). Retrieved 2018-09-11. [...] we recommend the consistent use of the preferred assignment operator '<-' (rather than '=') for assignment. * ["Google's R Style Guide"](https://google.github.io/styleguide/Rguide.xml#assignment). Retrieved 2018-09-11. * Wickham, Hadley. ["Style Guide"](http://stat405.had.co.nz/r-style.html). Retrieved 2018-09-11. * Bengtsson, Henrik (January 2009). ["R Coding Conventions (RCC) – a draft"](https://docs.google.com/document/preview?id=1esDVxyWvH8AsX-VJa-8oqWaHLs4stGlIbk8kLc5VlII&pli=1). Retrieved 2018-09-11. 31. [↑](#cite_ref-31) R Development Core Team. ["Assignments with the = Operator"](https://developer.r-project.org/equalAssign.html). Retrieved 2018-09-11. ## Other websites | | | --- | | Find more about**R (programming language)**at Wikipedia's [sister projects](/wiki/Wikipedia:Sister_projects "Wikipedia:Sister projects") | | | [Media](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:GNU_R "commons:Category:GNU R") from Commons | | | [Textbooks](https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/R_Programming "wikibooks:R Programming") from Wikibooks | | | [Learning resources](https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/How_to_use_R "wikiversity:How to use R") from Wikiversity | | [Authority control](/wiki/Help:Authority_control "Help:Authority control") | | --- | | International | * [VIAF](https://viaf.org/viaf/7154440112035341758) | | National | * [France](https://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb14568271t) * [BnF data](https://data.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb14568271t) * [Germany](https://d-nb.info/gnd/4705956-4) * [Israel](http://uli.nli.org.il/F/?func=find-b&local_base=NLX10&find_code=UID&request=987007539738205171) * [United States](https://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2002004407) * [Czech Republic](https://aleph.nkp.cz/F/?func=find-c&local_base=aut&ccl_term=ica=ph986737&CON_LNG=ENG) | | Other | * [IdRef](https://www.idref.fr/08080859X) |
R| | | R terminal | | Paradigms | Multi-paradigm: Array programming, object-oriented, imperative, functional | | Designed by | Ross Ihaka and Robert Gentleman (statistician) | | Developer | R Core Team[1] | | First appeared | August 1993; 30 years ago (1993-08)[2] | | Stable release | 4.3.2[3]  (codename "Dark and Stormy Night; Holding the Windsock; Arbor Day; See Things Now; Taking Off Again; Bunny-Wunnies Freak Out; Lost Library Book; Camp Pontanezen; Kick Things; Bird Hippie; One Push-Up; One Push-Up; Innocent and Trusting; Shortstop Beagle; Already Tomorrow; Beagle Scouts") / 31 October 2023; 7 days ago (31 October 2023) | | License | GNU GPL v2[4] | | Filename extensions | * .r * .rdata * .rds * .rda | | Website | www.r-project.org | | Influenced by | | * Common Lisp * Scheme[2] * XLispStat | | Influenced | | Julia[5] | | * R Programming at Wikibooks | R is a programming language and free software environment for statistics.[6][7][8][9][10][11] R is a language built for a specific purpose. It is strictly designed for statistical analysis. The algorithms for many statistical models are devised in R. Precisely R is the language of Statistical Analyzers. It’s an open source and the best suite for the statisticians to develop statistical softwares. R is putting utmost efforts to walk parallelly to Python. Usage in other areas The R language was originally made for statistics. But today, it is also used in many scientific fields including ecology.[12][13] Development history A list of changes in R releases is maintained in various "news" files at CRAN (Comprehensive R Archive Network).[14] Some highlights are listed below for several major releases. | Release | Date | Description | | --- | --- | --- | | 0.16 | | This is the last test version. | | 0.49 | 1997-04-23 | This is the oldest source release which is currently available on CRAN.[15] CRAN is started on this date, with 3 mirrors that initially hosted 12 packages.[16] | | 0.60 | 1997-12-05 | R becomes an official part of the GNU Project. The code is hosted and maintained on CVS. | | 0.65.1 | 1999-10-07 | First versions of update.packages and install.packages functions for downloading and installing packages from CRAN.[17] | | 1.0 | 2000-02-29 | The developers declared that it is stable enough for production use.[18] | | 1.4 | 2001-12-19 | S4 methods are introduced and the first version for Mac OS X is made available soon after. | | 1.8 | 2003-10-08 | Introduced a flexible condition handling mechanism for signalling and handling condition objects. | | 2.0 | 2004-10-04 | Introduced fast loading of data with minimal expense of system memory. | | 2.1 | 2005-04-18 | Support for UTF-8 encoding. They also started of internationalization and localization for different languages. | | 2.6.2 | 2008-02-08 | Last version to support Windows 95, 98, Me and NT 4.0[19] | | 2.11 | 2010-04-22 | Support for Windows 64 bit systems. | | 2.12.2 | 2011-02-25 | Last version to support Windows 2000[20] | | 2.13 | 2011-04-14 | Adding a new compiler function that allows speeding up functions by converting them to byte-code. | | 2.14 | 2011-10-31 | Added mandatory namespaces for packages. Added a new parallel package. | | 2.15 | 2012-03-30 | New load balancing functions. Improved serialization speed for long vectors. | | 3.0.0 | 2013-04-03 | Support for numeric index values 231 and larger on 64 bit systems. | | 3.3.3 | 2017-03-06 | Last version to support Microsoft Windows XP. | | 3.4.0 | 2017-04-21 | Just-in-time compilation (JIT) of functions and loops to byte-code enabled by default. | | 3.5.0 | 2018-04-23 | Packages byte-compiled on installation by default. Compact internal representation of integer sequences. Added a new serialization format to support compact internal representations. | | 3.6.0 | 2019-04-26 | | | 4.0.0 | 2020-04-24 | | Communities R has local communities worldwide for users to share ideas and learn.[21][22] There are a growing number of R events bringing its users together, such as conferences (e.g. useR!, WhyR?, conectaR, SatRdays)[23][24] and other meetups.[25] useR! conferences The official annual gathering of R users is called "useR!".[26] The first such event was useR! 2004 in May 2004, Vienna, Austria.[27] After skipping 2005, the useR! conference has been held annually.[28] Subsequent conferences have included:[26] useR! 2006, Vienna, Austria useR! 2007, Ames, Iowa, USA useR! 2008, Dortmund, Germany useR! 2009, Rennes, France useR! 2010, Gaithersburg, Maryland, USA useR! 2011, Coventry, United Kingdom useR! 2012, Nashville, Tennessee, USA useR! 2013, Albacete, Spain useR! 2014, Los Angeles, California, USA useR! 2015, Aalborg, Denmark useR! 2016, Stanford, California, USA useR! 2017, Brussels, Belgium useR! 2018, Brisbane, Australia useR! 2019, Toulouse, France Future conferences planned are as follows:[26][29] useR! 2020, St. Louis, Missouri, USA (Canceled) useR! 2021, Zurich, Switzerland The R Journal The R Journal is the open access refereed journal of the R project. It features articles on the use and development of the R language. Basic syntax The following examples illustrate the basic syntax of the language and use of the command-line interface. In R, the generally preferred[30] assignment operator is an arrow made from two characters <-. Although = can be used instead.[31] ``` x <- 1:6 # Create vector. y <- x^2 # Create vector by formula. print(y) # Print the vector’s contents. [1] 1 4 9 16 25 36 mean(y) # Arithmetic mean of vector. [1] 15.16667 var(y) # Sample variance of vector. [1] 178.9667 model <- lm(y ~ x) # Linear regression model y = A + B * x. print(model) # Print the model’s results. Call: lm(formula = y ~ x) Coefficients: (Intercept) x -9.333 7.000 summary(model) # Display an in-depth summary of the model. Call: lm(formula = y ~ x) Residuals: 1 2 3 4 5 6 3.3333 -0.6667 -2.6667 -2.6667 -0.6667 3.3333 Coefficients: Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|) (Intercept) -9.3333 2.8441 -3.282 0.030453 * x 7.0000 0.7303 9.585 0.000662 *** Signif. codes: 0 ‘***’ 0.001 ‘**’ 0.01 ‘*’ 0.05 ‘.’ 0.1 ‘ ’ 1 Residual standard error: 3.055 on 4 degrees of freedom Multiple R-squared: 0.9583, Adjusted R-squared: 0.9478 F-statistic: 91.88 on 1 and 4 DF, p-value: 0.000662 par(mfrow = c(2, 2)) # Create a 2 by 2 layout for figures. plot(model) # Output diagnostic plots of the model. ``` References ↑ Hornik, Kurt (November 26, 2015). "R FAQ". The Comprehensive R Archive Network. 2.1 What is R?. Retrieved 2018-08-05. ↑ 2.0 2.1 Ihaka, Ross (1998). R : Past and Future History (PDF). Interface '98 (Technical report). Statistics Department, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand. ↑ Peter Dalgaard (31 October 2023). "R 4.3.2 is released". Retrieved 2 November 2023. ↑ "R license". r-project. Retrieved 2018-08-05. ↑ "Introduction". The Julia Manual. Archived from the original on 20 June 2018. Retrieved 5 August 2018. ↑ Crawley, M. J. (2012). The R book. John Wiley & Sons. ↑ Dalgaard, P. (2008). Introductory statistics with R. Springer. ↑ Maronna, R. A., Martin, R. D., & Yohai, V. J. (2019). Robust statistics: theory and methods (with R). John Wiley & Sons. ↑ Ugarte, M. D., Militino, A. F., & Arnholt, A. T. (2008). Probability and Statistics with R. CRC Press. ↑ Bruce, P., Bruce, A., & Gedeck, P. (2020). Practical Statistics for Data Scientists: 50+ Essential Concepts Using R and Python. O'Reilly Media. ↑ Kruschke, J. (2014). Doing Bayesian data analysis: A tutorial with R, JAGS, and Stan. Academic Press. ↑ Borcard, D., Gillet, F., & Legendre, P. (2018). Numerical ecology with R. Springer. ↑ Bolker, B. M. (2008). Ecological models and data in R. Princeton University Press. ↑ Changes in versions 3.0.0 onward: "R News". cran.r-project.org. Retrieved 2014-07-03. Earlier change logs (by major release number): "NEWS". cran.r-project.org. Retrieved 2020-06-28. "NEWS.3". cran.r-project.org. Retrieved 2020-06-28. "NEWS.2". cran.r-project.org. Retrieved 2017-04-08. "NEWS.1". cran.r-project.org. Retrieved 2017-04-08. "NEWS.0". cran.r-project.org. Retrieved 2017-04-08. ↑ "Index of /src/base/R-0". ↑ "ANNOUNCE: CRAN". ↑ https://cran.r-project.org/src/base/NEWS.0 ↑ Peter Dalgaard. "R-1.0.0 is released". Retrieved 2009-06-06. ↑ https://cran-archive.r-project.org/bin/windows/base/old/2.7.0/CHANGES.R-2.7.0 ↑ "R FAQ". Retrieved 2020-03-20. ↑ "Local R User Group Directory". Revolutions Blog. Retrieved 12 May 2018. ↑ A list of R conferences and meetings. Jumping Rivers. Retrieved 12 May 2018. ↑ "official website of WhyR? conference". WhyR?. Retrieved 26 June 2019. ↑ "SatRdays listing". SatRdays. Retrieved 26 June 2019. ↑ "R Project for Statistical Computing". Meetup. Retrieved 12 May 2018. ↑ 26.0 26.1 26.2 "R: Conferences". r-project.org. 2019-11-01. Retrieved 2019-11-19. ↑ "useR! 2004 - The R User Conference". 27 May 2004. Archived from the original on 2013-09-14. Retrieved 2018-09-09. ↑ R Project (9 August 2013). "R-related Conferences". Retrieved 2019-08-15. ↑ "UseR! 2021 - The R User Conference". Retrieved 2020-03-23. ↑ most used assignment operator in R is <- R Development Core Team. "Writing R Extensions". Retrieved 2018-09-11. [...] we recommend the consistent use of the preferred assignment operator '<-' (rather than '=') for assignment. "Google's R Style Guide". Retrieved 2018-09-11. Wickham, Hadley. "Style Guide". Retrieved 2018-09-11. Bengtsson, Henrik (January 2009). "R Coding Conventions (RCC) – a draft". Retrieved 2018-09-11. ↑ R Development Core Team. "Assignments with the = Operator". Retrieved 2018-09-11. Other websites | | | --- | | Find more aboutR (programming language)at Wikipedia's sister projects | | | Media from Commons | | | Textbooks from Wikibooks | | | Learning resources from Wikiversity | | Authority control | | --- | | International | * VIAF | | National | * France * BnF data * Germany * Israel * United States * Czech Republic | | Other | * IdRef |
611,962
2017_eruption_of_Mount_Agung
2017 eruption of Mount Agung
7,244,811
Mount Agung [Mount Agung](/wiki/Mount_Agung "Mount Agung"), a volcano on the island of [Bali](/wiki/Bali "Bali") in [Indonesia](/wiki/Indonesia "Indonesia"), erupted in 2017. Thousands of people had to leave the area. Air travel was affected. As of 27 November 2017, the alert level was at its highest and evacuation orders were in place. [Tectonic](/wiki/Tectonic "Tectonic") earthquakes from the volcano had been detected since early August. Volcanic activity increased for several weeks. It decreased significantly in late October. A second, more violent period of major activity began in late November. Forty thousand people had to leave 22 villages around Mount Agung. Airports had to be closed. More than 400 flights were canceled. About 59,000 passengers could not get on their flights.[[1]](#cite_note-1) ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["Mount Agung: Bali Airport Closed And 59,000 Passengers Affected By Cancelled Flights"](http://says.om/my/news/mount-agung-bali-airport-closed-and-flight-cancelled-in-bali). Retrieved 29 November 2017.[*[permanent dead link](/wiki/Wikipedia:Link_rot "Wikipedia:Link rot")*] *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [history](/wiki/Category:History_stubs "Category:History stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2017_eruption_of_Mount_Agung&action=edit)*.
Mount Agung Mount Agung, a volcano on the island of Bali in Indonesia, erupted in 2017. Thousands of people had to leave the area. Air travel was affected. As of 27 November 2017, the alert level was at its highest and evacuation orders were in place. Tectonic earthquakes from the volcano had been detected since early August. Volcanic activity increased for several weeks. It decreased significantly in late October. A second, more violent period of major activity began in late November. Forty thousand people had to leave 22 villages around Mount Agung. Airports had to be closed. More than 400 flights were canceled. About 59,000 passengers could not get on their flights.[1] References ↑ "Mount Agung: Bali Airport Closed And 59,000 Passengers Affected By Cancelled Flights". Retrieved 29 November 2017.[permanent dead link] This short article about history can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
97,777
List_of_The_Nanny_episodes
List of The Nanny episodes
8,644,672
This is a list of the episodes of the [CBS](/wiki/CBS "CBS") television [sitcom](/wiki/Sitcom "Sitcom") ***[The Nanny](/wiki/The_Nanny "The Nanny")***. There are **146** episodes in this series. ## Season One (1993-1994) | Episode Number | Title | Original Airdate | | --- | --- | --- | | 01 | **Pilot** After loud-mouthed Fran Fine is jilted by Danny, her husband-to-be and boss, she makes money by selling cosmetics door-to-door. One door happens to belong to Maxwell Sheffield, a Broadway producer who happens to need a nanny for his three children. Fran jumps at the chance. Her unconventional wisdom and methods disagree with everyone at first, but when she brings the kids to Maxwell's producer party, everyone realizes that Fran is valuable. | [November 3](/wiki/November_3 "November 3"), [1993](/wiki/1993 "1993") | | 02 | **Smoke Gets in Your Lies** Brighton seeks popularity at school. Fran and Val tell him about a boy in their middle school who was the coolest kid around-he smoked, drank, and even had tattoos. Brighton tries smoking, but gets caught. Fran realizes that the problem is her fault, and fears Brighton will turn her in...but he goes against character and keeps the secret. It just may mean that the children are beginning to like Fran! | [November 10](/wiki/November_10 "November 10"), [1993](/wiki/1993 "1993") | | 03 | **My Fair Nanny** Maxwell decides to throw a party to woo a rich woman to produce his play. Fran jumps at the chance to plan a High Tea for mothers and daughters, but C.C. fears that Fran's wacky ways will ruin the party. Fran is tutored to be a socialite and manages to impress the ladies. Unfortunately, Maggie reveals that none of the daughters are happy! Fran changes back into "Nanny-mode" and turns the boring party into a great time. | [November 17](/wiki/November_17 "November 17"), [1993](/wiki/1993 "1993") | | 04 | **The Nuchslep** Maxwell will not let Maggie go on a date without supervision. Fran volunteers to go. Maggie is fine with this arrangement...but her boyfriend seems to like Fran better! | [November 24](/wiki/November_24 "November 24"), [1993](/wiki/1993 "1993") | | 05 | **Here Comes the Brood** C.C. takes the kids on a trip to the zoo to prove that she is just as motherly as Fran. While there, everyone has a miserable time. When Grace points out that Fran is always fun to be with, C.C. nastily tells her that Fran only likes the children because she is paid to do so. Grace runs away from home-to Fran's mother's apartment. They then go off to a family wedding, where Fran promises Grace that she "doesn't get paid extra for loving her." She then threatens to beat C.C. up if she "ever hurts her kids again." | December 1, 1993 | | 06 | **The Butler, the Husband, the Wife and Her Mother** Fran's rich and obnoxious cousin comes to town, bragging about her great life. When she appears, Fran pretends that she owns the Sheffield's home. To do that, Niles pretends to be Mr. Sheffield...which means that Maxwell must pretend to be Niles! Things only get more complicated when the Butler's Association comes to evaluate "Niles." In the end, all is revealed, and Fran's cousin is impressed by the family. | [December 8](/wiki/December_8 "December 8"), [1993](/wiki/1993 "1993") | | 07 | **Imaginary Friend** Fran eats Gracie's Imaginary Friend | [December 15](/wiki/December_15 "December 15"), [1993](/wiki/1993 "1993") | | 08 | **Christmas Episode** It's Christmas and Fran has bought everyone great presents, counting on a bonus to pay for it all, sadly for her, she does not get one | [December 22](/wiki/December_22 "December 22"), [1993](/wiki/1993 "1993") | | 09 | **Personal Business** Brock Storm is going to star in Mr Sheffield's show, but only Mr Sheffield sets him up with The Nanny. | [December 29](/wiki/December_29 "December 29"), [1993](/wiki/1993 "1993") | | 10 | **The Nanny-in-Law** Mr Sheffield's nanny comes into town and is not happy with Fran's way of dealing with the kids. | [January 12](/wiki/January_12 "January 12"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 11 | **A Plot for Nanny** Fran starts dating a Funeral Director who decides to take a new career path. | [January 19](/wiki/January_19 "January 19"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 12 | **The Show Must Go On** The Nanny is hired to direct Gracie's play. | [January 26](/wiki/January_26 "January 26"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 13 | **Maggie the Model** When Maggie becomes a model, things do not turn out quite as she'd planned | [February 2](/wiki/February_2 "February 2"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 14 | **The Family Plumbing** The Plumbing is not working and Fran convinces Mr Sheffield to hire her cousin. Meanwhile, Brighton is caught kissing and The Nanny walks in on Mr Sheffield in the shower! | [February 9](/wiki/February_9 "February 9"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 15 | **Deep Throat** Fran must go to hospital to under-go an operation. | [March 2](/wiki/March_2 "March 2"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 16 | **Schlepped Away** After everyone decides to go on a holiday, they make a quick stop at Sylvia's, only to find they must stay there due to a strong blizzard. | [March 9](/wiki/March_9 "March 9"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 17 | **Stop the Wedding, I Want to Get Off** Maxwell's sister is going to marry a duke, but Fran's instinct tells her his sister loves her driver. | [March 16](/wiki/March_16 "March 16"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 18 | **Sunday in the Park with Fran** Mr Sheffield's play will only be a hit if a certain reviewer says it will be a hit, but after taking Frank Bradley's son to the park, Fran makes a mess when she hits Frank's son with a baguette. | [March 23](/wiki/March_23 "March 23"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 19 | **The Gym Teacher** Maggie is desperate to get out of gym, with help from 'The Nanny'. It will all be fine...will it not? | [April 6](/wiki/April_6 "April 6"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 20 | **Ode to Barbara Joan** CC father's in town and he seems to be more warm with Fran then CC when he asks her to attend a Barbara concert. | [April 13](/wiki/April_13 "April 13"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 21 | **Frannie's Choice** Fran is proposed to by her ex-fiancée Danny. Will she go, or will she stay where she belongs? | [April 27](/wiki/April_27 "April 27"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 22 | **I Don't Remember Mama** It's Mothers' Day and Mr Sheffield is doing everything he can to keep the kids' minds off their mother, with a heart-warming surprise. | [May 16](/wiki/May_16 "May 16"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | ## Season Two (1994-1995) | Episode Number | Title | Original Airdate | | --- | --- | --- | | 23 | **Fran-Lite** The children are heading back to school, but Brighton refuses to go back because he feels small in middle school. Also, things get weird when Maxwell starts dating a woman who's exactly like Fran! | [September 12](/wiki/September_12 "September 12"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 24 | **The Playwright** In order to teach Brighton a lesson about rejecting girls, Fran goes on a date with a man she used to torment in high school. | [September 19](/wiki/September_19 "September 19"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 25 | **Everybody Needs a Bubby** While the retirement home gets fumigated, Grandma Yetta comes to stay at the Sheffield Mansion, but when she starts passing some of her "wisdom" among the children, Fran and Maxwell are concerned. | [September 26](/wiki/September_26 "September 26"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 26 | **Material Fran** One of Fran's old high school friends sets her up with her husband's business partner to see how she likes someone who's loaded. The idea would sound mighty fine if Fran's date was not so old! | [October 3](/wiki/October_3 "October 3"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 27 | **Curse of the Grandmas** It is the first anniversary since Fran started working for the Sheffields, but Maxwell does not seem to recall this very important occasion. Also, Fran leads Gracie's girl scout troop to "adopt" their very own grandmas at Yetta's retirement home, but each of Gracie's grandmas drop dead! | [October 10](/wiki/October_10 "October 10"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 28 | **The Nanny Napper** During a mishap in the subway, Fran unknowingly "kidnaps" a Russian woman's baby. | [October 17](/wiki/October_17 "October 17"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 29 | **A Star is Unborn** Fran is hired by an amateur director to play Juliet in a reproduction of *Romeo and Juliet*. However, Maxwell protests this for reasons even he is unaware of. | [October 24](/wiki/October_24 "October 24"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 30 | **Pishke Business** Sylvia and her canasta club want to invest their pishke in Maxwell's next play, but theRE may not be a play when C.C. assaults Maxwell's other investor! | [October 31](/wiki/October_31 "October 31"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 31 | **Stock Tip** Fran picks up a stock [broker](/wiki/Broker "Broker") at the grocery store, and when she introduces him to Max, the two hit it off! | [November 7](/wiki/November_7 "November 7"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 32 | **The Whine Cellar** It is Sylvia's 50th birthday, and Fran is the hostess. However, when she and C.C. accidentally lock themselves inside the wine cellar, the two must learn to tolerate each other. | [November 14](/wiki/November_14 "November 14"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 33 | **When You Pish Upon a Star** When Maxwell casts a major child star named Jack Walker into his reproduction of *Oliver*, Fran is charged with taking care of this obnoxious kid. Things start to heat up when Fran convinces Jack to quit show business! | [November 21](/wiki/November_21 "November 21"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 34 | **Take Back Your Mink** Fran's great-aunt dies and leaves Fran her coveted mink coat. Unfortunately, Maggie's obsessive belief in animal rights prompts Fran to reject the coat, pitting her against her mother. | [November 21](/wiki/November_21 "November 21"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 35 | **The Strike** Maxwell and Fran attract unwanted press attention due to an incident on the opening night of Maxwell's latest play. | [November 28](/wiki/November_28 "November 28"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 36 | **I've Got a Secret** When Maxwell invites a high-profile actress to recover at his house from plastic surgery, Fran goes to great lengths to find out who she is. | [December 12](/wiki/December_12 "December 12"), [1994](/wiki/1994 "1994") | | 37 | **Kindervelt Days** Fran wants to go to her Kindervelt Camp reunion, but becomes desperate when she cannot find a handsome man to whoo one of her camp rivals. | [January 2](/wiki/January_2 "January 2"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 38 | **Canasta Masta** Brighton joins Sylvia's and Yetta's canasta team in a search for an invigorating sport, but Maxwell does not approve. | [January 9](/wiki/January_9 "January 9"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 39 | **The Will** Fran fears for Maxwell's life when she finds a letter addressing a heart problem that's supposedly his. | [January 16](/wiki/January_16 "January 16"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 40 | **The Nanny Behind the Man** Fran and Maxwell want to hire a major playwright to write a new play for them, so Fran tries to impress him by setting him up with another woman. Who could this be? | [January 23](/wiki/January_23 "January 23"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 41 | **A Fine Friendship** Fran starts dating a man, but thinks that he is homosexual. | [February 6](/wiki/February_6 "February 6"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 42 | **Lamb Chop's On the Menu** Max and C.C. hire Shari Lewis and Lamb Chop to create their first film. Meanwhile, Fran cares for C.C.'s dog, Chester. | [February 13](/wiki/February_13 "February 13"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 43 | **Close Shave** Fran earns Maggie a job as a hospital candy striper. Meanwhile, Maxwell learns why he should not accept food from C.C. | [February 20](/wiki/February_20 "February 20"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 44 | **What the Butler Sang** Impressed by Niles' recently discovered ability to sing, Fran convinces Max to hire him for a new play. Meanwhile, Fran's recently broken-up sister Nadine comes to visit. | [February 27](/wiki/February_27 "February 27"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 45 | **A Kiss Is Just a Kiss** Fran and Maggie compete in a kissing contest. | [May 3](/wiki/May_3 "May 3"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 46 | **Strange Bedfellows** Fran attends the nanny retirement party for one of her friends, but the unfortunate parallels of their lives lead Fran to fear for her future. | [May 8](/wiki/May_8 "May 8"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 47 | **The Chatterbox** Fran helps a down-on-her-luck actress to get a job at a local hair salon. | [May 15](/wiki/May_15 "May 15"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 48 | **Fran Gets Mugged** Fran gets robbed of her purse in the park. It could not get much worse, right? Wrong! | [May 22](/wiki/May_22 "May 22"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | ## Season Three (1995-1996) | Episode Number | Title | Original Airdate | | --- | --- | --- | | 49 | **Pen Pal** | [September 11](/wiki/September_11 "September 11"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 50 | **Franny and the Professor** | [September 18](/wiki/September_18 "September 18"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 51 | **Dope Diamond** | [September 25](/wiki/September_25 "September 25"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 52 | **A Fine Family Feud** | [October 2](/wiki/October_2 "October 2"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 53 | **Val's Apartment** | [October 9](/wiki/October_9 "October 9"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 54 | **Shopaholic** | [October 16](/wiki/October_16 "October 16"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 55 | **Oy Vey, You're Gay** | [October 23](/wiki/October_23 "October 23"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 56 | **The Party's Over** | [November 6](/wiki/November_6 "November 6"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 57 | **The Two Mrs. Sheffields** | [November 13](/wiki/November_13 "November 13"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 58 | **Having His Baby** | [November 20](/wiki/November_20 "November 20"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 59 | **The Unkindest Gift** | [November 27](/wiki/November_27 "November 27"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 60 | **The Kibbutz** | [December 4](/wiki/December_4 "December 4"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 61 | **An Offer She Can't Refuse** | [December 11](/wiki/December_11 "December 11"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 62 | **Oy to the World** - Fully animated episode | [December 18](/wiki/December_18 "December 18"), [1995](/wiki/1995 "1995") | | 63 | **Fashion Show** | [January 8](/wiki/January_8 "January 8"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 64 | **Where's Fran?** | [January 15](/wiki/January_15 "January 15"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 65 | **The Grandmas** | [January 22](/wiki/January_22 "January 22"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 66 | **Val's Boyfriend** | [February 5](/wiki/February_5 "February 5"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 67 | **Love is a Many Blundered Thing** | [February 12](/wiki/February_12 "February 12"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 68 | **Your Feets Too Big** | [February 19](/wiki/February_19 "February 19"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 69 | **Where's the Pearls?** | [February 26](/wiki/February_26 "February 26"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 70 | **The Hockey Show** | [March 4](/wiki/March_4 "March 4"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 71 | **That's Midlife** | [March 11](/wiki/March_11 "March 11"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 72 | **The Cantor Show** | [April 29](/wiki/April_29 "April 29"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 73 | **Green Card** | [May 6](/wiki/May_6 "May 6"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 74 | **Ship of Fran's** | [May 13](/wiki/May_13 "May 13"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 75 | **A Pup in Paris** | [May 20](/wiki/May_20 "May 20"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | ## Season Four (1996-1997) | Episode Number | Title | Original Airdate | | --- | --- | --- | | 76 | **The Tart with Heart** | [September 18](/wiki/September_18 "September 18"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 77 | **The Cradle Robbers** | [September 25](/wiki/September_25 "September 25"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 78 | **The Bird's Nest** | [September 25](/wiki/September_25 "September 25"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 79 | **The Rosie Show** | [October 9](/wiki/October_9 "October 9"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 80 | **Freida Needa Man** | [October 16](/wiki/October_16 "October 16"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 81 | **Me and Mrs. Joan** | [October 30](/wiki/October_30 "October 30"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 82 | **The Taxman Cometh** | [November 6](/wiki/November_6 "November 6"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 83 | **An Affair to Dismember** | [November 13](/wiki/November_13 "November 13"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 84 | **Tattoo** | [November 20](/wiki/November_20 "November 20"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 85 | **The Car Show** | [December 11](/wiki/December_11 "December 11"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 86 | **Hurricane Fran** | [December 18](/wiki/December_18 "December 18"), [1996](/wiki/1996 "1996") | | 87 | **Danny's Dead and Who's Got the Will?** | [January 8](/wiki/January_8 "January 8"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 88 | **Kissing Cousins** | [January 15](/wiki/January_15 "January 15"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 89 | **The Fifth Wheel** | [January 29](/wiki/January_29 "January 29"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 90 | **The Nose Knows** | [February 5](/wiki/February_5 "February 5"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 91 | **The Bank Robbery** | [February 12](/wiki/February_12 "February 12"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 92 | **Samson, He Denied Her** | [February 19](/wiki/February_19 "February 19"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 93 | **The Facts of Lice** | [March 5](/wiki/March_5 "March 5"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 94 | **Fran's Roots** | [March 12](/wiki/March_12 "March 12"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 95 | **The Nanny and the Hunk Producer** | [April 2](/wiki/April_2 "April 2"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 96 | **The Passed-Over Story** | [April 9](/wiki/April_9 "April 9"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 97 | **No Muse is Good Muse** | [April 23](/wiki/April_23 "April 23"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 98 | **You Bette Your Life** | [April 30](/wiki/April_30 "April 30"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 99 | **The Heather Biblow Story** | [May 7](/wiki/May_7 "May 7"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 100 | **The Boca Story** | [May 14](/wiki/May_14 "May 14"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 101 | **Fran's Gotta Have It** | [May 21](/wiki/May_21 "May 21"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | ## Season Five (1997-1998) | Episode Number | Title | Original Airdate | | --- | --- | --- | | 102 | **The Morning After** | [October 1](/wiki/October_1 "October 1"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 103 | **First Date** | [October 8](/wiki/October_8 "October 8"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 104 | **The Bobbie Fleckman Story** | [October 15](/wiki/October_15 "October 15"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 105 | **Fransom** | [October 22](/wiki/October_22 "October 22"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 106 | **The Ex-Niles** | [October 29](/wiki/October_29 "October 29"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 107 | **A Decent Proposal** | [November 5](/wiki/November_5 "November 5"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 108 | **Mommy and Mai** | [November 12](/wiki/November_12 "November 12"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 109 | **Fair Weather Fran** | [November 19](/wiki/November_19 "November 19"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 110 | **Educating Fran** | [December 10](/wiki/December_10 "December 10"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 111 | **From Flushing with Love** | [December 17](/wiki/December_17 "December 17"), [1997](/wiki/1997 "1997") | | 112 | **Rash to Judgement** | [January 7](/wiki/January_7 "January 7"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 113 | **One False Mole and You're Dead** | [January 14](/wiki/January_14 "January 14"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 114 | **Call Me Fran** | [January 21](/wiki/January_21 "January 21"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 115 | **Not Without My Nanny** | [January 28](/wiki/January_28 "January 28"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 116 | **The Engagement** | [March 4](/wiki/March_4 "March 4"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 117 | **The Dinner Party** | [March 11](/wiki/March_11 "March 11"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 118 | **Homie-Work** | [March 18](/wiki/March_18 "March 18"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 119 | **The Reunion Show** | [March 25](/wiki/March_25 "March 25"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 120 | **Immaculate Concepcion** | [April 1](/wiki/April_1 "April 1"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 121 | **The Pre-nup** | [April 29](/wiki/April_29 "April 29"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 122 | **The Best Man** | [May 6](/wiki/May_6 "May 6"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 123 | **The Wedding, Part I** | [May 13](/wiki/May_13 "May 13"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 124 | **The Wedding, Part II** | [May 13](/wiki/May_13 "May 13"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | ## Season Six (1998-1999) | Episode Number | Title | Original Airdate | | --- | --- | --- | | 125 | **The Honeymoon's Overboard** | [September 30](/wiki/September_30 "September 30"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 126 | **Fran Gets Shushed** | [October 7](/wiki/October_7 "October 7"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 127 | **Once a Secretary, Always a Secretary** | [October 14](/wiki/October_14 "October 14"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 128 | **Sara's Parents** | [October 21](/wiki/October_21 "October 21"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 129 | **Maggie's Boyfriend** | [October 28](/wiki/October_28 "October 28"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 130 | **I'm Pregnant** | [November 4](/wiki/November_4 "November 4"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 131 | **Mom's the Word** | [November 11](/wiki/November_11 "November 11"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 132 | **Making Whoopi** | [November 18](/wiki/November_18 "November 18"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 133 | **Oh, Say, Can You Ski?** | [November 25](/wiki/November_25 "November 25"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 134 | **The Hanukkah Story** | [December 16](/wiki/December_16 "December 16"), [1998](/wiki/1998 "1998") | | 135 | **The In-Law Who Came Forever** | [January 6](/wiki/January_6 "January 6"), [1999](/wiki/1999 "1999") | | 136 | **The Fran in the Mirror** | [January 20](/wiki/January_20 "January 20"), [1999](/wiki/1999 "1999") | | 137 | **The Yummy Mummy** | [February 3](/wiki/February_3 "February 3"), [1999](/wiki/1999 "1999") | | 138 | **California Here We Come** | [March 31](/wiki/March_31 "March 31"), [1999](/wiki/1999 "1999") | | 139 | **Ma'ternal Affairs** | [June 2](/wiki/June_2 "June 2"), [1999](/wiki/1999 "1999") | | 140 | **The Producers** | [June 9](/wiki/June_9 "June 9"), [1999](/wiki/1999 "1999") | | 141 | **The Dummy Twins** | [June 16](/wiki/June_16 "June 16"), [1999](/wiki/1999 "1999") | | 142 | **Yetta's Letters** | [June 16](/wiki/June_16 "June 16"), [1999](/wiki/1999 "1999") | | 143 | **Maggie's Wedding** | [June 23](/wiki/June_23 "June 23"), [1999](/wiki/1999 "1999") | | 144 | **The Baby Shower** | [June 23](/wiki/June_23 "June 23"), [1999](/wiki/1999 "1999") | | 145 | **The Finale, Part I** | [May 12](/wiki/May_12 "May 12"), [1999](/wiki/1999 "1999") | | 146 | **The Finale, Part II** | [May 12](/wiki/May_12 "May 12"), [1999](/wiki/1999 "1999") | ## Reunion Special: 2004 * *The Nanny Reunion: A Nosh to Remember*
This is a list of the episodes of the CBS television sitcom The Nanny. There are 146 episodes in this series. Season One (1993-1994) | Episode Number | Title | Original Airdate | | --- | --- | --- | | 01 | Pilot After loud-mouthed Fran Fine is jilted by Danny, her husband-to-be and boss, she makes money by selling cosmetics door-to-door. One door happens to belong to Maxwell Sheffield, a Broadway producer who happens to need a nanny for his three children. Fran jumps at the chance. Her unconventional wisdom and methods disagree with everyone at first, but when she brings the kids to Maxwell's producer party, everyone realizes that Fran is valuable. | November 3, 1993 | | 02 | Smoke Gets in Your Lies Brighton seeks popularity at school. Fran and Val tell him about a boy in their middle school who was the coolest kid around-he smoked, drank, and even had tattoos. Brighton tries smoking, but gets caught. Fran realizes that the problem is her fault, and fears Brighton will turn her in...but he goes against character and keeps the secret. It just may mean that the children are beginning to like Fran! | November 10, 1993 | | 03 | My Fair Nanny Maxwell decides to throw a party to woo a rich woman to produce his play. Fran jumps at the chance to plan a High Tea for mothers and daughters, but C.C. fears that Fran's wacky ways will ruin the party. Fran is tutored to be a socialite and manages to impress the ladies. Unfortunately, Maggie reveals that none of the daughters are happy! Fran changes back into "Nanny-mode" and turns the boring party into a great time. | November 17, 1993 | | 04 | The Nuchslep Maxwell will not let Maggie go on a date without supervision. Fran volunteers to go. Maggie is fine with this arrangement...but her boyfriend seems to like Fran better! | November 24, 1993 | | 05 | Here Comes the Brood C.C. takes the kids on a trip to the zoo to prove that she is just as motherly as Fran. While there, everyone has a miserable time. When Grace points out that Fran is always fun to be with, C.C. nastily tells her that Fran only likes the children because she is paid to do so. Grace runs away from home-to Fran's mother's apartment. They then go off to a family wedding, where Fran promises Grace that she "doesn't get paid extra for loving her." She then threatens to beat C.C. up if she "ever hurts her kids again." | December 1, 1993 | | 06 | The Butler, the Husband, the Wife and Her Mother Fran's rich and obnoxious cousin comes to town, bragging about her great life. When she appears, Fran pretends that she owns the Sheffield's home. To do that, Niles pretends to be Mr. Sheffield...which means that Maxwell must pretend to be Niles! Things only get more complicated when the Butler's Association comes to evaluate "Niles." In the end, all is revealed, and Fran's cousin is impressed by the family. | December 8, 1993 | | 07 | Imaginary Friend Fran eats Gracie's Imaginary Friend | December 15, 1993 | | 08 | Christmas Episode It's Christmas and Fran has bought everyone great presents, counting on a bonus to pay for it all, sadly for her, she does not get one | December 22, 1993 | | 09 | Personal Business Brock Storm is going to star in Mr Sheffield's show, but only Mr Sheffield sets him up with The Nanny. | December 29, 1993 | | 10 | The Nanny-in-Law Mr Sheffield's nanny comes into town and is not happy with Fran's way of dealing with the kids. | January 12, 1994 | | 11 | A Plot for Nanny Fran starts dating a Funeral Director who decides to take a new career path. | January 19, 1994 | | 12 | The Show Must Go On The Nanny is hired to direct Gracie's play. | January 26, 1994 | | 13 | Maggie the Model When Maggie becomes a model, things do not turn out quite as she'd planned | February 2, 1994 | | 14 | The Family Plumbing The Plumbing is not working and Fran convinces Mr Sheffield to hire her cousin. Meanwhile, Brighton is caught kissing and The Nanny walks in on Mr Sheffield in the shower! | February 9, 1994 | | 15 | Deep Throat Fran must go to hospital to under-go an operation. | March 2, 1994 | | 16 | Schlepped Away After everyone decides to go on a holiday, they make a quick stop at Sylvia's, only to find they must stay there due to a strong blizzard. | March 9, 1994 | | 17 | Stop the Wedding, I Want to Get Off Maxwell's sister is going to marry a duke, but Fran's instinct tells her his sister loves her driver. | March 16, 1994 | | 18 | Sunday in the Park with Fran Mr Sheffield's play will only be a hit if a certain reviewer says it will be a hit, but after taking Frank Bradley's son to the park, Fran makes a mess when she hits Frank's son with a baguette. | March 23, 1994 | | 19 | The Gym Teacher Maggie is desperate to get out of gym, with help from 'The Nanny'. It will all be fine...will it not? | April 6, 1994 | | 20 | Ode to Barbara Joan CC father's in town and he seems to be more warm with Fran then CC when he asks her to attend a Barbara concert. | April 13, 1994 | | 21 | Frannie's Choice Fran is proposed to by her ex-fiancée Danny. Will she go, or will she stay where she belongs? | April 27, 1994 | | 22 | I Don't Remember Mama It's Mothers' Day and Mr Sheffield is doing everything he can to keep the kids' minds off their mother, with a heart-warming surprise. | May 16, 1994 | Season Two (1994-1995) | Episode Number | Title | Original Airdate | | --- | --- | --- | | 23 | Fran-Lite The children are heading back to school, but Brighton refuses to go back because he feels small in middle school. Also, things get weird when Maxwell starts dating a woman who's exactly like Fran! | September 12, 1994 | | 24 | The Playwright In order to teach Brighton a lesson about rejecting girls, Fran goes on a date with a man she used to torment in high school. | September 19, 1994 | | 25 | Everybody Needs a Bubby While the retirement home gets fumigated, Grandma Yetta comes to stay at the Sheffield Mansion, but when she starts passing some of her "wisdom" among the children, Fran and Maxwell are concerned. | September 26, 1994 | | 26 | Material Fran One of Fran's old high school friends sets her up with her husband's business partner to see how she likes someone who's loaded. The idea would sound mighty fine if Fran's date was not so old! | October 3, 1994 | | 27 | Curse of the Grandmas It is the first anniversary since Fran started working for the Sheffields, but Maxwell does not seem to recall this very important occasion. Also, Fran leads Gracie's girl scout troop to "adopt" their very own grandmas at Yetta's retirement home, but each of Gracie's grandmas drop dead! | October 10, 1994 | | 28 | The Nanny Napper During a mishap in the subway, Fran unknowingly "kidnaps" a Russian woman's baby. | October 17, 1994 | | 29 | A Star is Unborn Fran is hired by an amateur director to play Juliet in a reproduction of Romeo and Juliet. However, Maxwell protests this for reasons even he is unaware of. | October 24, 1994 | | 30 | Pishke Business Sylvia and her canasta club want to invest their pishke in Maxwell's next play, but theRE may not be a play when C.C. assaults Maxwell's other investor! | October 31, 1994 | | 31 | Stock Tip Fran picks up a stock broker at the grocery store, and when she introduces him to Max, the two hit it off! | November 7, 1994 | | 32 | The Whine Cellar It is Sylvia's 50th birthday, and Fran is the hostess. However, when she and C.C. accidentally lock themselves inside the wine cellar, the two must learn to tolerate each other. | November 14, 1994 | | 33 | When You Pish Upon a Star When Maxwell casts a major child star named Jack Walker into his reproduction of Oliver, Fran is charged with taking care of this obnoxious kid. Things start to heat up when Fran convinces Jack to quit show business! | November 21, 1994 | | 34 | Take Back Your Mink Fran's great-aunt dies and leaves Fran her coveted mink coat. Unfortunately, Maggie's obsessive belief in animal rights prompts Fran to reject the coat, pitting her against her mother. | November 21, 1994 | | 35 | The Strike Maxwell and Fran attract unwanted press attention due to an incident on the opening night of Maxwell's latest play. | November 28, 1994 | | 36 | I've Got a Secret When Maxwell invites a high-profile actress to recover at his house from plastic surgery, Fran goes to great lengths to find out who she is. | December 12, 1994 | | 37 | Kindervelt Days Fran wants to go to her Kindervelt Camp reunion, but becomes desperate when she cannot find a handsome man to whoo one of her camp rivals. | January 2, 1995 | | 38 | Canasta Masta Brighton joins Sylvia's and Yetta's canasta team in a search for an invigorating sport, but Maxwell does not approve. | January 9, 1995 | | 39 | The Will Fran fears for Maxwell's life when she finds a letter addressing a heart problem that's supposedly his. | January 16, 1995 | | 40 | The Nanny Behind the Man Fran and Maxwell want to hire a major playwright to write a new play for them, so Fran tries to impress him by setting him up with another woman. Who could this be? | January 23, 1995 | | 41 | A Fine Friendship Fran starts dating a man, but thinks that he is homosexual. | February 6, 1995 | | 42 | Lamb Chop's On the Menu Max and C.C. hire Shari Lewis and Lamb Chop to create their first film. Meanwhile, Fran cares for C.C.'s dog, Chester. | February 13, 1995 | | 43 | Close Shave Fran earns Maggie a job as a hospital candy striper. Meanwhile, Maxwell learns why he should not accept food from C.C. | February 20, 1995 | | 44 | What the Butler Sang Impressed by Niles' recently discovered ability to sing, Fran convinces Max to hire him for a new play. Meanwhile, Fran's recently broken-up sister Nadine comes to visit. | February 27, 1995 | | 45 | A Kiss Is Just a Kiss Fran and Maggie compete in a kissing contest. | May 3, 1995 | | 46 | Strange Bedfellows Fran attends the nanny retirement party for one of her friends, but the unfortunate parallels of their lives lead Fran to fear for her future. | May 8, 1995 | | 47 | The Chatterbox Fran helps a down-on-her-luck actress to get a job at a local hair salon. | May 15, 1995 | | 48 | Fran Gets Mugged Fran gets robbed of her purse in the park. It could not get much worse, right? Wrong! | May 22, 1995 | Season Three (1995-1996) | Episode Number | Title | Original Airdate | | --- | --- | --- | | 49 | Pen Pal | September 11, 1995 | | 50 | Franny and the Professor | September 18, 1995 | | 51 | Dope Diamond | September 25, 1995 | | 52 | A Fine Family Feud | October 2, 1995 | | 53 | Val's Apartment | October 9, 1995 | | 54 | Shopaholic | October 16, 1995 | | 55 | Oy Vey, You're Gay | October 23, 1995 | | 56 | The Party's Over | November 6, 1995 | | 57 | The Two Mrs. Sheffields | November 13, 1995 | | 58 | Having His Baby | November 20, 1995 | | 59 | The Unkindest Gift | November 27, 1995 | | 60 | The Kibbutz | December 4, 1995 | | 61 | An Offer She Can't Refuse | December 11, 1995 | | 62 | Oy to the World - Fully animated episode | December 18, 1995 | | 63 | Fashion Show | January 8, 1996 | | 64 | Where's Fran? | January 15, 1996 | | 65 | The Grandmas | January 22, 1996 | | 66 | Val's Boyfriend | February 5, 1996 | | 67 | Love is a Many Blundered Thing | February 12, 1996 | | 68 | Your Feets Too Big | February 19, 1996 | | 69 | Where's the Pearls? | February 26, 1996 | | 70 | The Hockey Show | March 4, 1996 | | 71 | That's Midlife | March 11, 1996 | | 72 | The Cantor Show | April 29, 1996 | | 73 | Green Card | May 6, 1996 | | 74 | Ship of Fran's | May 13, 1996 | | 75 | A Pup in Paris | May 20, 1996 | Season Four (1996-1997) | Episode Number | Title | Original Airdate | | --- | --- | --- | | 76 | The Tart with Heart | September 18, 1996 | | 77 | The Cradle Robbers | September 25, 1996 | | 78 | The Bird's Nest | September 25, 1996 | | 79 | The Rosie Show | October 9, 1996 | | 80 | Freida Needa Man | October 16, 1996 | | 81 | Me and Mrs. Joan | October 30, 1996 | | 82 | The Taxman Cometh | November 6, 1996 | | 83 | An Affair to Dismember | November 13, 1996 | | 84 | Tattoo | November 20, 1996 | | 85 | The Car Show | December 11, 1996 | | 86 | Hurricane Fran | December 18, 1996 | | 87 | Danny's Dead and Who's Got the Will? | January 8, 1997 | | 88 | Kissing Cousins | January 15, 1997 | | 89 | The Fifth Wheel | January 29, 1997 | | 90 | The Nose Knows | February 5, 1997 | | 91 | The Bank Robbery | February 12, 1997 | | 92 | Samson, He Denied Her | February 19, 1997 | | 93 | The Facts of Lice | March 5, 1997 | | 94 | Fran's Roots | March 12, 1997 | | 95 | The Nanny and the Hunk Producer | April 2, 1997 | | 96 | The Passed-Over Story | April 9, 1997 | | 97 | No Muse is Good Muse | April 23, 1997 | | 98 | You Bette Your Life | April 30, 1997 | | 99 | The Heather Biblow Story | May 7, 1997 | | 100 | The Boca Story | May 14, 1997 | | 101 | Fran's Gotta Have It | May 21, 1997 | Season Five (1997-1998) | Episode Number | Title | Original Airdate | | --- | --- | --- | | 102 | The Morning After | October 1, 1997 | | 103 | First Date | October 8, 1997 | | 104 | The Bobbie Fleckman Story | October 15, 1997 | | 105 | Fransom | October 22, 1997 | | 106 | The Ex-Niles | October 29, 1997 | | 107 | A Decent Proposal | November 5, 1997 | | 108 | Mommy and Mai | November 12, 1997 | | 109 | Fair Weather Fran | November 19, 1997 | | 110 | Educating Fran | December 10, 1997 | | 111 | From Flushing with Love | December 17, 1997 | | 112 | Rash to Judgement | January 7, 1998 | | 113 | One False Mole and You're Dead | January 14, 1998 | | 114 | Call Me Fran | January 21, 1998 | | 115 | Not Without My Nanny | January 28, 1998 | | 116 | The Engagement | March 4, 1998 | | 117 | The Dinner Party | March 11, 1998 | | 118 | Homie-Work | March 18, 1998 | | 119 | The Reunion Show | March 25, 1998 | | 120 | Immaculate Concepcion | April 1, 1998 | | 121 | The Pre-nup | April 29, 1998 | | 122 | The Best Man | May 6, 1998 | | 123 | The Wedding, Part I | May 13, 1998 | | 124 | The Wedding, Part II | May 13, 1998 | Season Six (1998-1999) | Episode Number | Title | Original Airdate | | --- | --- | --- | | 125 | The Honeymoon's Overboard | September 30, 1998 | | 126 | Fran Gets Shushed | October 7, 1998 | | 127 | Once a Secretary, Always a Secretary | October 14, 1998 | | 128 | Sara's Parents | October 21, 1998 | | 129 | Maggie's Boyfriend | October 28, 1998 | | 130 | I'm Pregnant | November 4, 1998 | | 131 | Mom's the Word | November 11, 1998 | | 132 | Making Whoopi | November 18, 1998 | | 133 | Oh, Say, Can You Ski? | November 25, 1998 | | 134 | The Hanukkah Story | December 16, 1998 | | 135 | The In-Law Who Came Forever | January 6, 1999 | | 136 | The Fran in the Mirror | January 20, 1999 | | 137 | The Yummy Mummy | February 3, 1999 | | 138 | California Here We Come | March 31, 1999 | | 139 | Ma'ternal Affairs | June 2, 1999 | | 140 | The Producers | June 9, 1999 | | 141 | The Dummy Twins | June 16, 1999 | | 142 | Yetta's Letters | June 16, 1999 | | 143 | Maggie's Wedding | June 23, 1999 | | 144 | The Baby Shower | June 23, 1999 | | 145 | The Finale, Part I | May 12, 1999 | | 146 | The Finale, Part II | May 12, 1999 | Reunion Special: 2004 The Nanny Reunion: A Nosh to Remember
457,536
Běijīng_Shǒudū_Guójì_Jīchǎng
Běijīng Shǒudū Guójì Jīchǎng
4,848,932
Redirect to: * [Beijing Capital International Airport](/wiki/Beijing_Capital_International_Airport "Beijing Capital International Airport")
Redirect to: Beijing Capital International Airport
714,802
Potawatomi
Potawatomi
8,709,043
Potawatomi| *Bodéwadmi* | | --- | | Potawatomi at a rain dance in 1920 | | Total population | | 28,000 | | Regions with significant populations | |  [United States](/wiki/United_States "United States") ([Indiana](/wiki/Indiana "Indiana"), [Kansas](/wiki/Kansas "Kansas"), [Michigan](/wiki/Michigan "Michigan"), [Oklahoma](/wiki/Oklahoma "Oklahoma"), [Wisconsin](/wiki/Wisconsin "Wisconsin"), [Illinois](/wiki/Illinois "Illinois")) [Canada](/wiki/Canada "Canada") ([Ontario](/wiki/Ontario "Ontario")) | | Languages | | [English](/wiki/English_language "English language"), Potawatomi | | Religion | | [Catholicism](/wiki/Catholicism "Catholicism"), [Methodism](/wiki/Methodism "Methodism"), Midewiwin | The **Pottawatomi** [/ˌpɑːtəˈwɑːtəmiː/](/wiki/Help:IPA/English "Help:IPA/English"),[[1]](#cite_note-1) also spelled **Pottawatomie** and **Potawatomi** (among many variations), are a Native American people of the [Great Plains](/wiki/Great_Plains "Great Plains"), upper [Mississippi River](/wiki/Mississippi_River "Mississippi River"), and western [Great Lakes](/wiki/Indigenous_peoples_of_the_Northeastern_Woodlands "Indigenous peoples of the Northeastern Woodlands") region. They traditionally speak the Potawatomi language. That language is part of the [Algonquian family](/wiki/Algonquian_languages "Algonquian languages"). The Potawatomi called themselves ***Neshnabé***, a [cognate](/wiki/Cognate "Cognate") of the word *Anishinaabe*. The Potawatomi are part of a long-term friendship, called the Council of Three Fires, with the [Ojibwe](/wiki/Ojibwe "Ojibwe") and Odawa (Ottawa). ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) Clifton, James A. (1978). "Potawatomi." In *Northeast*, ed. Bruce G. Trigger. Vol. 15 of *Handbook of North American Indians*, ed. William C. Sturtevant. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution, pg. 725 ## Other websites Wikimedia Commons has media related to ***[Potawatomi](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Potawatomi "commons:Category:Potawatomi")***. * ["Potawatomi Indians"](https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Catholic_Encyclopedia_(1913)/Potawatomi_Indians). *[Catholic Encyclopedia](/wiki/Catholic_Encyclopedia "Catholic Encyclopedia")*. New York: Robert Appleton Company. 1913. * [Hannahville Indian Community; Wilson, MI](http://www.hannahville.net/) * [Citizen Potawatomi Nation](http://www.potawatomi.org/), official website * [First Nations Compact Histories: Potawatomi History](http://www.tolatsga.org/pota.html) [Archived](https://web.archive.org/web/20080611144959/http://www.tolatsga.org/pota.html) 2008-06-11 at the [Wayback Machine](/wiki/Wayback_Machine "Wayback Machine") * [Forest County Potawatomi](http://www.fcpotawatomi.com/) * [Kettle & Stony Point First Nation](http://www.kettlepoint.org) * [Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Band of Pottawatomi](https://gunlaketribe-nsn.gov/) (Gun Lake) * [Moose Deer Point First Nation](http://www.moosedeerpoint.com/) [Archived](https://web.archive.org/web/20130624000448/http://moosedeerpoint.com/) 2013-06-24 at the [Wayback Machine](/wiki/Wayback_Machine "Wayback Machine") * [Nottawaseppi Huron Band of Potawatomi](http://www.nhbpi.com/) * [Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians](http://www.pokagon.com) * [Potawatomi Author Larry Mitchell](http://nativeblog.typepad.com/) * [Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation](http://www.pbpindiantribe.com/) * [Treaties with the Potawatomi](http://www.kansasheritage.org/PBP/books/treaties/title.html#toc) * [Treaty Between the Ottawa, Chippewa, Wyandot, and Potawatomi Indians](http://www.wdl.org/en/item/2746/) * [Potawatomi Migration from Wisconsin and Michigan to Canada](https://www.geni.com/projects/Potawatomi-Migration-from-Wisconsin-Michigan-to-Canada/31326) | * [v](/wiki/Template:Demographics_of_the_United_States "Template:Demographics of the United States") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Demographics_of_the_United_States&action=edit) Demographics of the United States | | --- | | Demographic history | | Economic and social | * [Household income](/wiki/Household_income_in_the_United_States "Household income in the United States") * [Income inequality](/wiki/Income_inequality_in_the_United_States "Income inequality in the United States") | | [Religion](/wiki/Religion_in_the_United_States "Religion in the United States") | * Buddhists * [Christians](/wiki/Christianity_in_the_United_States "Christianity in the United States") * [Jews](/wiki/American_Jews "American Jews") | | [Race and ethnicity](/wiki/Race_and_ethnicity_in_the_United_States "Race and ethnicity in the United States") | * [People of the United States / Americans](/wiki/Americans "Americans") * [2020 Census](/wiki/2020_United_States_Census "2020 United States Census") * [Racism](/wiki/Racism_in_the_United_States "Racism in the United States") * [White Americans](/wiki/White_American "White American"): [European Americans](/wiki/European_American "European American") + [English Americans](/wiki/English_American "English American") + [French Americans](/wiki/French_American "French American") + [German Americans](/wiki/German_American "German American") + [Irish Americans](/wiki/Irish_American "Irish American") + [Italian Americans](/wiki/Italian_American "Italian American") * [Iranian Americans](/wiki/Iranian_American "Iranian American") * [Israeli Americans](/wiki/Israeli_American "Israeli American") * [White Hispanic and Latino Americans](/wiki/White_Hispanic_and_Latino_Americans "White Hispanic and Latino Americans") * Black Americans: [African Americans](/wiki/African_American "African American") * [African immigrants to the United States](/wiki/African_immigration_to_the_United_States "African immigration to the United States") * [Afro-Caribbean / West Indian Americans](/wiki/West_Indian_American "West Indian American") * [Black Hispanic and Latino Americans](/wiki/Black_Hispanic_and_Latino_Americans "Black Hispanic and Latino Americans") * [Asian Americans](/wiki/Asian_American "Asian American") + [Asian Hispanic and Latino Americans](/wiki/Asian_Hispanic_and_Latino_Americans "Asian Hispanic and Latino Americans") + [Chinese Americans](/wiki/Chinese_American "Chinese American") + [Filipino Americans](/wiki/Filipino_American "Filipino American") + [Indian Americans](/wiki/Indian_American "Indian American") + [Japanese Americans](/wiki/Japanese_American "Japanese American") + [Vietnamese Americans](/wiki/Vietnamese_American "Vietnamese American") * Americans from other parts of the Americas: [Canadian](/wiki/Canadian_American "Canadian American") * [Guyanese American](/wiki/Guyanese_American "Guyanese American") * [Hispanic and Latino Americans](/wiki/Hispanic_and_Latino_Americans "Hispanic and Latino Americans") + [Cuban Americans](/wiki/Cuban_American "Cuban American") + [Mexican Americans](/wiki/Mexican_American "Mexican American") + [Puerto Ricans (Stateside)](/wiki/Puerto_Ricans_in_the_United_States "Puerto Ricans in the United States") * [Native Americans](/wiki/Native_Americans_in_the_United_States "Native Americans in the United States") and [Alaska Natives](/wiki/Alaska_Natives "Alaska Natives") * [Pacific Islander Americans](/wiki/Pacific_Islander_Americans "Pacific Islander Americans") + [Chamorro Americans](/wiki/Chamorro_people "Chamorro people") + [Native Hawaiians](/wiki/Native_Hawaiians "Native Hawaiians") + [Samoan Americans](/wiki/Samoan_American "Samoan American") * Other ethnic groups + [Romani people](/wiki/Romani_Americans "Romani Americans") | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about the [United States](/wiki/Category:United_States_stubs "Category:United States stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Potawatomi&action=edit)*.
Potawatomi| Bodéwadmi | | --- | | Potawatomi at a rain dance in 1920 | | Total population | | 28,000 | | Regions with significant populations | |  United States (Indiana, Kansas, Michigan, Oklahoma, Wisconsin, Illinois) Canada (Ontario) | | Languages | | English, Potawatomi | | Religion | | Catholicism, Methodism, Midewiwin | The Pottawatomi /ˌpɑːtəˈwɑːtəmiː/,[1] also spelled Pottawatomie and Potawatomi (among many variations), are a Native American people of the Great Plains, upper Mississippi River, and western Great Lakes region. They traditionally speak the Potawatomi language. That language is part of the Algonquian family. The Potawatomi called themselves Neshnabé, a cognate of the word Anishinaabe. The Potawatomi are part of a long-term friendship, called the Council of Three Fires, with the Ojibwe and Odawa (Ottawa). References ↑ Clifton, James A. (1978). "Potawatomi." In Northeast, ed. Bruce G. Trigger. Vol. 15 of Handbook of North American Indians, ed. William C. Sturtevant. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution, pg. 725 Other websites Wikimedia Commons has media related to Potawatomi. "Potawatomi Indians". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. 1913. Hannahville Indian Community; Wilson, MI Citizen Potawatomi Nation, official website First Nations Compact Histories: Potawatomi History Archived 2008-06-11 at the Wayback Machine Forest County Potawatomi Kettle & Stony Point First Nation Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Band of Pottawatomi (Gun Lake) Moose Deer Point First Nation Archived 2013-06-24 at the Wayback Machine Nottawaseppi Huron Band of Potawatomi Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians Potawatomi Author Larry Mitchell Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation Treaties with the Potawatomi Treaty Between the Ottawa, Chippewa, Wyandot, and Potawatomi Indians Potawatomi Migration from Wisconsin and Michigan to Canada | * v * t * e Demographics of the United States | | --- | | Demographic history | | Economic and social | * Household income * Income inequality | | Religion | * Buddhists * Christians * Jews | | Race and ethnicity | * People of the United States / Americans * 2020 Census * Racism White Americans: European Americans English Americans French Americans German Americans Irish Americans Italian Americans Iranian Americans Israeli Americans White Hispanic and Latino Americans Black Americans: African Americans African immigrants to the United States Afro-Caribbean / West Indian Americans Black Hispanic and Latino Americans Asian Americans Asian Hispanic and Latino Americans Chinese Americans Filipino Americans Indian Americans Japanese Americans Vietnamese Americans Americans from other parts of the Americas: Canadian Guyanese American Hispanic and Latino Americans Cuban Americans Mexican Americans Puerto Ricans (Stateside) Native Americans and Alaska Natives Pacific Islander Americans Chamorro Americans Native Hawaiians Samoan Americans Other ethnic groups Romani people | This short article about the United States can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
401,356
Cash_Cab
Cash Cab
8,615,337
| Cash Cab | | --- | | Genre | [Game show](/wiki/Game_show "Game show") | | Created by | Adam Wood | | Presented by | [Ben Bailey](/wiki/Ben_Bailey "Ben Bailey")Beth Melewski | | Country of origin | United States | | Original language(s) | English | | No. of seasons | 13 | | No. of episodes | 487 | | Production | | Producer(s) | Lion Television | | Running time | 24–26 minutes | | Production company(s) | Lion Television | | Distributor | MGM Domestic Television Distribution | | Release | | Original network | [Discovery Channel](/wiki/Discovery_Channel "Discovery Channel") (2005–12, 2017–18)Bravo (2019–20) | | Original release | December 5, 2005 (2005-12-05) –August 26, 2020 (2020-08-26) | | Chronology | | Related shows | *Cash Cab* | | Other websites | | [Website](https://www.discovery.com/tv-shows/cash-cab/) | ***Cash Cab*** is an [American](/wiki/United_States "United States") [television](/wiki/Television "Television") [game show](/wiki/Game_show "Game show"). It [aired](/wiki/Broadcasting "Broadcasting") on the [Discovery Channel](/wiki/Discovery_Channel "Discovery Channel"). The program started on December 5, 2005 and ended 2012.[[1]](#cite_note-1) It was hosted by [Ben Bailey](/wiki/Ben_Bailey "Ben Bailey"). It took place in [New York City](/wiki/New_York_City "New York City"). The series was also broadcast on Discovery from 2017 until 2018. A version was broadcast on Bravo from 2019 to 2020. ## Gameplay Potential contestants entered a [taxi](/wiki/Taxi "Taxi") driven by Bailey. When they got in and said where they wanted to go, they were made aware that they were in the Cash Cab. This included flashing ceiling lights and music, along with Bailey's greeting. They were then asked if they wanted to play. If they said that they wanted to play, they have to stay in the taxi until they reached where they wanted to go or until they got three questions wrong ("three strikes"). Contestants who played were asked a series of questions by Bailey. For the first four questions, $50 was added to their prize pool for each correct answer. The next four questions were worth $100 each. Questions after that were worth $200. In the first two seasons, the questions were worth $25, $50, and $100. If a contestant answered a question wrong, they added no money and got a strike. If the contestant got three strikes, they had to leave the taxi no matter where they are and got no prize. Contestants had two chances to ask for help. These chances were called "Shout-Outs." The first Shout-Out was the "Mobile Shout-Out." It let the contestant make a [phone call](/wiki/Telephone "Telephone") to someone they knew to ask them for help in answering the question. The call could take up to 15 seconds. The other Shout-Out was the "Street Shout-Out." With this Shout out, Bailey would pull the taxi over and the contestant would ask someone on the street for help. When the taxi had to stop at a [red light](/wiki/Traffic_light "Traffic light") and the contestant had at least $200, a "Red Light Challenge" was played. A question was asked that had more than one correct answer. The contestant had 30 seconds to give all of the correct answers to the question. If the contestant does so, $250 was added to their prize pool. If the 30 second time limit runs out, the contestant did not get a strike. In the early seasons, games had only one Red Light Challenge. Starting in the fourth season, some games had more than one. The second was played if the contestant had at least $1,000 in their prize pool. If the contestant got to where they wanted to go without getting three strikes, they had a choice: they could leave the taxi and keep the money in their prize pool or they could risk it on a "Video Bonus" question. If they decided to play the Video Bonus question, a [video clip](/wiki/Video "Video") was played and they were asked a question based on the clip. If the contestant answered correctly, their prize pool was doubled. If they gave a wrong answer, they lost all of their prize. Starting in the fourth season, some games were "Double Ride" games. In these games, the value for a correct answer was doubled. The first four questions were worth $100, the next four were worth $200 and questions after were worth $400. The Red Light Challenge was worth $500. ## Other versions In 2007, a [spin-off](/wiki/Spin-off "Spin-off"), *Cash Cab: After Dark*, started. Contestants were picked up near or after [sunset](/wiki/Sunset "Sunset"). The questions were worth double the amount of *Cash Cab.* The question were also harder. Another spin-off, *Cash Cab: Chicago*, started during the sixth season of *Cash Cab*. It was hosted by Beth Melewski. This series used the same rules as the New York *Cash Cab*. It ended after one season.[[2]](#cite_note-2) The series was also broadcast on the Discovery Channel from 2017 until 2018. A version of the program was broadcast from 2019 until 2020 on Bravo. ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) Adalian, Josef (April 18, 2012). ["It's the End of the Road for Cash Cab"](http://www.vulture.com/2012/04/the-end-of-the-road-for-cash-cab.html). *Vulture*. New York Media LLC. Retrieved April 22, 2013. 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2) ["End of the road for 'Cash Cab Chicago'"](http://www.suntimes.com/entertainment/television/8579723-421/end-of-the-road-for-cash-cab-chicago.html). *[Chicago Sun-Times](/wiki/Chicago_Sun-Times "Chicago Sun-Times")*. April 5, 2012. ## Other websites * [Official website](http://dsc.discovery.com/fansites/cashcab/cashcab.html) * [*Cash Cab*](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0790825/) on [IMDb](/wiki/IMDb "IMDb")
| Cash Cab | | --- | | Genre | Game show | | Created by | Adam Wood | | Presented by | Ben BaileyBeth Melewski | | Country of origin | United States | | Original language(s) | English | | No. of seasons | 13 | | No. of episodes | 487 | | Production | | Producer(s) | Lion Television | | Running time | 24–26 minutes | | Production company(s) | Lion Television | | Distributor | MGM Domestic Television Distribution | | Release | | Original network | Discovery Channel (2005–12, 2017–18)Bravo (2019–20) | | Original release | December 5, 2005 (2005-12-05) –August 26, 2020 (2020-08-26) | | Chronology | | Related shows | Cash Cab | | Other websites | | Website | Cash Cab is an American television game show. It aired on the Discovery Channel. The program started on December 5, 2005 and ended 2012.[1] It was hosted by Ben Bailey. It took place in New York City. The series was also broadcast on Discovery from 2017 until 2018. A version was broadcast on Bravo from 2019 to 2020. Gameplay Potential contestants entered a taxi driven by Bailey. When they got in and said where they wanted to go, they were made aware that they were in the Cash Cab. This included flashing ceiling lights and music, along with Bailey's greeting. They were then asked if they wanted to play. If they said that they wanted to play, they have to stay in the taxi until they reached where they wanted to go or until they got three questions wrong ("three strikes"). Contestants who played were asked a series of questions by Bailey. For the first four questions, $50 was added to their prize pool for each correct answer. The next four questions were worth $100 each. Questions after that were worth $200. In the first two seasons, the questions were worth $25, $50, and $100. If a contestant answered a question wrong, they added no money and got a strike. If the contestant got three strikes, they had to leave the taxi no matter where they are and got no prize. Contestants had two chances to ask for help. These chances were called "Shout-Outs." The first Shout-Out was the "Mobile Shout-Out." It let the contestant make a phone call to someone they knew to ask them for help in answering the question. The call could take up to 15 seconds. The other Shout-Out was the "Street Shout-Out." With this Shout out, Bailey would pull the taxi over and the contestant would ask someone on the street for help. When the taxi had to stop at a red light and the contestant had at least $200, a "Red Light Challenge" was played. A question was asked that had more than one correct answer. The contestant had 30 seconds to give all of the correct answers to the question. If the contestant does so, $250 was added to their prize pool. If the 30 second time limit runs out, the contestant did not get a strike. In the early seasons, games had only one Red Light Challenge. Starting in the fourth season, some games had more than one. The second was played if the contestant had at least $1,000 in their prize pool. If the contestant got to where they wanted to go without getting three strikes, they had a choice: they could leave the taxi and keep the money in their prize pool or they could risk it on a "Video Bonus" question. If they decided to play the Video Bonus question, a video clip was played and they were asked a question based on the clip. If the contestant answered correctly, their prize pool was doubled. If they gave a wrong answer, they lost all of their prize. Starting in the fourth season, some games were "Double Ride" games. In these games, the value for a correct answer was doubled. The first four questions were worth $100, the next four were worth $200 and questions after were worth $400. The Red Light Challenge was worth $500. Other versions In 2007, a spin-off, Cash Cab: After Dark, started. Contestants were picked up near or after sunset. The questions were worth double the amount of Cash Cab. The question were also harder. Another spin-off, Cash Cab: Chicago, started during the sixth season of Cash Cab. It was hosted by Beth Melewski. This series used the same rules as the New York Cash Cab. It ended after one season.[2] The series was also broadcast on the Discovery Channel from 2017 until 2018. A version of the program was broadcast from 2019 until 2020 on Bravo. References ↑ Adalian, Josef (April 18, 2012). "It's the End of the Road for Cash Cab". Vulture. New York Media LLC. Retrieved April 22, 2013. ↑ "End of the road for 'Cash Cab Chicago'". Chicago Sun-Times. April 5, 2012. Other websites Official website Cash Cab on IMDb
136,483
2008_elections
2008 elections
6,436,004
Redirect to: * [2008 United States presidential election](/wiki/2008_United_States_presidential_election "2008 United States presidential election")
Redirect to: 2008 United States presidential election
793,792
Twenterand
Twenterand
8,015,175
| Twenterand Tweanteraand | | --- | | Municipality | | | | FlagCoat of arms | | Location | | Map | | Coordinates: [52°24′N 6°37′E / 52.400°N 6.617°E / 52.400; 6.617](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Twenterand&params=52_24_N_6_37_E_type:city(33792)_region:NL-OV) | | Country | [Netherlands](/wiki/Netherlands "Netherlands") | | Province | [Overijssel](/wiki/Overijssel "Overijssel") | | Region | [Salland](/wiki/Salland "Salland"), [Twente](/wiki/Twente "Twente") | | Established | 2003 | | Seat | Vriezenveen | | Area | |  • Total | 108.14 km2 (41.75 sq mi) | |  • Land | 106.17 km2 (40.99 sq mi) | |  • Water | 1.97 km2 (0.76 sq mi) | | Elevation | 10 m (30 ft) | | Population (2019) | |  • Total | 33,792 | |  • Density | 318/km2 (820/sq mi) | | Website | [www.twenterand.nl](https://www.twenterand.nl) | **Twenterand** is a municipality in the province of [Overijssel](/wiki/Overijssel "Overijssel"), the Netherlands. About 34,000 people were living there in 2021. It was created from the former municipalities of Den Ham and Vriezenveen on 1 January 2001. The new municipality was called Vriezenveen but renamed in Twenterand in 2003. Twenterand lies partially in [Twente](/wiki/Twente "Twente") region (Vriezenveen area) and partially in [Salland](/wiki/Salland "Salland") region (Den Ham area, except eastern Vroomshoop). Administratively the municipality belongs to Twente region. ## References * [Plaatsengids.nl](https://www.plaatsengids.nl/twenterand) | Places next to Twenterand | | --- | | | | | | | --- | --- | --- | | [Ommen](/wiki/Ommen "Ommen") | | [Hardenberg](/wiki/Hardenberg "Hardenberg"), [Wielen](/wiki/Wielen "Wielen") ([Lower Saxony](/wiki/Lower_Saxony "Lower Saxony"), [Germany](/wiki/Germany "Germany")) | | | | [Tubbergen](/wiki/Tubbergen "Tubbergen") | | [Hellendoorn](/wiki/Hellendoorn "Hellendoorn"), [Wierden](/wiki/Wierden "Wierden") | [Almelo](/wiki/Almelo "Almelo") | | | | * [v](/wiki/Template:Overijssel_Province "Template:Overijssel Province") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Overijssel_Province&action=edit) [Municipalities](/wiki/List_of_municipalities_of_the_Netherlands "List of municipalities of the Netherlands") of [Overijssel](/wiki/Overijssel "Overijssel") (25) | | --- | | * [Almelo](/wiki/Almelo "Almelo") * [Borne](/wiki/Borne,_Netherlands "Borne, Netherlands") * [Dalfsen](/wiki/Dalfsen "Dalfsen") * [Deventer](/wiki/Deventer "Deventer") * [Dinkelland](/wiki/Dinkelland "Dinkelland") * [Enschede](/wiki/Enschede "Enschede") * [Haaksbergen](/wiki/Haaksbergen "Haaksbergen") * [Hardenberg](/wiki/Hardenberg "Hardenberg") * [Hellendoorn](/wiki/Hellendoorn "Hellendoorn") * [Hengelo](/wiki/Hengelo,_Overijssel "Hengelo, Overijssel") * [Hof van Twente](/wiki/Hof_van_Twente "Hof van Twente") * [Kampen](/wiki/Kampen,_Netherlands "Kampen, Netherlands") * [Losser](/wiki/Losser "Losser") * [Oldenzaal](/wiki/Oldenzaal "Oldenzaal") * [Olst-Wijhe](/wiki/Olst-Wijhe "Olst-Wijhe") * [Ommen](/wiki/Ommen "Ommen") * [Raalte](/wiki/Raalte "Raalte") * [Rijssen-Holten](/wiki/Rijssen-Holten "Rijssen-Holten") * [Staphorst](/wiki/Staphorst "Staphorst") * [Steenwijkerland](/wiki/Steenwijkerland "Steenwijkerland") * [Tubbergen](/wiki/Tubbergen "Tubbergen") * Twenterand * [Wierden](/wiki/Wierden "Wierden") * [Zwartewaterland](/wiki/Zwartewaterland "Zwartewaterland") * [Zwolle](/wiki/Zwolle,_Netherlands "Zwolle, Netherlands") | | | * [Netherlands](/wiki/Netherlands "Netherlands") * [Provinces](/wiki/Provinces_of_the_Netherlands "Provinces of the Netherlands") * [Municipalities](/wiki/List_of_municipalities_of_the_Netherlands "List of municipalities of the Netherlands") | | * [v](/wiki/Template:Salland_municipalities "Template:Salland municipalities") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Salland_municipalities&action=edit) [Municipalities](/wiki/List_of_municipalities_of_the_Netherlands "List of municipalities of the Netherlands") of [Salland](/wiki/Salland "Salland") (13) | | --- | | * [Dalfsen](/wiki/Dalfsen "Dalfsen") * [Deventer](/wiki/Deventer "Deventer") * [Hardenberg](/wiki/Hardenberg "Hardenberg") * [Hellendoorn](/wiki/Hellendoorn "Hellendoorn") * [Kampen](/wiki/Kampen,_Netherlands "Kampen, Netherlands") * [Olst-Wijhe](/wiki/Olst-Wijhe "Olst-Wijhe") * [Ommen](/wiki/Ommen "Ommen") * [Raalte](/wiki/Raalte "Raalte") * [Rijssen-Holten](/wiki/Rijssen-Holten "Rijssen-Holten") * [Staphorst](/wiki/Staphorst "Staphorst") * Twenterand * [Zwartewaterland](/wiki/Zwartewaterland "Zwartewaterland") * [Zwolle](/wiki/Zwolle,_Netherlands "Zwolle, Netherlands") | | | * [Netherlands](/wiki/Netherlands "Netherlands") * [Provinces](/wiki/Provinces_of_the_Netherlands "Provinces of the Netherlands") * [Municipalities](/wiki/List_of_municipalities_of_the_Netherlands "List of municipalities of the Netherlands") | | * [v](/wiki/Template:Twente_municipalities "Template:Twente municipalities") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Twente_municipalities&action=edit) [Municipalities](/wiki/List_of_municipalities_of_the_Netherlands "List of municipalities of the Netherlands") of [Twente](/wiki/Twente "Twente") (14) | | --- | | * [Almelo](/wiki/Almelo "Almelo") * [Borne](/wiki/Borne,_Netherlands "Borne, Netherlands") * [Dinkelland](/wiki/Dinkelland "Dinkelland") * [Enschede](/wiki/Enschede "Enschede") * [Haaksbergen](/wiki/Haaksbergen "Haaksbergen") * [Hellendoorn](/wiki/Hellendoorn "Hellendoorn") * [Hengelo](/wiki/Hengelo,_Overijssel "Hengelo, Overijssel") * [Hof van Twente](/wiki/Hof_van_Twente "Hof van Twente") * [Losser](/wiki/Losser "Losser") * [Oldenzaal](/wiki/Oldenzaal "Oldenzaal") * [Rijssen-Holten](/wiki/Rijssen-Holten "Rijssen-Holten") * [Tubbergen](/wiki/Tubbergen "Tubbergen") * Twenterand * [Wierden](/wiki/Wierden "Wierden") | | | * [Netherlands](/wiki/Netherlands "Netherlands") * [Provinces](/wiki/Provinces_of_the_Netherlands "Provinces of the Netherlands") * [Municipalities](/wiki/List_of_municipalities_of_the_Netherlands "List of municipalities of the Netherlands") | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [Europe](/wiki/Category:Europe_stubs "Category:Europe stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Twenterand&action=edit)*.
| Twenterand Tweanteraand | | --- | | Municipality | | | | FlagCoat of arms | | Location | | Map | | Coordinates: 52°24′N 6°37′E / 52.400°N 6.617°E / 52.400; 6.617 | | Country | Netherlands | | Province | Overijssel | | Region | Salland, Twente | | Established | 2003 | | Seat | Vriezenveen | | Area | |  • Total | 108.14 km2 (41.75 sq mi) | |  • Land | 106.17 km2 (40.99 sq mi) | |  • Water | 1.97 km2 (0.76 sq mi) | | Elevation | 10 m (30 ft) | | Population (2019) | |  • Total | 33,792 | |  • Density | 318/km2 (820/sq mi) | | Website | www.twenterand.nl | Twenterand is a municipality in the province of Overijssel, the Netherlands. About 34,000 people were living there in 2021. It was created from the former municipalities of Den Ham and Vriezenveen on 1 January 2001. The new municipality was called Vriezenveen but renamed in Twenterand in 2003. Twenterand lies partially in Twente region (Vriezenveen area) and partially in Salland region (Den Ham area, except eastern Vroomshoop). Administratively the municipality belongs to Twente region. References Plaatsengids.nl | Places next to Twenterand | | --- | | | | | | | --- | --- | --- | | Ommen | | Hardenberg, Wielen (Lower Saxony, Germany) | | | | Tubbergen | | Hellendoorn, Wierden | Almelo | | | | * v * t * e Municipalities of Overijssel (25) | | --- | | * Almelo * Borne * Dalfsen * Deventer * Dinkelland * Enschede * Haaksbergen * Hardenberg * Hellendoorn * Hengelo * Hof van Twente * Kampen * Losser * Oldenzaal * Olst-Wijhe * Ommen * Raalte * Rijssen-Holten * Staphorst * Steenwijkerland * Tubbergen * Twenterand * Wierden * Zwartewaterland * Zwolle | | | * Netherlands * Provinces * Municipalities | | * v * t * e Municipalities of Salland (13) | | --- | | * Dalfsen * Deventer * Hardenberg * Hellendoorn * Kampen * Olst-Wijhe * Ommen * Raalte * Rijssen-Holten * Staphorst * Twenterand * Zwartewaterland * Zwolle | | | * Netherlands * Provinces * Municipalities | | * v * t * e Municipalities of Twente (14) | | --- | | * Almelo * Borne * Dinkelland * Enschede * Haaksbergen * Hellendoorn * Hengelo * Hof van Twente * Losser * Oldenzaal * Rijssen-Holten * Tubbergen * Twenterand * Wierden | | | * Netherlands * Provinces * Municipalities | This short article about Europe can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
21,343
Gram
Gram
7,291,163
A **gram**, or **gramme**, is a [unit](/wiki/Unit "Unit") of measure in the [metric system](/wiki/Metric_system "Metric system"). It measures [mass](/wiki/Mass "Mass"), or how much [matter](/wiki/Matter "Matter") something is. The symbol is **g**. One gram used to be defined as the mass of one [cubic centimetre](/wiki/Cubic_centimetre "Cubic centimetre") of pure [water](/wiki/Water "Water") at 3.98 degrees [Celsius](/wiki/Celsius "Celsius"). Now one gram is defined as 1/1000 of a [kilogram](/wiki/Kilogram "Kilogram").[[1]](#cite_note-1) A milligram is 1/1000 of a gram. ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["Metric system - Facts from the Encyclopedia"](https://web.archive.org/web/20070907052428/http://education.yahoo.com/reference/encyclopedia/entry/metricsy). Yahoo! Education. Archived from [the original](http://education.yahoo.com/reference/encyclopedia/entry/metricsy) on 7 September 2007. Retrieved 3 June 2013. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [science](/wiki/Category:Science_stubs "Category:Science stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Gram&action=edit)*.
A gram, or gramme, is a unit of measure in the metric system. It measures mass, or how much matter something is. The symbol is g. One gram used to be defined as the mass of one cubic centimetre of pure water at 3.98 degrees Celsius. Now one gram is defined as 1/1000 of a kilogram.[1] A milligram is 1/1000 of a gram. References ↑ "Metric system - Facts from the Encyclopedia". Yahoo! Education. Archived from the original on 7 September 2007. Retrieved 3 June 2013. This short article about science can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
845,720
Coutances
Coutances
7,585,711
| Coutances | | --- | | [Subprefecture](/wiki/Subprefectures_in_France "Subprefectures in France") and [commune](/wiki/Communes_of_France "Communes of France") | | Coutances Cathedral | | Coat of arms | | Location of Coutances | | CoutancesShow map of FranceCoutancesShow map of Normandy | | Coordinates: [49°03′N 1°26′W / 49.05°N 1.44°W / 49.05; -1.44](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Coutances&params=49.05_N_1.44_W_type:city(8408)_region:FR-NOR)[Coordinates](/wiki/Geographic_coordinate_system "Geographic coordinate system"): [49°03′N 1°26′W / 49.05°N 1.44°W / 49.05; -1.44](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Coutances&params=49.05_N_1.44_W_type:city(8408)_region:FR-NOR) | | Country | [France](/wiki/France "France") | | [Region](/wiki/Regions_of_France "Regions of France") | [Normandy](/wiki/Normandy_(administrative_region) "Normandy (administrative region)") | | [Department](/wiki/Departments_of_France "Departments of France") | [Manche](/wiki/Manche "Manche") | | [Arrondissement](/wiki/Arrondissements_of_France "Arrondissements of France") | Coutances | | [Canton](/wiki/Cantons_of_France "Cantons of France") | Coutances | | [Intercommunality](/wiki/Communes_of_France#Intercommunality "Communes of France") | Coutances Mer et Bocage | | Government | |  • Mayor (2020–2026) | Jean-Dominique Bourdin | | Area**1** | 12.51 km2 (4.83 sq mi) | | Population (Jan. 2019)[[1]](#cite_note-popleg2019-1) | 8,408 | |  • Density | 670/km2 (1,700/sq mi) | | [Time zone](/wiki/Time_zone "Time zone") | [UTC+01:00](/wiki/UTC%2B01:00 "UTC+01:00") ([CET](/wiki/Central_European_Time "Central European Time")) | |  • Summer ([DST](/wiki/Daylight_saving_time "Daylight saving time")) | [UTC+02:00](/wiki/UTC%2B02:00 "UTC+02:00") ([CEST](/wiki/Central_European_Summer_Time "Central European Summer Time")) | | [INSEE](/wiki/INSEE_code "INSEE code")/Postal code | [50147](https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/1405599?geo=COM-50147) /50200 | | Elevation | 12–150 m (39–492 ft) | | **1** French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries. | **Coutances** is a [commune](/wiki/Communes_of_France "Communes of France"). It is in [Normandy](/wiki/Normandy "Normandy") in the [Manche](/wiki/Manche "Manche") [department](/wiki/Departments_of_France "Departments of France") in northwest [France](/wiki/France "France"). ## Sights * [Coutances Cathedral](/wiki/Coutances_Cathedral "Coutances Cathedral") * The church of Saint-Nicolas * The church of Saint-Pierre * The chateau of Gratot ## Twin towns – sister cities Coutances is [twinned](/wiki/Town_twinning "Town twinning") with: * [Ochsenfurt](/wiki/Ochsenfurt "Ochsenfurt"), [Germany](/wiki/Germany "Germany") * [Troina](/wiki/Troina "Troina"), [Italy](/wiki/Italy "Italy") * [Ilkley](/wiki/Ilkley "Ilkley"), [England](/wiki/England "England"), [United Kingdom](/wiki/United_Kingdom "United Kingdom") * Saint Ouen, [Jersey](/wiki/Jersey "Jersey"), [Channel Islands](/wiki/Channel_Islands "Channel Islands") * La Pocatière, [Canada](/wiki/Canada "Canada") ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-popleg2019_1-0) ["Populations légales 2019"](https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/6005800?geo=COM-50147). [The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies](/wiki/INSEE "INSEE"). 29 December 2021. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature in France](/wiki/Category:France_geography_stubs "Category:France geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Coutances&action=edit)*.
| Coutances | | --- | | Subprefecture and commune | | Coutances Cathedral | | Coat of arms | | Location of Coutances | | CoutancesShow map of FranceCoutancesShow map of Normandy | | Coordinates: 49°03′N 1°26′W / 49.05°N 1.44°W / 49.05; -1.44Coordinates: 49°03′N 1°26′W / 49.05°N 1.44°W / 49.05; -1.44 | | Country | France | | Region | Normandy | | Department | Manche | | Arrondissement | Coutances | | Canton | Coutances | | Intercommunality | Coutances Mer et Bocage | | Government | |  • Mayor (2020–2026) | Jean-Dominique Bourdin | | Area1 | 12.51 km2 (4.83 sq mi) | | Population (Jan. 2019)[1] | 8,408 | |  • Density | 670/km2 (1,700/sq mi) | | Time zone | UTC+01:00 (CET) | |  • Summer (DST) | UTC+02:00 (CEST) | | INSEE/Postal code | 50147 /50200 | | Elevation | 12–150 m (39–492 ft) | | 1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries. | Coutances is a commune. It is in Normandy in the Manche department in northwest France. Sights Coutances Cathedral The church of Saint-Nicolas The church of Saint-Pierre The chateau of Gratot Twin towns – sister cities Coutances is twinned with: Ochsenfurt, Germany Troina, Italy Ilkley, England, United Kingdom Saint Ouen, Jersey, Channel Islands La Pocatière, Canada References ↑ "Populations légales 2019". The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies. 29 December 2021. This short article about a place or feature in France can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
151,947
Eaux-Bonnes
Eaux-Bonnes
4,241,977
**Eaux-Bonnes** is a [commune](/wiki/Commune_in_France "Commune in France") of the [Pyrénées-Atlantiques](/wiki/Pyr%C3%A9n%C3%A9es-Atlantiques "Pyrénées-Atlantiques") *[département](/wiki/Departments_of_France "Departments of France")* in the southwestern part of [France](/wiki/France "France"). *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature in France](/wiki/Category:France_geography_stubs "Category:France geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Eaux-Bonnes&action=edit)*.
Eaux-Bonnes is a commune of the Pyrénées-Atlantiques département in the southwestern part of France. This short article about a place or feature in France can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
891,928
Zein_al-Sharaf_bint_Jamil
Zein al-Sharaf bint Jamil
8,855,189
| Zein al-Sharaf | | --- | | Queen Zein in 1953 | | [Queen consort of Jordan](/wiki/Queen_consort_of_Jordan "Queen consort of Jordan") | | Tenure | 20 July 1951 – 11 August 1952 | | | | Born | (1916-08-02)2 August 1916[Alexandria](/wiki/Alexandria "Alexandria"), Sultanate of Egypt | | Died | 26 April 1994(1994-04-26) (aged 77)[Lausanne](/wiki/Lausanne "Lausanne"), Switzerland | | Burial | Raghadan Palace | | Spouse | [King Talal](/wiki/Talal_of_Jordan "Talal of Jordan")(m. 1934; died 1972) | | Issue | [King Hussein](/wiki/Hussein_of_Jordan "Hussein of Jordan") [Prince Muhammad](/wiki/Prince_Muhammad_bin_Talal "Prince Muhammad bin Talal") [Prince Hassan](/wiki/Prince_Hassan_bin_Talal "Prince Hassan bin Talal") Princess Basma | | [House](/wiki/Dynasty "Dynasty") | Hashemite | | Father | Sharif Jamil 'Ali bin Nasser | | Mother | Wijdan Shakir Pasha | **Zein Al-Sharaf bint Jamil** ([Arabic](/wiki/Arabic_language "Arabic language"): زين الشرف بنت جميل; 2 August 1916 – 26 April 1994), mother of [King Hussein](/wiki/Hussein_of_Jordan "Hussein of Jordan") of the of [Jordan](/wiki/Jordan "Jordan") and wife of [King Talal](/wiki/Talal_of_Jordan "Talal of Jordan"). She is considered the pioneer of the women's movement in modern Jordanian society. She made contributions to Jordanian women and girls education. She was called the Queen Mother by King Hussein bin Talal. She died in [Lausanne](/wiki/Lausanne "Lausanne"), [Switzerland](/wiki/Switzerland "Switzerland") on April 26, 1994. Her body was moved to [Amman](/wiki/Amman "Amman") and buried there. | * [v](/wiki/Template:Grand_Commander_of_the_Order_of_the_Defender_of_the_Realm "Template:Grand Commander of the Order of the Defender of the Realm") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Grand_Commander_of_the_Order_of_the_Defender_of_the_Realm&action=edit) Grand Commanders of the [Order of the Defender of the Realm](/wiki/Order_of_the_Defender_of_the_Realm "Order of the Defender of the Realm") | | --- | | GrandCommanders | * 1958: Tunku Kurshiah * 1958: Tunku Ismail * 1958: Tunku Munawir * 1958: Tengku Yahya Petra * 1958: Leong Yew Koh * 1958: Raja Uda * 1958: Tan Cheng Lock * 1959: [Abdul Razak Hussein](/wiki/Abdul_Razak_Hussein "Abdul Razak Hussein") * 1959: Henry Lee Hau Shik * 1959: Tengku Budriah * 1961: Abdul Malek Yusuf * 1964: Abang Openg * 1964: Mustapha Harun * 1967: Pengiran Ahmad Raffae * 1968: Syed Sheh Shahabudin * 1970: Syed Sheh Barakbah * 1970: Tuanku Bujang * 1970: Sharifah Rodziah Barakbah * 1972: Abdul Aziz Abdul Majid * 1975: Fuad Stephens * 1976: Sardon Jubir * 1976: Syed Zahiruddin * 1977: Mohd Hamdan Abdullah * 1978: [Abang Muhammad Salahuddin](/wiki/Abang_Muhammad_Salahuddin "Abang Muhammad Salahuddin") * 1978: Ahmad Koroh * 1979: Mohamad Adnan Robert * 1981: [Hussein Onn](/wiki/Hussein_Onn "Hussein Onn") * 1982: Abdul Rahman Ya'kub * 1982: Awang Hassan * 1987: Tunku Ibrahim Ismail * 1989: Ahmad Zaidi Adruce * 1989: Hamdan Sheikh Tahir * 1989: Mohammad Said Keruak * 1989: Syed Ahmad Shahabuddin * 1996: [Sakaran Dandai](/wiki/Sakaran_Dandai "Sakaran Dandai") * 2003: Ahmadshah Abdullah * 2003: [Mahathir Mohamad](/wiki/Mahathir_Mohamad "Mahathir Mohamad") * 2004: Mohd Khalil Yaakob * 2009: [Abdullah Ahmad Badawi](/wiki/Abdullah_Ahmad_Badawi "Abdullah Ahmad Badawi") * 2011: Juhar Mahiruddin * 2014: Abdul Taib Mahmud * 2020: Mohd Ali Rustam * 2021: Ahmad Fuzi Abdul Razak | | HonoraryGrandCommanders | * 1958: Lim Yew Hock * 1959: Djuanda Kartawidjaja * 1960: Gerald Templer * 1962: [Thanat Khoman](/wiki/Thanat_Khoman "Thanat Khoman") * 1962: [Thanom Kittikachorn](/wiki/Thanom_Kittikachorn "Thanom Kittikachorn") * 1963: Norodom Monineath * 1963: [Yusof Ishak](/wiki/Yusof_Ishak "Yusof Ishak") * 1964: Dhani Nivat * 1964: [Hayato Ikeda](/wiki/Hayato_Ikeda "Hayato Ikeda") * 1964: [Masayoshi Ōhira](/wiki/Masayoshi_%C5%8Chira "Masayoshi Ōhira") * 1964: Norodom Kantol * 1964: Prapas Charusathien * 1964: Wan Waithayakon * 1965: Abdel Hakim Amer * 1965: Ali Sabri * 1965: [Anwar Sadat](/wiki/Anwar_Sadat "Anwar Sadat") * 1965: [Zein al-Sharaf bint Jamil](/wiki/Zein_Al-Sharaf "Zein Al-Sharaf") * 1965: Firyal Irshaid * 1965: [Hassan bin Talal](/wiki/Prince_Hassan_bin_Talal "Prince Hassan bin Talal") * 1965: Hassan Ibrahim * 1965: Hussein el-Shafei * 1965: [Chung Il-kwon](/wiki/Chung_Il-kwon "Chung Il-kwon") * 1965: [Muhammad bin Talal](/wiki/Prince_Muhammad_bin_Talal "Prince Muhammad bin Talal") * 1965: [Muna al-Hussein](/wiki/Princess_Muna_al-Hussein "Princess Muna al-Hussein") * 1965: Nguyễn Cao Kỳ * 1965: Hussein ibn Nasser * 1965: Wasfi al-Tal * 1965: Zakaria Mohieddin * 1966: Chang Kay Young * 1966: James Beveridge Thomson * 1967: [Albert II](/wiki/Albert_II_of_Belgium "Albert II of Belgium") * 1967: [Eisaku Satō](/wiki/Eisaku_Sat%C5%8D "Eisaku Satō") * 1970: Adam Malik * 1970: Nawwaf bin Abdulaziz Al Saud * 1971: Souvanna Phouma * 1975: [Kukrit Pramoj](/wiki/Kukrit_Pramoj "Kukrit Pramoj") * 1979: Kriangsak Chamanan * 1982: [Fahd bin Abdulaziz Al Saud](/wiki/Fahd_of_Saudi_Arabia "Fahd of Saudi Arabia") * 1984: [Elena Ceaușescu](/wiki/Elena_Ceau%C8%99escu "Elena Ceaușescu") * 1984: [Prem Tinsulanonda](/wiki/Prem_Tinsulanonda "Prem Tinsulanonda") * 1989: Jefri Bolkiah * 2000: [Maha Vajiralongkorn](/wiki/Vajiralongkorn "Vajiralongkorn") * 2000: Sultan bin Abdulaziz Al Saud * 2001: [Khalifa bin Salman Al Khalifa](/wiki/Khalifa_bin_Salman_Al_Khalifa "Khalifa bin Salman Al Khalifa") * 2003: [Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud](/wiki/Abdullah_of_Saudi_Arabia "Abdullah of Saudi Arabia") * 2003: Marcello Pera * 2003: [Pier Ferdinando Casini](/wiki/Pier_Ferdinando_Casini "Pier Ferdinando Casini") * 2005: [Victoria](/wiki/Victoria,_Crown_Princess_of_Sweden "Victoria, Crown Princess of Sweden") * 2010: [Moza bint Nasser](/wiki/Moza_bint_Nasser "Moza bint Nasser") * 2012: [Naruhito](/wiki/Naruhito "Naruhito") * 2012: [Masako](/wiki/Empress_Masako "Empress Masako") |
| Zein al-Sharaf | | --- | | Queen Zein in 1953 | | Queen consort of Jordan | | Tenure | 20 July 1951 – 11 August 1952 | | | | Born | (1916-08-02)2 August 1916Alexandria, Sultanate of Egypt | | Died | 26 April 1994(1994-04-26) (aged 77)Lausanne, Switzerland | | Burial | Raghadan Palace | | Spouse | King Talal(m. 1934; died 1972) | | Issue | King Hussein Prince Muhammad Prince Hassan Princess Basma | | House | Hashemite | | Father | Sharif Jamil 'Ali bin Nasser | | Mother | Wijdan Shakir Pasha | Zein Al-Sharaf bint Jamil (Arabic: زين الشرف بنت جميل; 2 August 1916 – 26 April 1994), mother of King Hussein of the of Jordan and wife of King Talal. She is considered the pioneer of the women's movement in modern Jordanian society. She made contributions to Jordanian women and girls education. She was called the Queen Mother by King Hussein bin Talal. She died in Lausanne, Switzerland on April 26, 1994. Her body was moved to Amman and buried there. | * v * t * e Grand Commanders of the Order of the Defender of the Realm | | --- | | GrandCommanders | * 1958: Tunku Kurshiah * 1958: Tunku Ismail * 1958: Tunku Munawir * 1958: Tengku Yahya Petra * 1958: Leong Yew Koh * 1958: Raja Uda * 1958: Tan Cheng Lock * 1959: Abdul Razak Hussein * 1959: Henry Lee Hau Shik * 1959: Tengku Budriah * 1961: Abdul Malek Yusuf * 1964: Abang Openg * 1964: Mustapha Harun * 1967: Pengiran Ahmad Raffae * 1968: Syed Sheh Shahabudin * 1970: Syed Sheh Barakbah * 1970: Tuanku Bujang * 1970: Sharifah Rodziah Barakbah * 1972: Abdul Aziz Abdul Majid * 1975: Fuad Stephens * 1976: Sardon Jubir * 1976: Syed Zahiruddin * 1977: Mohd Hamdan Abdullah * 1978: Abang Muhammad Salahuddin * 1978: Ahmad Koroh * 1979: Mohamad Adnan Robert * 1981: Hussein Onn * 1982: Abdul Rahman Ya'kub * 1982: Awang Hassan * 1987: Tunku Ibrahim Ismail * 1989: Ahmad Zaidi Adruce * 1989: Hamdan Sheikh Tahir * 1989: Mohammad Said Keruak * 1989: Syed Ahmad Shahabuddin * 1996: Sakaran Dandai * 2003: Ahmadshah Abdullah * 2003: Mahathir Mohamad * 2004: Mohd Khalil Yaakob * 2009: Abdullah Ahmad Badawi * 2011: Juhar Mahiruddin * 2014: Abdul Taib Mahmud * 2020: Mohd Ali Rustam * 2021: Ahmad Fuzi Abdul Razak | | HonoraryGrandCommanders | * 1958: Lim Yew Hock * 1959: Djuanda Kartawidjaja * 1960: Gerald Templer * 1962: Thanat Khoman * 1962: Thanom Kittikachorn * 1963: Norodom Monineath * 1963: Yusof Ishak * 1964: Dhani Nivat * 1964: Hayato Ikeda * 1964: Masayoshi Ōhira * 1964: Norodom Kantol * 1964: Prapas Charusathien * 1964: Wan Waithayakon * 1965: Abdel Hakim Amer * 1965: Ali Sabri * 1965: Anwar Sadat * 1965: Zein al-Sharaf bint Jamil * 1965: Firyal Irshaid * 1965: Hassan bin Talal * 1965: Hassan Ibrahim * 1965: Hussein el-Shafei * 1965: Chung Il-kwon * 1965: Muhammad bin Talal * 1965: Muna al-Hussein * 1965: Nguyễn Cao Kỳ * 1965: Hussein ibn Nasser * 1965: Wasfi al-Tal * 1965: Zakaria Mohieddin * 1966: Chang Kay Young * 1966: James Beveridge Thomson * 1967: Albert II * 1967: Eisaku Satō * 1970: Adam Malik * 1970: Nawwaf bin Abdulaziz Al Saud * 1971: Souvanna Phouma * 1975: Kukrit Pramoj * 1979: Kriangsak Chamanan * 1982: Fahd bin Abdulaziz Al Saud * 1984: Elena Ceaușescu * 1984: Prem Tinsulanonda * 1989: Jefri Bolkiah * 2000: Maha Vajiralongkorn * 2000: Sultan bin Abdulaziz Al Saud * 2001: Khalifa bin Salman Al Khalifa * 2003: Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud * 2003: Marcello Pera * 2003: Pier Ferdinando Casini * 2005: Victoria * 2010: Moza bint Nasser * 2012: Naruhito * 2012: Masako |
267,573
Bart_The_General
Bart The General
2,465,467
Redirect to: * [Bart the General](/wiki/Bart_the_General "Bart the General")
Redirect to: Bart the General
1,041,162
Piton_de_la_fournaise
Piton de la fournaise
9,025,271
Redirect to: * [Piton de la Fournaise](/wiki/Piton_de_la_Fournaise "Piton de la Fournaise")
Redirect to: Piton de la Fournaise
935,740
Corsico
Corsico
9,060,596
Corsico Coat of arms **Corsico** is a city in northern [Italy](/wiki/Italy "Italy"). It is next to [Milan](/wiki/Milan "Milan"). Corsico is in the [Lombardy](/wiki/Lombardy "Lombardy") Region. About 35,000 people live there. | * [v](/wiki/Template:Metropolitan_City_of_Milan "Template:Metropolitan City of Milan") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Metropolitan_City_of_Milan&action=edit) [Lombardy](/wiki/Lombardy "Lombardy") · *[Comuni](/wiki/Comune "Comune")* of the [Metropolitan City of Milan](/wiki/Metropolitan_City_of_Milan "Metropolitan City of Milan") | | --- | | * [Abbiategrasso](/wiki/Abbiategrasso "Abbiategrasso") * [Albairate](/wiki/Albairate "Albairate") * [Arconate](/wiki/Arconate "Arconate") * [Arese](/wiki/Arese "Arese") * [Arluno](/wiki/Arluno "Arluno") * [Assago](/wiki/Assago "Assago") * [Baranzate](/wiki/Baranzate "Baranzate") * [Bareggio](/wiki/Bareggio "Bareggio") * [Basiano](/wiki/Basiano "Basiano") * [Basiglio](/wiki/Basiglio "Basiglio") * [Bellinzago Lombardo](/wiki/Bellinzago_Lombardo "Bellinzago Lombardo") * [Bernate Ticino](/wiki/Bernate_Ticino "Bernate Ticino") * [Besate](/wiki/Besate "Besate") * [Binasco](/wiki/Binasco "Binasco") * [Boffalora sopra Ticino](/wiki/Boffalora_sopra_Ticino "Boffalora sopra Ticino") * [Bollate](/wiki/Bollate "Bollate") * [Bresso](/wiki/Bresso "Bresso") * [Bubbiano](/wiki/Bubbiano "Bubbiano") * [Buccinasco](/wiki/Buccinasco "Buccinasco") * [Buscate](/wiki/Buscate "Buscate") * [Bussero](/wiki/Bussero "Bussero") * [Busto Garolfo](/wiki/Busto_Garolfo "Busto Garolfo") * [Calvignasco](/wiki/Calvignasco "Calvignasco") * [Cambiago](/wiki/Cambiago "Cambiago") * [Canegrate](/wiki/Canegrate "Canegrate") * [Carpiano](/wiki/Carpiano "Carpiano") * [Carugate](/wiki/Carugate "Carugate") * Casarile * Casorezzo * [Cassano d'Adda](/wiki/Cassano_d%27Adda "Cassano d'Adda") * [Cassina de' Pecchi](/wiki/Cassina_de%27_Pecchi "Cassina de' Pecchi") * Cassinetta di Lugagnano * [Castano Primo](/wiki/Castano_Primo "Castano Primo") * [Cernusco sul Naviglio](/wiki/Cernusco_sul_Naviglio "Cernusco sul Naviglio") * Cerro Maggiore * [Cerro al Lambro](/wiki/Cerro_al_Lambro "Cerro al Lambro") * [Cesano Boscone](/wiki/Cesano_Boscone "Cesano Boscone") * [Cesate](/wiki/Cesate "Cesate") * [Cinisello Balsamo](/wiki/Cinisello_Balsamo "Cinisello Balsamo") * [Cisliano](/wiki/Cisliano "Cisliano") * [Cologno Monzese](/wiki/Cologno_Monzese "Cologno Monzese") * [Colturano](/wiki/Colturano "Colturano") * [Corbetta](/wiki/Corbetta,_Lombardy "Corbetta, Lombardy") * [Cormano](/wiki/Cormano "Cormano") * [Cornaredo](/wiki/Cornaredo "Cornaredo") * Corsico * Cuggiono * [Cusago](/wiki/Cusago "Cusago") * [Cusano Milanino](/wiki/Cusano_Milanino "Cusano Milanino") * [Dairago](/wiki/Dairago "Dairago") * Dresano * [Gaggiano](/wiki/Gaggiano "Gaggiano") * [Garbagnate Milanese](/wiki/Garbagnate_Milanese "Garbagnate Milanese") * [Gessate](/wiki/Gessate "Gessate") * [Gorgonzola](/wiki/Gorgonzola,_Milan "Gorgonzola, Milan") * Grezzago * [Gudo Visconti](/wiki/Gudo_Visconti "Gudo Visconti") * [Inveruno](/wiki/Inveruno "Inveruno") * Inzago * [Lacchiarella](/wiki/Lacchiarella "Lacchiarella") * [Lainate](/wiki/Lainate "Lainate") * [Legnano](/wiki/Legnano "Legnano") * Liscate * [Locate di Triulzi](/wiki/Locate_di_Triulzi "Locate di Triulzi") * [Magenta](/wiki/Magenta,_Lombardy "Magenta, Lombardy") * [Magnago](/wiki/Magnago "Magnago") * Marcallo con Casone * Masate * Mediglia * [Melegnano](/wiki/Melegnano "Melegnano") * [Melzo](/wiki/Melzo "Melzo") * Mesero * [Milan](/wiki/Milan "Milan") * Morimondo * Motta Visconti * [Nerviano](/wiki/Nerviano "Nerviano") * Nosate * [Novate Milanese](/wiki/Novate_Milanese "Novate Milanese") * [Noviglio](/wiki/Noviglio "Noviglio") * [Opera](/wiki/Opera,_Lombardy "Opera, Lombardy") * Ossona * Ozzero * [Paderno Dugnano](/wiki/Paderno_Dugnano "Paderno Dugnano") * Pantigliate * [Parabiago](/wiki/Parabiago "Parabiago") * Paullo * [Pero](/wiki/Pero,_Lombardy "Pero, Lombardy") * [Peschiera Borromeo](/wiki/Peschiera_Borromeo "Peschiera Borromeo") * Pessano con Bornago * [Pieve Emanuele](/wiki/Pieve_Emanuele "Pieve Emanuele") * Pioltello * [Pogliano Milanese](/wiki/Pogliano_Milanese "Pogliano Milanese") * Pozzo d'Adda * [Pozzuolo Martesana](/wiki/Pozzuolo_Martesana "Pozzuolo Martesana") * [Pregnana Milanese](/wiki/Pregnana_Milanese "Pregnana Milanese") * Rescaldina * [Rho](/wiki/Rho,_Lombardy "Rho, Lombardy") * [Robecchetto con Induno](/wiki/Robecchetto_con_Induno "Robecchetto con Induno") * Robecco sul Naviglio * Rodano * [Rosate](/wiki/Rosate "Rosate") * [Rozzano](/wiki/Rozzano "Rozzano") * San Colombano al Lambro * [San Donato Milanese](/wiki/San_Donato_Milanese "San Donato Milanese") * [San Giorgio su Legnano](/wiki/San_Giorgio_su_Legnano "San Giorgio su Legnano") * [San Giuliano Milanese](/wiki/San_Giuliano_Milanese "San Giuliano Milanese") * [San Vittore Olona](/wiki/San_Vittore_Olona "San Vittore Olona") * [San Zenone al Lambro](/wiki/San_Zenone_al_Lambro "San Zenone al Lambro") * Santo Stefano Ticino * [Sedriano](/wiki/Sedriano "Sedriano") * [Segrate](/wiki/Segrate "Segrate") * [Senago](/wiki/Senago "Senago") * [Sesto San Giovanni](/wiki/Sesto_San_Giovanni "Sesto San Giovanni") * Settala * [Settimo Milanese](/wiki/Settimo_Milanese "Settimo Milanese") * [Solaro](/wiki/Solaro,_Lombardy "Solaro, Lombardy") * Trezzano Rosa * [Trezzano sul Naviglio](/wiki/Trezzano_sul_Naviglio "Trezzano sul Naviglio") * Trezzo sull'Adda * Tribiano * Truccazzano * [Turbigo](/wiki/Turbigo "Turbigo") * [Vanzaghello](/wiki/Vanzaghello "Vanzaghello") * [Vanzago](/wiki/Vanzago "Vanzago") * Vaprio d'Adda * Vermezzo con Zelo * [Vernate](/wiki/Vernate,_Lombardy "Vernate, Lombardy") * Vignate * [Villa Cortese](/wiki/Villa_Cortese "Villa Cortese") * [Vimodrone](/wiki/Vimodrone "Vimodrone") * Vittuone * [Vizzolo Predabissi](/wiki/Vizzolo_Predabissi "Vizzolo Predabissi") * [Zibido San Giacomo](/wiki/Zibido_San_Giacomo "Zibido San Giacomo") | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [Europe](/wiki/Category:Europe_stubs "Category:Europe stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Corsico&action=edit)*.
Corsico Coat of arms Corsico is a city in northern Italy. It is next to Milan. Corsico is in the Lombardy Region. About 35,000 people live there. | * v * t * e Lombardy · Comuni of the Metropolitan City of Milan | | --- | | * Abbiategrasso * Albairate * Arconate * Arese * Arluno * Assago * Baranzate * Bareggio * Basiano * Basiglio * Bellinzago Lombardo * Bernate Ticino * Besate * Binasco * Boffalora sopra Ticino * Bollate * Bresso * Bubbiano * Buccinasco * Buscate * Bussero * Busto Garolfo * Calvignasco * Cambiago * Canegrate * Carpiano * Carugate * Casarile * Casorezzo * Cassano d'Adda * Cassina de' Pecchi * Cassinetta di Lugagnano * Castano Primo * Cernusco sul Naviglio * Cerro Maggiore * Cerro al Lambro * Cesano Boscone * Cesate * Cinisello Balsamo * Cisliano * Cologno Monzese * Colturano * Corbetta * Cormano * Cornaredo * Corsico * Cuggiono * Cusago * Cusano Milanino * Dairago * Dresano * Gaggiano * Garbagnate Milanese * Gessate * Gorgonzola * Grezzago * Gudo Visconti * Inveruno * Inzago * Lacchiarella * Lainate * Legnano * Liscate * Locate di Triulzi * Magenta * Magnago * Marcallo con Casone * Masate * Mediglia * Melegnano * Melzo * Mesero * Milan * Morimondo * Motta Visconti * Nerviano * Nosate * Novate Milanese * Noviglio * Opera * Ossona * Ozzero * Paderno Dugnano * Pantigliate * Parabiago * Paullo * Pero * Peschiera Borromeo * Pessano con Bornago * Pieve Emanuele * Pioltello * Pogliano Milanese * Pozzo d'Adda * Pozzuolo Martesana * Pregnana Milanese * Rescaldina * Rho * Robecchetto con Induno * Robecco sul Naviglio * Rodano * Rosate * Rozzano * San Colombano al Lambro * San Donato Milanese * San Giorgio su Legnano * San Giuliano Milanese * San Vittore Olona * San Zenone al Lambro * Santo Stefano Ticino * Sedriano * Segrate * Senago * Sesto San Giovanni * Settala * Settimo Milanese * Solaro * Trezzano Rosa * Trezzano sul Naviglio * Trezzo sull'Adda * Tribiano * Truccazzano * Turbigo * Vanzaghello * Vanzago * Vaprio d'Adda * Vermezzo con Zelo * Vernate * Vignate * Villa Cortese * Vimodrone * Vittuone * Vizzolo Predabissi * Zibido San Giacomo | This short article about Europe can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
349,743
Yanta_District
Yanta District
4,287,078
**Yanta District** ([Chinese](/wiki/Chinese_language "Chinese language"): 雁塔区, pinyin:Yàntǎ Qū, meaning "Wild goose Tower District") is a District of [Xi'an](/wiki/Xi%27an "Xi'an"), it's in southern part of [Xi'an](/wiki/Xi%27an "Xi'an"). Area of it is 151.44km2, and as of November 2010, 1,178,529 people live in here. The name of Yanta District is come from Big Wild Goose Tower, a tower that builded in 652 A.D. It's famous in culture and tour. The district have many university. ## History In September 1954, Yanta District was set up. It was merge from Xi'an No.9 District, a part of Chang'an County, a part of Weiqu District and some other place. In May 1960, some part of Xincheng District, Lianhu District and Beilin District was merged to Yanta District. But that was revoked in April 1962. In September 1965, Yanta District was changed to Xi'an suburb toghter with Weiyang District, original Epang District and some other place. It's revoked in February 1980. ## Political divisions Yanta District is divided to 8 part: * Xiaozhailu Subdistrict * Dayanta Subdistrict * Changyanpu Subdistrict * Dianzicheng Subdistrict * Dengjiapo Subdistrict * Yuhuazhai Subdistrict * Zhangbagou Subdistrict * Qujiang Subdistrict *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [Asia](/wiki/Category:Asia_stubs "Category:Asia stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Yanta_District&action=edit)*.
Yanta District (Chinese: 雁塔区, pinyin:Yàntǎ Qū, meaning "Wild goose Tower District") is a District of Xi'an, it's in southern part of Xi'an. Area of it is 151.44km2, and as of November 2010, 1,178,529 people live in here. The name of Yanta District is come from Big Wild Goose Tower, a tower that builded in 652 A.D. It's famous in culture and tour. The district have many university. History In September 1954, Yanta District was set up. It was merge from Xi'an No.9 District, a part of Chang'an County, a part of Weiqu District and some other place. In May 1960, some part of Xincheng District, Lianhu District and Beilin District was merged to Yanta District. But that was revoked in April 1962. In September 1965, Yanta District was changed to Xi'an suburb toghter with Weiyang District, original Epang District and some other place. It's revoked in February 1980. Political divisions Yanta District is divided to 8 part: Xiaozhailu Subdistrict Dayanta Subdistrict Changyanpu Subdistrict Dianzicheng Subdistrict Dengjiapo Subdistrict Yuhuazhai Subdistrict Zhangbagou Subdistrict Qujiang Subdistrict This short article about Asia can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
948,270
Storyteller_–_The_Complete_Anthology:_1964–1990
Storyteller – The Complete Anthology: 1964–1990
8,858,413
| Storyteller – The Complete Anthology: 1964–1990 | | --- | | [Compilation album](/wiki/Compilation_album "Compilation album") by [Rod Stewart](/wiki/Rod_Stewart "Rod Stewart") | | Released | November 1989 | | Recorded | 1964–1989 | | [Genre](/wiki/Music_genre "Music genre") | [Hard rock](/wiki/Hard_rock "Hard rock"), [Soft rock](/wiki/Soft_rock "Soft rock"), [Folk rock](/wiki/Folk_rock "Folk rock"), [Blues rock](/wiki/Blues_rock "Blues rock"), Synth pop, [New wave](/wiki/New_wave "New wave") | | Length | 291:54 | | [Label](/wiki/Record_label "Record label") | [Warner Bros.](/wiki/Warner_Bros._Records "Warner Bros. Records") | | [Rod Stewart](/wiki/Rod_Stewart "Rod Stewart") chronology | | | | | | | --- | --- | --- | | *[The Best of Rod Stewart](/wiki/The_Best_of_Rod_Stewart_(1989_album) "The Best of Rod Stewart (1989 album)")*(1989) | ***Storyteller – The Complete Anthology: 1964–1990***(1989) | *[Downtown Train – Selections from the Storyteller Anthology](/wiki/Downtown_Train_%E2%80%93_Selections_from_the_Storyteller_Anthology "Downtown Train – Selections from the Storyteller Anthology")*(1990) | | | Professional ratings | | --- | | Review scores | | Source | Rating | | [Allmusic](/wiki/Allmusic "Allmusic") | [[1]](#cite_note-1) | | *[Rolling Stone](/wiki/Rolling_Stone "Rolling Stone")* | [[2]](#cite_note-2) | ***Storyteller – The Complete Anthology: 1964-1990*** is a 4-disc compilation album by [Rod Stewart](/wiki/Rod_Stewart "Rod Stewart") released in November 1989. It went to number 1 in New Zealand and number 5 in Australia in 2012. ## Track listing * For details on previous releases see original. ### Disc One 1. "Good Morning Little Schoolgirl" (previously released as a single) – 2:06 2. "Can I Get a Witness?" (Holland-Dozier-Holland) – 3:34 3. "Shake" (previously released as a single) – 2:48 4. "So Much to Say" (previously released as [B-side](/wiki/B-side "B-side") to "Little Miss Understood") – 3:13 5. "Little Miss Understood" (previously released as a single) – 3:37 6. "I’ve Been Drinking" (previously released as B-side to "Love Is Blue" by The Jeff Beck Group) – 3:17 7. "I Ain't Superstitious" (previously released on *Truth* by The Jeff Beck Group) – 4:53 8. "Shapes of Things" (previously released on *Truth* by The Jeff Beck Group) – 3:18 9. "In a Broken Dream" (previously released as a single by Python Lee Jackson) – 3:39 10. "Street Fighting Man" (previously released on *[An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down](/wiki/An_Old_Raincoat_Won%27t_Ever_Let_You_Down "An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down")*) – 5:05 11. "Handbags and Gladrags" (previously released on *An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down*) – 4:23 12. "Gasoline Alley" (previously released on *[Gasoline Alley](/wiki/Gasoline_Alley_(album) "Gasoline Alley (album)")*) – 4:02 13. "Cut Across Shorty" (previously released on *Gasoline Alley*) – 6:31 14. "Country Comforts" (previously released on *Gasoline Alley*) – 4:43 15. "[It's All Over Now](/wiki/It%27s_All_Over_Now "It's All Over Now")" (previously released on *Gasoline Alley*) – 6:22 16. "Sweet Lady Mary" (previously released on *Long Player* by Faces) – 5:48 17. "Had Me a Real Good Time" (previously released on *Long Player* by Faces) – 5:54 ### Disc Two 1. "Maggie May" (previously released on *[Every Picture Tells a Story](/wiki/Every_Picture_Tells_a_Story "Every Picture Tells a Story")*) – 5:45 2. "Mandolin Wind" (previously released on *Every Picture Tells a Story*) – 5:30 3. "(I Know) I'm Losing You" (previously released on *Every Picture Tells a Story*) – 5:22 4. "Reason to Believe" (previously released on *Every Picture Tells a Story*) – 4:07 5. "Every Picture Tells a Story" (previously released on *Every Picture Tells a Story*) – 5:58 6. "Stay With Me" (previously released on *A Nod Is as Good as a Wink...To a Blind Horse* by Faces) – 4:37 7. "True Blue" (previously released on *[Never a Dull Moment](/wiki/Never_a_Dull_Moment_(Rod_Stewart_album) "Never a Dull Moment (Rod Stewart album)")*) – 3:33 8. "Angel" (previously released on *Never a Dull Moment*) – 4:04 9. "[You Wear It Well](/wiki/You_Wear_It_Well "You Wear It Well")" (previously released on *Never a Dull Moment*) – 5:02 10. "I'd Rather Go Blind" (previously released on *Never a Dull Moment*) – 3:53 11. "Twistin' the Night Away" (previously released on *Never a Dull Moment*) – 3:14 12. "What's Made Milwaukee Famous (Has Made a Loser Out of Me)" (previously released as UK B-side to "Angel") – 2:52 13. "Oh! No Not My Baby" (previously released as a Rod Stewart and Faces single) – 3:38 14. "[Pinball Wizard](/wiki/Pinball_Wizard "Pinball Wizard")" (previously released on *Tommy (London Symphony Orchestra album)* and later on the greatest hits compilation *[Sing It Again Rod](/wiki/Sing_It_Again_Rod "Sing It Again Rod")*) – 3:40 15. "Sweet Little Rock 'N Roller" (previously released on *[Smiler](/wiki/Smiler_(album) "Smiler (album)")*) - 3:46 16. "Let Me Be Your Car" (previously released on *Smiler*) – 4:58 17. "You Can Make Me Dance, Sing or Anything" (previously released as a single by Faces) – 4:23 ### Disc Three 1. "Sailing" (previously released on *[Atlantic Crossing](/wiki/Atlantic_Crossing "Atlantic Crossing")*) – 4:38 2. "I Don't Want to Talk About It (1975)" (previously released on *Atlantic Crossing*) – 4:49 3. "Stone Cold Sober" (previously released on *Atlantic Crossing*) – 4:12 4. "To Love Somebody" with Booker T. & the M.G.'s ([Barry Gibb](/wiki/Barry_Gibb "Barry Gibb"), [Robin Gibb](/wiki/Robin_Gibb "Robin Gibb")) – 4:30 5. "[Tonight's the Night (Gonna Be Alright)](/wiki/Tonight%27s_the_Night_(Gonna_Be_Alright) "Tonight's the Night (Gonna Be Alright)")" (previously released on *[A Night on the Town](/wiki/A_Night_on_the_Town_(Rod_Stewart_album) "A Night on the Town (Rod Stewart album)")*) – 3:54 6. "[The First Cut Is the Deepest](/wiki/The_First_Cut_Is_the_Deepest "The First Cut Is the Deepest")" (previously released on *A Night on the Town*) – 4:26 7. "The Killing of Georgie (Part I and II)" (previously released on *A Night on the Town*) – 6:31 8. "[Get Back](/wiki/Get_Back "Get Back")" (previously released on *All This and World War II* soundtrack) – 4:24 9. "[Hot Legs](/wiki/Hot_Legs "Hot Legs")" (previously released on *[Foot Loose & Fancy Free](/wiki/Foot_Loose_%26_Fancy_Free "Foot Loose & Fancy Free")*) – 5:11 10. "I Was Only Joking" (previously released on *Foot Loose & Fancy Free*) – 6:02 11. "You're in My Heart (The Final Acclaim)" (previously released on *Foot Loose & Fancy Free*) – 4:28 12. "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" (previously released on *[Blondes Have More Fun](/wiki/Blondes_Have_More_Fun "Blondes Have More Fun")*) – 5:28 13. "Passion" (previously released on *[Foolish Behaviour](/wiki/Foolish_Behaviour "Foolish Behaviour")*) – 5:30 14. "Oh God, I Wish I Was Home Tonight" (previously released on *Foolish Behaviour*) – 5:01 15. "Tonight I'm Yours (Don't Hurt Me)" (previously released on *[Tonight I'm Yours](/wiki/Tonight_I%27m_Yours "Tonight I'm Yours")*) – 4:10 ### Disc Four 1. "[Young Turks](/wiki/Young_Turks_(song) "Young Turks (song)")" (previously released on *[Tonight I'm Yours](/wiki/Tonight_I%27m_Yours "Tonight I'm Yours")*) – 5:01 2. "[Baby Jane](/wiki/Baby_Jane_(Rod_Stewart_song) "Baby Jane (Rod Stewart song)")" (previously released on *[Body Wishes](/wiki/Body_Wishes "Body Wishes")*) – 4:43 3. "What Am I Gonna Do (I’m so in Love with you)" (previously released on *Body Wishes*) – 4:17 4. "[People Get Ready](/wiki/People_Get_Ready "People Get Ready")" with [Jeff Beck](/wiki/Jeff_Beck "Jeff Beck") (previously released as a single) – 4:52 5. "Some Guys Have All the Luck" (previously released on *[Camouflage](/wiki/Camouflage_(Rod_Stewart_album) "Camouflage (Rod Stewart album)")*) – 4:32 6. "Infatuation" (previously released on *Camouflage*) – 5:12 7. "Love Touch" (previously released on *[Every Beat of My Heart](/wiki/Every_Beat_of_My_Heart_(Rod_Stewart_album) "Every Beat of My Heart (Rod Stewart album)")*) – 4:03 8. "Every Beat of My Heart" (previously released on *Every Beat of My Heart*) – 5:18 9. "Lost in You" (previously released on *[Out of Order](/wiki/Out_of_Order_(Rod_Stewart_album) "Out of Order (Rod Stewart album)")*) – 4:57 10. "My Heart Can't Tell You No" (previously released on *Out of Order*) – 5:11 11. "Dynamite" (previously released on *Out of Order*) – 4:15 12. "Crazy About Her" (previously released on *Out of Order*) – 4:54 13. "Forever Young" (previously released on *Out of Order*) – 4:03 14. "I Don't Want to Talk About It (1989)" (previously unreleased version) – 4:52 15. "This Old Heart of Mine" with [Ronald Isley](/wiki/Ronald_Isley "Ronald Isley") (previously unreleased version) – 4:12 16. "[Downtown Train](/wiki/Downtown_Train "Downtown Train")" ([Tom Waits](/wiki/Tom_Waits "Tom Waits")) (new song) – 4:39 ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) [Allmusic review](https://www.allmusic.com/album/r19124) 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2) [Rolling Stone review](https://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/storyteller-complete-anthology-1964-1990-19900111) | * [v](/wiki/Template:Rod_Stewart "Template:Rod Stewart") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Rod_Stewart&action=edit) [Rod Stewart](/wiki/Rod_Stewart "Rod Stewart") | | --- | | [Discography](/wiki/Rod_Stewart_discography "Rod Stewart discography") | | Studio albums | * *[An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down](/wiki/An_Old_Raincoat_Won%27t_Ever_Let_You_Down "An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down")* (1969) * *[Gasoline Alley](/wiki/Gasoline_Alley_(album) "Gasoline Alley (album)")* (1970) * *[Every Picture Tells a Story](/wiki/Every_Picture_Tells_a_Story "Every Picture Tells a Story")* (1971) * *[Never a Dull Moment](/wiki/Never_a_Dull_Moment_(Rod_Stewart_album) "Never a Dull Moment (Rod Stewart album)")* (1972) * *[Smiler](/wiki/Smiler_(album) "Smiler (album)")* (1974) * *[Atlantic Crossing](/wiki/Atlantic_Crossing "Atlantic Crossing")* (1975) * *[A Night on the Town](/wiki/A_Night_on_the_Town_(Rod_Stewart_album) "A Night on the Town (Rod Stewart album)")* (1976) * *[Foot Loose & Fancy Free](/wiki/Foot_Loose_%26_Fancy_Free "Foot Loose & Fancy Free")* (1977) * *[Blondes Have More Fun](/wiki/Blondes_Have_More_Fun "Blondes Have More Fun")* (1978) * *[Foolish Behaviour](/wiki/Foolish_Behaviour "Foolish Behaviour")* (1980) * *[Tonight I'm Yours](/wiki/Tonight_I%27m_Yours "Tonight I'm Yours")* (1981) * *[Body Wishes](/wiki/Body_Wishes "Body Wishes")* (1983) * *[Camouflage](/wiki/Camouflage_(Rod_Stewart_album) "Camouflage (Rod Stewart album)")* (1984) * *[Every Beat of My Heart](/wiki/Every_Beat_of_My_Heart_(Rod_Stewart_album) "Every Beat of My Heart (Rod Stewart album)")* (1986) * *[Out of Order](/wiki/Out_of_Order_(Rod_Stewart_album) "Out of Order (Rod Stewart album)")* (1988) * *[Vagabond Heart](/wiki/Vagabond_Heart "Vagabond Heart")* (1991) * *[A Spanner in the Works](/wiki/A_Spanner_in_the_Works "A Spanner in the Works")* (1995) * *[When We Were the New Boys](/wiki/When_We_Were_the_New_Boys "When We Were the New Boys")* (1998) * *[Human](/wiki/Human_(Rod_Stewart_album) "Human (Rod Stewart album)")* (2001) * *[It Had to Be You: The Great American Songbook](/wiki/It_Had_to_Be_You:_The_Great_American_Songbook "It Had to Be You: The Great American Songbook")* (2002) * *[As Time Goes By: The Great American Songbook, Volume II](/wiki/As_Time_Goes_By:_The_Great_American_Songbook,_Volume_II "As Time Goes By: The Great American Songbook, Volume II")* (2003) * *[Stardust: The Great American Songbook, Volume III](/wiki/Stardust:_The_Great_American_Songbook,_Volume_III "Stardust: The Great American Songbook, Volume III")* (2004) * *[Thanks for the Memory: The Great American Songbook, Volume IV](/wiki/Thanks_for_the_Memory:_The_Great_American_Songbook,_Volume_IV "Thanks for the Memory: The Great American Songbook, Volume IV")* (2005) * *[Still the Same... Great Rock Classics of Our Time](/wiki/Still_the_Same..._Great_Rock_Classics_of_Our_Time "Still the Same... Great Rock Classics of Our Time")* (2006) * *[Soulbook](/wiki/Soulbook "Soulbook")* (2009) * *[Fly Me to the Moon... The Great American Songbook Volume V](/wiki/Fly_Me_to_the_Moon..._The_Great_American_Songbook_Volume_V "Fly Me to the Moon... The Great American Songbook Volume V")* (2010) * *[Merry Christmas, Baby](/wiki/Merry_Christmas,_Baby_(album) "Merry Christmas, Baby (album)")* (2012) * *[Time](/wiki/Time_(Rod_Stewart_album) "Time (Rod Stewart album)")* (2013) * *[Another Country](/wiki/Another_Country_(Rod_Stewart_album) "Another Country (Rod Stewart album)")* (2015) * *Blood Red Roses* (2018) * *The Tears of Hercules* (2021) | | Live albums | * *Coast to Coast: Overture and Beginners* (1974) * *[Absolutely Live](/wiki/Absolutely_Live_(Rod_Stewart_album) "Absolutely Live (Rod Stewart album)")* (1982) * *[Unplugged...and Seated](/wiki/Unplugged...and_Seated "Unplugged...and Seated")* (1993) | | Compilation albums | * *[Sing It Again Rod](/wiki/Sing_It_Again_Rod "Sing It Again Rod")* (1973) * *[The Best of Rod Stewart](/wiki/The_Best_of_Rod_Stewart_(1976_album) "The Best of Rod Stewart (1976 album)")* (1976) * *[The Best of Rod Stewart Vol. 2](/wiki/The_Best_of_Rod_Stewart_Vol._2 "The Best of Rod Stewart Vol. 2")* (1976) * *[Greatest Hits, Vol. 1](/wiki/Greatest_Hits,_Vol._1_(Rod_Stewart_album) "Greatest Hits, Vol. 1 (Rod Stewart album)")* (1979) * *Storyteller – The Complete Anthology: 1964–1990* (1989) * *[The Best of Rod Stewart](/wiki/The_Best_of_Rod_Stewart_(1989_album) "The Best of Rod Stewart (1989 album)")* (1989) * *[Downtown Train – Selections from the Storyteller Anthology](/wiki/Downtown_Train_%E2%80%93_Selections_from_the_Storyteller_Anthology "Downtown Train – Selections from the Storyteller Anthology")* (1990) * *[Lead Vocalist](/wiki/Lead_Vocalist_(album) "Lead Vocalist (album)")* (1993) * *[If We Fall in Love Tonight](/wiki/If_We_Fall_in_Love_Tonight "If We Fall in Love Tonight")* (1996) * *[The Story So Far: The Very Best of Rod Stewart](/wiki/The_Story_So_Far:_The_Very_Best_of_Rod_Stewart "The Story So Far: The Very Best of Rod Stewart")* (2001) * *You're in My Heart: Rod Stewart with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra* (2019) | | Concert tours | * Blondes 'Ave More Fun Tour (1978–1979) * Body Wishes Tour (1983) * Camouflage Tour (1984–1985) * Every Beat of My Heart Tour (1986) * Out of Order Tour (1988–1989) * *Rod Stewart: The Hits* (2011–2018) * Live the Life Tour (2013) * The Voice, The Guitar, The Songs Tour (2014) * Hits 2016 * From Gasoline Alley to Another Country: Hits 2016 (2016) | | Family | * Alana Stewart (first wife) * Kimberly Stewart (daughter) * Ruby Stewart (daughter) * [Rachel Hunter](/wiki/Rachel_Hunter "Rachel Hunter") (second wife) * Penny Lancaster (third wife) | | Related articles | * Riva Records * Jimmy Powell (singer)#Jimmy Powell and the 5 Dimensions * Steampacket * Shotgun Express * The Jeff Beck Group * [Faces](/wiki/Faces_(band) "Faces (band)") * *Tonight's the Night* | | **[Category](/wiki/Category:Rod_Stewart "Category:Rod Stewart")** | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [music](/wiki/Category:Music_stubs "Category:Music stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Storyteller_%E2%80%93_The_Complete_Anthology:_1964%E2%80%931990&action=edit)*.
| Storyteller – The Complete Anthology: 1964–1990 | | --- | | Compilation album by Rod Stewart | | Released | November 1989 | | Recorded | 1964–1989 | | Genre | Hard rock, Soft rock, Folk rock, Blues rock, Synth pop, New wave | | Length | 291:54 | | Label | Warner Bros. | | Rod Stewart chronology | | | | | | | --- | --- | --- | | The Best of Rod Stewart(1989) | Storyteller – The Complete Anthology: 1964–1990(1989) | Downtown Train – Selections from the Storyteller Anthology(1990) | | | Professional ratings | | --- | | Review scores | | Source | Rating | | Allmusic | [1] | | Rolling Stone | [2] | Storyteller – The Complete Anthology: 1964-1990 is a 4-disc compilation album by Rod Stewart released in November 1989. It went to number 1 in New Zealand and number 5 in Australia in 2012. Track listing For details on previous releases see original. Disc One "Good Morning Little Schoolgirl" (previously released as a single) – 2:06 "Can I Get a Witness?" (Holland-Dozier-Holland) – 3:34 "Shake" (previously released as a single) – 2:48 "So Much to Say" (previously released as B-side to "Little Miss Understood") – 3:13 "Little Miss Understood" (previously released as a single) – 3:37 "I’ve Been Drinking" (previously released as B-side to "Love Is Blue" by The Jeff Beck Group) – 3:17 "I Ain't Superstitious" (previously released on Truth by The Jeff Beck Group) – 4:53 "Shapes of Things" (previously released on Truth by The Jeff Beck Group) – 3:18 "In a Broken Dream" (previously released as a single by Python Lee Jackson) – 3:39 "Street Fighting Man" (previously released on An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down) – 5:05 "Handbags and Gladrags" (previously released on An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down) – 4:23 "Gasoline Alley" (previously released on Gasoline Alley) – 4:02 "Cut Across Shorty" (previously released on Gasoline Alley) – 6:31 "Country Comforts" (previously released on Gasoline Alley) – 4:43 "It's All Over Now" (previously released on Gasoline Alley) – 6:22 "Sweet Lady Mary" (previously released on Long Player by Faces) – 5:48 "Had Me a Real Good Time" (previously released on Long Player by Faces) – 5:54 Disc Two "Maggie May" (previously released on Every Picture Tells a Story) – 5:45 "Mandolin Wind" (previously released on Every Picture Tells a Story) – 5:30 "(I Know) I'm Losing You" (previously released on Every Picture Tells a Story) – 5:22 "Reason to Believe" (previously released on Every Picture Tells a Story) – 4:07 "Every Picture Tells a Story" (previously released on Every Picture Tells a Story) – 5:58 "Stay With Me" (previously released on A Nod Is as Good as a Wink...To a Blind Horse by Faces) – 4:37 "True Blue" (previously released on Never a Dull Moment) – 3:33 "Angel" (previously released on Never a Dull Moment) – 4:04 "You Wear It Well" (previously released on Never a Dull Moment) – 5:02 "I'd Rather Go Blind" (previously released on Never a Dull Moment) – 3:53 "Twistin' the Night Away" (previously released on Never a Dull Moment) – 3:14 "What's Made Milwaukee Famous (Has Made a Loser Out of Me)" (previously released as UK B-side to "Angel") – 2:52 "Oh! No Not My Baby" (previously released as a Rod Stewart and Faces single) – 3:38 "Pinball Wizard" (previously released on Tommy (London Symphony Orchestra album) and later on the greatest hits compilation Sing It Again Rod) – 3:40 "Sweet Little Rock 'N Roller" (previously released on Smiler) - 3:46 "Let Me Be Your Car" (previously released on Smiler) – 4:58 "You Can Make Me Dance, Sing or Anything" (previously released as a single by Faces) – 4:23 Disc Three "Sailing" (previously released on Atlantic Crossing) – 4:38 "I Don't Want to Talk About It (1975)" (previously released on Atlantic Crossing) – 4:49 "Stone Cold Sober" (previously released on Atlantic Crossing) – 4:12 "To Love Somebody" with Booker T. & the M.G.'s (Barry Gibb, Robin Gibb) – 4:30 "Tonight's the Night (Gonna Be Alright)" (previously released on A Night on the Town) – 3:54 "The First Cut Is the Deepest" (previously released on A Night on the Town) – 4:26 "The Killing of Georgie (Part I and II)" (previously released on A Night on the Town) – 6:31 "Get Back" (previously released on All This and World War II soundtrack) – 4:24 "Hot Legs" (previously released on Foot Loose & Fancy Free) – 5:11 "I Was Only Joking" (previously released on Foot Loose & Fancy Free) – 6:02 "You're in My Heart (The Final Acclaim)" (previously released on Foot Loose & Fancy Free) – 4:28 "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" (previously released on Blondes Have More Fun) – 5:28 "Passion" (previously released on Foolish Behaviour) – 5:30 "Oh God, I Wish I Was Home Tonight" (previously released on Foolish Behaviour) – 5:01 "Tonight I'm Yours (Don't Hurt Me)" (previously released on Tonight I'm Yours) – 4:10 Disc Four "Young Turks" (previously released on Tonight I'm Yours) – 5:01 "Baby Jane" (previously released on Body Wishes) – 4:43 "What Am I Gonna Do (I’m so in Love with you)" (previously released on Body Wishes) – 4:17 "People Get Ready" with Jeff Beck (previously released as a single) – 4:52 "Some Guys Have All the Luck" (previously released on Camouflage) – 4:32 "Infatuation" (previously released on Camouflage) – 5:12 "Love Touch" (previously released on Every Beat of My Heart) – 4:03 "Every Beat of My Heart" (previously released on Every Beat of My Heart) – 5:18 "Lost in You" (previously released on Out of Order) – 4:57 "My Heart Can't Tell You No" (previously released on Out of Order) – 5:11 "Dynamite" (previously released on Out of Order) – 4:15 "Crazy About Her" (previously released on Out of Order) – 4:54 "Forever Young" (previously released on Out of Order) – 4:03 "I Don't Want to Talk About It (1989)" (previously unreleased version) – 4:52 "This Old Heart of Mine" with Ronald Isley (previously unreleased version) – 4:12 "Downtown Train" (Tom Waits) (new song) – 4:39 References ↑ Allmusic review ↑ Rolling Stone review | * v * t * e Rod Stewart | | --- | | Discography | | Studio albums | * An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down (1969) * Gasoline Alley (1970) * Every Picture Tells a Story (1971) * Never a Dull Moment (1972) * Smiler (1974) * Atlantic Crossing (1975) * A Night on the Town (1976) * Foot Loose & Fancy Free (1977) * Blondes Have More Fun (1978) * Foolish Behaviour (1980) * Tonight I'm Yours (1981) * Body Wishes (1983) * Camouflage (1984) * Every Beat of My Heart (1986) * Out of Order (1988) * Vagabond Heart (1991) * A Spanner in the Works (1995) * When We Were the New Boys (1998) * Human (2001) * It Had to Be You: The Great American Songbook (2002) * As Time Goes By: The Great American Songbook, Volume II (2003) * Stardust: The Great American Songbook, Volume III (2004) * Thanks for the Memory: The Great American Songbook, Volume IV (2005) * Still the Same... Great Rock Classics of Our Time (2006) * Soulbook (2009) * Fly Me to the Moon... The Great American Songbook Volume V (2010) * Merry Christmas, Baby (2012) * Time (2013) * Another Country (2015) * Blood Red Roses (2018) * The Tears of Hercules (2021) | | Live albums | * Coast to Coast: Overture and Beginners (1974) * Absolutely Live (1982) * Unplugged...and Seated (1993) | | Compilation albums | * Sing It Again Rod (1973) * The Best of Rod Stewart (1976) * The Best of Rod Stewart Vol. 2 (1976) * Greatest Hits, Vol. 1 (1979) * Storyteller – The Complete Anthology: 1964–1990 (1989) * The Best of Rod Stewart (1989) * Downtown Train – Selections from the Storyteller Anthology (1990) * Lead Vocalist (1993) * If We Fall in Love Tonight (1996) * The Story So Far: The Very Best of Rod Stewart (2001) * You're in My Heart: Rod Stewart with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra (2019) | | Concert tours | * Blondes 'Ave More Fun Tour (1978–1979) * Body Wishes Tour (1983) * Camouflage Tour (1984–1985) * Every Beat of My Heart Tour (1986) * Out of Order Tour (1988–1989) * Rod Stewart: The Hits (2011–2018) * Live the Life Tour (2013) * The Voice, The Guitar, The Songs Tour (2014) * Hits 2016 * From Gasoline Alley to Another Country: Hits 2016 (2016) | | Family | * Alana Stewart (first wife) * Kimberly Stewart (daughter) * Ruby Stewart (daughter) * Rachel Hunter (second wife) * Penny Lancaster (third wife) | | Related articles | * Riva Records * Jimmy Powell (singer)#Jimmy Powell and the 5 Dimensions * Steampacket * Shotgun Express * The Jeff Beck Group * Faces * Tonight's the Night | | Category | This short article about music can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
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9,104,661
| Jane Hadley Barkley | | --- | | | | | | [Second Lady of the United States](/wiki/Second_Lady_of_the_United_States "Second Lady of the United States") | | **In role**November 18, 1949 – January 20, 1953 | | Vice President | [Alben W. Barkley](/wiki/Alben_W._Barkley "Alben W. Barkley") | | Preceded by | [Bess Truman](/wiki/Bess_Truman "Bess Truman") | | Succeeded by | [Pat Nixon](/wiki/Pat_Nixon "Pat Nixon") | | | | Personal details | | Born | Elizabeth Jane Rucker(1911-09-23)September 23, 1911[Keytesville, Missouri](/wiki/Keytesville,_Missouri "Keytesville, Missouri"), U.S. | | Died | September 6, 1956(1956-09-06) (aged 44)[Washington, D.C.](/wiki/Washington,_D.C. "Washington, D.C."), U.S. | | Political party | [Democratic](/wiki/Democratic_Party_(United_States) "Democratic Party (United States)") | | Spouse(s) | Carleton Hadley (1931-1944, his death; 2 children)[Alben W. Barkley](/wiki/Alben_W._Barkley "Alben W. Barkley") (1949-1956, his death) | **Elizabeth Jane Rucker Hadley Barkley** (September 23, 1911 – September 6, 1964, known as **Jane Hadley Barkley**) was [second lady of the United States](/wiki/Second_Lady_of_the_United_States "Second Lady of the United States") from 1949 to 1953. She was the second wife of [Vice President](/wiki/Vice_President_of_the_United_States "Vice President of the United States") [Alben W. Barkley](/wiki/Alben_W._Barkley "Alben W. Barkley"). ## Early life Barkley was born in [Keytesville, Missouri](/wiki/Keytesville,_Missouri "Keytesville, Missouri"). Her father was a lawyer. Her mother was a pianist who had studied in Europe. She married her first husband, Carleton Hadley, in 1931. She met him at [Washington University](/wiki/Washington_University "Washington University") in [St. Louis](/wiki/St._Louis "St. Louis"), [Missouri](/wiki/Missouri "Missouri"). He became a [prominent](https://simple.wiktionary.org/wiki/prominent "wikt:prominent") railroad attorney. They had two daughters. He died in 1944 at the age of 42. ## Marriage to Alben Barkley She married Vice President Alben Barkley, a widower, on November 18, 1949. She was his second wife, and he was her second husband.[[1]](#cite_note-1)[[2]](#cite_note-2) He was 71 and she was 37. Barkley's first wife Dorothy had died in 1947. Until her [courtship](https://simple.wiktionary.org/wiki/courtship "wikt:courtship") with Barkley, Jane Rucker Hadley had been a [devoted](https://simple.wiktionary.org/wiki/devoted "wikt:devoted") [Republican](/wiki/Republican_Party_(United_States) "Republican Party (United States)"). In 1940, Mrs. Hadley was working in the St. Louis office of [Grand Old Party](/wiki/Grand_Old_Party "Grand Old Party") presidential nominee [Wendell Willkie](/wiki/Wendell_Willkie "Wendell Willkie"). When her milkman said his favorite president was [Franklin Delano Roosevelt](/wiki/Franklin_Delano_Roosevelt "Franklin Delano Roosevelt"), she left a note saying, "No Willkie, no milkie". Jane Barkley (far left), next to Alben Barkley ## Death After Barkley's death, Jane Barkley started work as a secretary at [George Washington University](/wiki/George_Washington_University "George Washington University"). Mrs. Barkley published a memoir in 1954 with Vanguard publishers of New York. It was called *I Married the Veep*. When she died in 1956 from a heart attack, she was still working at the university.[[3]](#cite_note-3) ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) "The Merry Widower", *Time*, August 22, 1949 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2) "The Veep Yields", *Time*, November 7, 1949 3. [↑](#cite_ref-3) "Milestones", Time, September 18, 1964 | * [v](/wiki/Template:US_Second_Ladies_and_Gentlemen "Template:US Second Ladies and Gentlemen") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:US_Second_Ladies_and_Gentlemen&action=edit) [Second Ladies and Gentlemen of the United States](/wiki/Second_Ladies_and_Gentlemen_of_the_United_States "Second Ladies and Gentlemen of the United States") | | --- | | [Abigail Adams](/wiki/Abigail_Adams "Abigail Adams") **·** Ann Gerry **·** Hannah Minthorne Tompkins **·** [Floride Calhoun](/wiki/Floride_Calhoun "Floride Calhoun") **·** [Letitia Christian Tyler](/wiki/Letitia_Christian_Tyler "Letitia Christian Tyler") **·** Sophia Dallas **·** [Abigail Fillmore](/wiki/Abigail_Fillmore "Abigail Fillmore") **·** Mary Cyrene Burch Breckinridge **·** Ellen Vesta Emery Hamlin **·** [Eliza Johnson](/wiki/Eliza_McCardle_Johnson "Eliza McCardle Johnson") **·** Ellen Maria Colfax **·** Eliza Hendricks **·** Anna Morton **·** Letitia Stevenson **·** Jennie Tuttle Hobart **·** [Edith Roosevelt](/wiki/Edith_Roosevelt "Edith Roosevelt") **·** [Cornelia Cole Fairbanks](/wiki/Cornelia_Cole_Fairbanks "Cornelia Cole Fairbanks") **·** Carrie Babcock Sherman **·** Lois Irene Marshall **·** [Grace Coolidge](/wiki/Grace_Coolidge "Grace Coolidge") **·** Caro Dawes **·** Mariette Rheiner Garner **·** Ilo Wallace **·** [Bess Truman](/wiki/Bess_Truman "Bess Truman") **·** Jane Hadley Barkley **·** [Pat Nixon](/wiki/Pat_Nixon "Pat Nixon") **·** [Lady Bird Johnson](/wiki/Lady_Bird_Johnson "Lady Bird Johnson") **·** [Muriel Humphrey Brown](/wiki/Muriel_Humphrey_Brown "Muriel Humphrey Brown") **·** [Judy Agnew](/wiki/Judy_Agnew "Judy Agnew") **·** [Betty Ford](/wiki/Betty_Ford "Betty Ford") **·** [Happy Rockefeller](/wiki/Happy_Rockefeller "Happy Rockefeller") **·** [Joan Mondale](/wiki/Joan_Mondale "Joan Mondale") **·** [Barbara Bush](/wiki/Barbara_Bush "Barbara Bush") **·** [Marilyn Quayle](/wiki/Marilyn_Quayle "Marilyn Quayle") **·** [Tipper Gore](/wiki/Tipper_Gore "Tipper Gore") **·** [Lynne Cheney](/wiki/Lynne_Cheney "Lynne Cheney") **·** [Jill Biden](/wiki/Jill_Biden "Jill Biden") **·** [Karen Pence](/wiki/Karen_Pence "Karen Pence") **·** [Doug Emhoff](/wiki/Doug_Emhoff "Doug Emhoff") | |
| Jane Hadley Barkley | | --- | | | | | | Second Lady of the United States | | In roleNovember 18, 1949 – January 20, 1953 | | Vice President | Alben W. Barkley | | Preceded by | Bess Truman | | Succeeded by | Pat Nixon | | | | Personal details | | Born | Elizabeth Jane Rucker(1911-09-23)September 23, 1911Keytesville, Missouri, U.S. | | Died | September 6, 1956(1956-09-06) (aged 44)Washington, D.C., U.S. | | Political party | Democratic | | Spouse(s) | Carleton Hadley (1931-1944, his death; 2 children)Alben W. Barkley (1949-1956, his death) | Elizabeth Jane Rucker Hadley Barkley (September 23, 1911 – September 6, 1964, known as Jane Hadley Barkley) was second lady of the United States from 1949 to 1953. She was the second wife of Vice President Alben W. Barkley. Early life Barkley was born in Keytesville, Missouri. Her father was a lawyer. Her mother was a pianist who had studied in Europe. She married her first husband, Carleton Hadley, in 1931. She met him at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri. He became a prominent railroad attorney. They had two daughters. He died in 1944 at the age of 42. Marriage to Alben Barkley She married Vice President Alben Barkley, a widower, on November 18, 1949. She was his second wife, and he was her second husband.[1][2] He was 71 and she was 37. Barkley's first wife Dorothy had died in 1947. Until her courtship with Barkley, Jane Rucker Hadley had been a devoted Republican. In 1940, Mrs. Hadley was working in the St. Louis office of Grand Old Party presidential nominee Wendell Willkie. When her milkman said his favorite president was Franklin Delano Roosevelt, she left a note saying, "No Willkie, no milkie". Jane Barkley (far left), next to Alben Barkley Death After Barkley's death, Jane Barkley started work as a secretary at George Washington University. Mrs. Barkley published a memoir in 1954 with Vanguard publishers of New York. It was called I Married the Veep. When she died in 1956 from a heart attack, she was still working at the university.[3] References ↑ "The Merry Widower", Time, August 22, 1949 ↑ "The Veep Yields", Time, November 7, 1949 ↑ "Milestones", Time, September 18, 1964 | * v * t * e Second Ladies and Gentlemen of the United States | | --- | | Abigail Adams · Ann Gerry · Hannah Minthorne Tompkins · Floride Calhoun · Letitia Christian Tyler · Sophia Dallas · Abigail Fillmore · Mary Cyrene Burch Breckinridge · Ellen Vesta Emery Hamlin · Eliza Johnson · Ellen Maria Colfax · Eliza Hendricks · Anna Morton · Letitia Stevenson · Jennie Tuttle Hobart · Edith Roosevelt · Cornelia Cole Fairbanks · Carrie Babcock Sherman · Lois Irene Marshall · Grace Coolidge · Caro Dawes · Mariette Rheiner Garner · Ilo Wallace · Bess Truman · Jane Hadley Barkley · Pat Nixon · Lady Bird Johnson · Muriel Humphrey Brown · Judy Agnew · Betty Ford · Happy Rockefeller · Joan Mondale · Barbara Bush · Marilyn Quayle · Tipper Gore · Lynne Cheney · Jill Biden · Karen Pence · Doug Emhoff | |
414,857
New_City,_New_York
New City, New York
9,002,933
**New City** is a town in [Rockland County, New York](/wiki/Rockland_County,_New_York "Rockland County, New York"). It is about 18 mi (29 km) north of [New York City](/wiki/New_York_City "New York City"). The town is classified as a [hamlet](/wiki/Hamlet "Hamlet") of [Clarkstown](/wiki/Clarkstown,_New_York "Clarkstown, New York"), meaning it is a small settlement inside of a larger town. The town is the [county seat](/wiki/County_seat "County seat") of Rockland County, because it is the location of the Rockland County Courthouse and government. Because of how close it is to New York City, many people go there to [work](/wiki/Work "Work"). | * [v](/wiki/Template:Rockland_County,_New_York "Template:Rockland County, New York") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Rockland_County,_New_York&action=edit) Municipalities and communities of [Rockland County, New York](/wiki/Rockland_County,_New_York "Rockland County, New York"), United States | | --- | | [County seat](/wiki/County_seat "County seat"): **New City** | | [Towns](/wiki/Administrative_divisions_of_New_York#Town "Administrative divisions of New York") | * [Clarkstown](/wiki/Clarkstown,_New_York "Clarkstown, New York") * [Haverstraw](/wiki/Haverstraw,_New_York "Haverstraw, New York") * [Orangetown](/wiki/Orangetown,_New_York "Orangetown, New York") * [Ramapo](/wiki/Ramapo,_New_York "Ramapo, New York") * Stony Point | | | [Villages](/wiki/Administrative_divisions_of_New_York#Village "Administrative divisions of New York") | * Airmont * Chestnut Ridge * Grand View-on-Hudson * [Haverstraw](/wiki/Haverstraw_(village),_New_York "Haverstraw (village), New York") * Hillburn * Kaser * Montebello * New Hempstead * New Square * [Nyack](/wiki/Nyack,_New_York "Nyack, New York") * [Piermont](/wiki/Piermont,_New_York "Piermont, New York") * [Pomona](/wiki/Pomona,_New_York "Pomona, New York") * Sloatsburg * [Spring Valley](/wiki/Spring_Valley,_New_York "Spring Valley, New York") * [Suffern](/wiki/Suffern,_New_York "Suffern, New York") * Upper Nyack * Wesley Hills * West Haverstraw | | [CDPs](/wiki/Administrative_divisions_of_New_York#Census-designated_place "Administrative divisions of New York") | * Bardonia * [Blauvelt](/wiki/Blauvelt,_New_York "Blauvelt, New York") * Congers * Hillcrest * Monsey * Mount Ivy * Nanuet * New City * [Orangeburg](/wiki/Orangeburg,_New_York "Orangeburg, New York") * [Pearl River](/wiki/Pearl_River,_New_York "Pearl River, New York") * South Nyack * Sparkill * Stony Point * [Tappan](/wiki/Tappan,_New_York "Tappan, New York") * Thiells * Valley Cottage * Viola * [West Nyack](/wiki/West_Nyack,_New_York "West Nyack, New York") | | [Otherhamlets](/wiki/Administrative_divisions_of_New_York#Hamlet "Administrative divisions of New York") | * Centenary * Central Nyack * Doodletown * Garnerville * Grassy Point * Johnsontown * Jones Point * Ladentown * Middletown * Nauraushaun * Palisades * Rockland Lake * Sandyfield * Sickletown * St. John's in the Wilderness * Sterlington * Tallman * Tomkins Cove | | [Authority control](/wiki/Help:Authority_control "Help:Authority control") | | --- | | International | * [VIAF](https://viaf.org/viaf/131468837) * [WorldCat Identities](https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n89123049/) | | National | * [Israel](http://uli.nli.org.il/F/?func=find-b&local_base=NLX10&find_code=UID&request=987007562606205171) * [United States](https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n89123049) | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature in the United States](/wiki/Category:United_States_geography_stubs "Category:United States geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=New_City,_New_York&action=edit)*.
New City is a town in Rockland County, New York. It is about 18 mi (29 km) north of New York City. The town is classified as a hamlet of Clarkstown, meaning it is a small settlement inside of a larger town. The town is the county seat of Rockland County, because it is the location of the Rockland County Courthouse and government. Because of how close it is to New York City, many people go there to work. | * v * t * e Municipalities and communities of Rockland County, New York, United States | | --- | | County seat: New City | | Towns | * Clarkstown * Haverstraw * Orangetown * Ramapo * Stony Point | | | Villages | * Airmont * Chestnut Ridge * Grand View-on-Hudson * Haverstraw * Hillburn * Kaser * Montebello * New Hempstead * New Square * Nyack * Piermont * Pomona * Sloatsburg * Spring Valley * Suffern * Upper Nyack * Wesley Hills * West Haverstraw | | CDPs | * Bardonia * Blauvelt * Congers * Hillcrest * Monsey * Mount Ivy * Nanuet * New City * Orangeburg * Pearl River * South Nyack * Sparkill * Stony Point * Tappan * Thiells * Valley Cottage * Viola * West Nyack | | Otherhamlets | * Centenary * Central Nyack * Doodletown * Garnerville * Grassy Point * Johnsontown * Jones Point * Ladentown * Middletown * Nauraushaun * Palisades * Rockland Lake * Sandyfield * Sickletown * St. John's in the Wilderness * Sterlington * Tallman * Tomkins Cove | | Authority control | | --- | | International | * VIAF * WorldCat Identities | | National | * Israel * United States | This short article about a place or feature in the United States can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
139,776
Pyrénées-Orientales
Pyrénées-Orientales
8,529,285
| Pyrénées-Orientales | | --- | | [Department](/wiki/Departments_of_France "Departments of France") | | Le Canigou mountain, Pyrénées-Orientales | | FlagCoat of arms | | Location of Pyrénées-Orientales in France | | Coordinates: [42°30′N 2°45′E / 42.500°N 2.750°E / 42.500; 2.750](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Pyr%C3%A9n%C3%A9es-Orientales&params=42_30_N_2_45_E_region:FR_type:adm2nd)[Coordinates](/wiki/Geographic_coordinate_system "Geographic coordinate system"): [42°30′N 2°45′E / 42.500°N 2.750°E / 42.500; 2.750](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Pyr%C3%A9n%C3%A9es-Orientales&params=42_30_N_2_45_E_region:FR_type:adm2nd) | | Country | France | | [Region](/wiki/Regions_of_France "Regions of France") | [Occitanie](/wiki/Occitanie "Occitanie") | | [Prefecture](/wiki/Prefectures_in_France "Prefectures in France") | [Perpignan](/wiki/Perpignan "Perpignan") | | [Subprefectures](/wiki/Prefectures_in_France "Prefectures in France") | [Céret](/wiki/C%C3%A9ret "Céret"), [Prades](/wiki/Prades_(Pyr%C3%A9n%C3%A9es-Orientales) "Prades (Pyrénées-Orientales)") | | Government | |  • President | Hermeline Malherbe[[1]](#cite_note-1) | | Area[[2]](#cite_note-insee-geo-2) | |  • Total | 4,116 km2 (1,589 sq mi) | | Population (2014)[[3]](#cite_note-insee-3) | |  • Total | 466,327 | |  • Density | 110/km2 (290/sq mi) | | [Demonyms](/wiki/Demonym "Demonym") | Pyrénaliens, Pyrénaliennes | | [Time zone](/wiki/Time_zone "Time zone") | [UTC+1](/wiki/UTC%2B1 "UTC+1") ([CET](/wiki/Central_European_Time "Central European Time")) | |  • Summer ([DST](/wiki/Daylight_saving_time "Daylight saving time")) | [UTC+2](/wiki/UTC%2B2 "UTC+2") ([CEST](/wiki/Central_European_Summer_Time "Central European Summer Time")) | | [ISO 3166 code](/wiki/ISO_3166 "ISO 3166") | FR-66 | | [Arrondissements](/wiki/Arrondissements_of_France "Arrondissements of France") | 3 | | [Cantons](/wiki/Cantons_in_France "Cantons in France") | 17 | | [Communes](/wiki/Communes_in_France "Communes in France") | 226 | | Website | <http://www.cg66.fr> | **Pyrénées-Orientales** (English: *Eastern Pyrenees*; [Catalan](/wiki/Catalan_language "Catalan language"): *Pirineus Orientals*; [Occitan](/wiki/Occitan_language "Occitan language"): *Pirenèus Orientals*) is a [department](/wiki/Departments_of_France "Departments of France") in the [region](/wiki/Regions_of_France "Regions of France") of [Occitanie](/wiki/Occitanie "Occitanie") in southern [France](/wiki/France "France"); it is next to the northern [Spanish](/wiki/Spain "Spain") [border](/wiki/Border "Border") and the [Mediterranean Sea](/wiki/Mediterranean_Sea "Mediterranean Sea"). The department is formed by the [historically](/wiki/History "History") [Catalan-speaking](/wiki/Catalan_language "Catalan language") area of **Rosillon** (with its different parts: Roussillon (modern), Haute Cerdagne (or simply Cerdagne), Conflent, Vallespir and Capcir) and Fenouillèdes, an [historically](/wiki/History "History") [Occitan-speaking](/wiki/Occitan_language "Occitan language") area. ## History Before 1659, most of the present department was part of the former Principality of Catalonia, within the [Kingdom of Spain](/wiki/Kingdom_of_Spain "Kingdom of Spain"), so historically most of it has been [Catalan-speaking](/wiki/Catalan_language "Catalan language"), and it is still sometimes referred to as [Northern Catalonia](/wiki/Northern_Catalonia "Northern Catalonia"). Pyrénées-Orientales was created in 1790 during the [French Revolution](/wiki/French_Revolution "French Revolution"), when the whole of France was divided into departments, replacing the old [provinces](/wiki/Province "Province"). Pyrénées-Orientales was formed by the province of Roussillon and Fenouillèdes ([Occitan](/wiki/Occitan_language "Occitan language"): *Fenolheda*), a small piece of territory which had formerly been on the southern edge of Languedoc. ## Geography Pyrénées-Orientales has an area of 4,116 km2 (1,589 sq mi).[[2]](#cite_note-insee-geo-2) It has the department of [Aude](/wiki/Aude "Aude") to the north, the [Mediterranean Sea](/wiki/Mediterranean_Sea "Mediterranean Sea") to the east, [Spain](/wiki/Spain "Spain") to the south, and [Andorra](/wiki/Andorra "Andorra") and the department of [Ariège](/wiki/Ari%C3%A8ge_(department) "Ariège (department)") to the west. | Places next to Pyrénées-Orientales | | --- | | | | | | | --- | --- | --- | | | [Aude](/wiki/Aude "Aude") | | | [Andorra](/wiki/Andorra "Andorra") and [Ariège](/wiki/Ari%C3%A8ge_(department) "Ariège (department)") | **Pyrénées-Orientales** | [Mediterranean Sea](/wiki/Mediterranean_Sea "Mediterranean Sea") | | | [Spain](/wiki/Spain "Spain")([Catalonia](/wiki/Catalonia "Catalonia")) | | | The department is dominated by the [Pyrenees](/wiki/Pyrenees "Pyrenees") [mountain range](/wiki/Mountain_range "Mountain range"). The highest mountain is [Pic Carlit](/wiki/Carlit "Carlit") ([42°34′11″N 01°55′55″E / 42.56972°N 1.93194°E / 42.56972; 1.93194 (Pic Carlit)](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Pyr%C3%A9n%C3%A9es-Orientales&params=42_34_11_N_01_55_55_E_region:ID_type:mountain&title=Pic+Carlit)) that is 2,921 m (9,583 ft) high.[[4]](#cite_note-reliefs-4) The best known mountain in the department is [Le Canigou](/wiki/Canigou "Canigou") ([42°31′08″N 02°27′24″E / 42.51889°N 2.45667°E / 42.51889; 2.45667 (Le Canigou)](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Pyr%C3%A9n%C3%A9es-Orientales&params=42_31_08_N_02_27_24_E_region:ID_type:mountain&title=Le+Canigou)) that is 2,784 m (9,134 ft) high.[[4]](#cite_note-reliefs-4) There are three main [rivers](/wiki/River "River") in the department: from north to south, [Agly](/wiki/Agly "Agly"), [Têt](/wiki/T%C3%AAt_(river) "Têt (river)") (the largest river of the department) and [Tech](/wiki/Tech_(river) "Tech (river)"); the Agly has its [source](/wiki/Source_(river_or_stream) "Source (river or stream)") in the Corbières hills, in the southern part of the [Aude](/wiki/Aude "Aude") department. The other two river has their sources in the Pyrenees. The three rivers flow into the [eastern](/wiki/East "East") [Plain](/wiki/Plain "Plain") of Roussillon before they flow into the Mediterranean Sea. Most of the population and [agricultural](/wiki/Agriculture "Agriculture") production are concentrated in the Plain of Roussillon, with only 30% of the area. [Llívia](/wiki/Llivia "Llivia") is a town of Cerdanya, province of [Girona](/wiki/Girona "Girona"), [Catalonia](/wiki/Catalonia "Catalonia"), [Spain](/wiki/Spain "Spain"), that forms a [Spanish](/wiki/Spain "Spain") [exclave](/wiki/Exclave "Exclave") surrounded by [French](/wiki/France "France") territory. ### Climate In the department, there are three subtypes of the group C in the [Köppen climate classification](/wiki/K%C3%B6ppen_climate_classification "Köppen climate classification"):[[5]](#cite_note-5) 1. **Csa** - Mediterranean climate with hot summers. 2. **Cfa** - Subtropical humid climate with hot summers. 3. **Cfb** - [Oceanic climate](/wiki/Oceanic_climate "Oceanic climate") with template summers. | Climate data for Perpignan, Pyrénées-Orientales, France | | --- | | Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year | | Daily mean °C (°F) | 8(46) | 8(46) | 11(52) | 13(55) | 16(61) | 20(68) | 23(73) | 23(73) | 20(68) | 16(61) | 11(52) | 9(48) | 15(59) | | Average rainfall mm (inches) | 50(2.0) | 40(1.6) | 50(2.0) | 40(1.6) | 50(2.0) | 30(1.2) | 20(0.8) | 20(0.8) | 50(2.0) | 70(2.8) | 50(2.0) | 50(2.0) | 520(20.8) | | Source: Weatherbase.com [[1]](http://www.weatherbase.com/weather/weather.php3?s=74770&cityname=Perpignan-Languedoc-Roussillon-France&units=metric) | ## Administration The département is managed by the *Departamental Council of the Pyrénées-Orientales* in [Perpignan](/wiki/Perpignan "Perpignan"). The Pyrénées-Orientales is part of the region of [Occitanie](/wiki/Occitanie "Occitanie"). ### Administrative divisions The area is [traditionally](/wiki/Tradition "Tradition") divided into [comarques](/wiki/Comarca "Comarca"), of which five (French Cerdagne, Capcir, Conflent, Roussillon and Vallespir) are historically Catalan-speaking and one (Fenouillèdes) is historically Occitan-speaking. There are 3 [*arrondissements*](/wiki/Arrondissements_of_France "Arrondissements of France") ([districts](/wiki/District "District")), 17 [*cantons*](/wiki/Cantons_in_France "Cantons in France") and 226 [*communes*](/wiki/Communes_in_France "Communes in France") ([municipalities](/wiki/Municipality "Municipality")) in the Pyrénées-Orientales.[[6]](#cite_note-insee1-6) | INSEEcode | Arrondissement | [Capital](/wiki/Capital_(city) "Capital (city)") | Population[[7]](#cite_note-insee2-7)(2014) | Area[[8]](#cite_note-8)(km²) | Density(inh./km²) | *Communes* | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | 661 | [Céret](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_C%C3%A9ret "Arrondissement of Céret") | [Céret](/wiki/C%C3%A9ret "Céret") | 73,192 | 953.5 | 76.8 | 40 | | 662 | [Perpignan](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Perpignan "Arrondissement of Perpignan") | [Perpignan](/wiki/Perpignan "Perpignan") | 349,959 | 1,317.4 | 265.6 | 86 | | 663 | [Prades](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Prades "Arrondissement of Prades") | [Prades](/wiki/Prades_(Pyr%C3%A9n%C3%A9es-Orientales) "Prades (Pyrénées-Orientales)") | 43,176 | 1,845.1 | 23.4 | 100 | The following is a list of the 17 [cantons](/wiki/Cantons_of_France "Cantons of France") of the **Pyrénées-Orientales** [department](/wiki/Departments_of_France "Departments of France") (with their [INSEE codes](/wiki/INSEE_code "INSEE code")), following the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015:[[9]](#cite_note-9) 1. Les Aspres (6601) 2. Le Canigou (6602) 3. La Côte Sableuse (6603) 4. La Côte Salanquaise (6604) 5. La Côte Vermeille (6605) 6. Perpignan-1 (6606) 7. Perpignan-2 (6607) 8. Perpignan-3 (6608) 9. Perpignan-4 (6609) 10. Perpignan-5 (6610) 11. Perpignan-6 (6611) 12. La Plaine d'Illibéris (6612) 13. Les Pyrénées catalanes (6613) 14. Le Ribéral (6614) 15. La Vallée de la Têt (6615) 16. La Vallée de l'Agly (6616) 17. Vallespir-Albères (6617) *Cantons* of the Pyrénées-Orientales **1**- Les Aspres, **2**- Le Canigou, **3**- La Côte sableuse, **4**- La Côte salanquaise, **5**- La Côte Vermeille, **6**- Perpignan-1, **7**- Perpignan-2, **8**- Perpignan-3, **9**- Perpignan-4, **10**- Perpignan-5, **11**- Perpignan-6, **12**- La Plaine d'Illibéris, **13**- Les Pyrénées catalanes, **14**- Le Ribéral, **15**- La Vallée de l'Agly, **16**- La Vallée de la Têt, **17**- Vallespir-Albères ## Demographics Pyrénées-Orientales has a population, in 2014, of 466,327,[[3]](#cite_note-insee-3) for a [population density](/wiki/Population_density "Population density") of 113.3 inhabitants/km2. The *arrondissement* of Perpignan, with 349,959 inhabitants, is by far the largest. The other two, Ceret and Prades, have respectively 73,192 and 43,176 inhabitants.[[7]](#cite_note-insee2-7) The only important city is Perpignan with 120,605 people living there in 2012. The subprefectures Céret and Prades have 7,663 and 5,927, respectively.[[7]](#cite_note-insee2-7) **Evolution of the population in Pyrénées-Orientales** The cities with more than 6,000 inhabitants in the department are: Albera Massif viewed from Saint-Génis-des-Fontaines | City | Population (2014)[[7]](#cite_note-insee2-7) | Arrondissement | | --- | --- | --- | | [Perpignan](/wiki/Perpignan "Perpignan") | 120,605 | [Perpignan](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Perpignan "Arrondissement of Perpignan") | | Canet-en-Roussillon | 12,224 | [Perpignan](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Perpignan "Arrondissement of Perpignan") | | Saint-Estève | 11,925 | [Perpignan](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Perpignan "Arrondissement of Perpignan") | | Argelès-sur-Mer | 10,279 | [Céret](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_C%C3%A9ret "Arrondissement of Céret") | | Saint-Laurent-de-la-Salanque | 10,269 | [Perpignan](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Perpignan "Arrondissement of Perpignan") | | Saint-Cyprien | 10,015 | [Perpignan](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Perpignan "Arrondissement of Perpignan") | | Cabestany | 9,683 | [Perpignan](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Perpignan "Arrondissement of Perpignan") | | Elne | 8,556 | [Perpignan](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Perpignan "Arrondissement of Perpignan") | | Rivesaltes | 8,550 | [Perpignan](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Perpignan "Arrondissement of Perpignan") | | [Pia](/wiki/Pia,_Pyr%C3%A9n%C3%A9es-Orientales "Pia, Pyrénées-Orientales") | 8,519 | [Perpignan](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Perpignan "Arrondissement of Perpignan") | | [Céret](/wiki/C%C3%A9ret "Céret") | 7,663 | [Céret](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_C%C3%A9ret "Arrondissement of Céret") | | Le Soler | 7,524 | [Perpignan](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Perpignan "Arrondissement of Perpignan") | | Thuir | 7,374 | [Perpignan](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Perpignan "Arrondissement of Perpignan") | | Bompas | 7,004 | [Perpignan](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Perpignan "Arrondissement of Perpignan") | | Toulouges | 6,690 | [Perpignan](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Perpignan "Arrondissement of Perpignan") | The inhabitants of Pyrénées-Orientales are known, in [French](/wiki/French_language "French language"), as *Pyrénaliens* (women: *Pyrénaliennes*) or *Catalans* (women: *Catalanes*).[[10]](#cite_note-10) French is spoken by almost all the population. Minority languages in the region are [Catalan](/wiki/Catalan_language "Catalan language") and [Occitan](/wiki/Occitan_language "Occitan language"), which between them are estimated to be spoken by rather more than a quarter of the population and understood by more than 40%. On 10 December 2007, the *Departamental Council of the Pyrénées-Orientales* recognized Catalan as a regional language of the department, though French is still the only [official language](/wiki/Official_language "Official language") in France, according to the Constitution.[[11]](#cite_note-11) ## Economy Pyrénées-Orientales is a [wine](/wiki/Wine "Wine")-growing area and a tourist destination. The area is famous for its wine with the predominately red [grape](/wiki/Grape "Grape") varieties grown all over the department. ## Places of interest Some places of interest are: * [Prades](/wiki/Prades_(Pyr%C3%A9n%C3%A9es-Orientales) "Prades (Pyrénées-Orientales)") ([Catalan](/wiki/Catalan_language "Catalan language"): *Prada de Conflent*) - site of the Catalan Summer University (*Universitat Catalana d'Estiu*). * Banyuls-sur-Mer (Catalan *Banyuls de la Marenda*) famous for its wines. * Prats de Molló - important defensive castle of the 17th century facing south to the Pyrenees. * Salses - important defensive castle of the 16th century, on the ancient frontier with [Spain](/wiki/Spain "Spain"). ## Gallery * [Perpignan](/wiki/Perpignan "Perpignan") * Château Royal de Collioure * Fort de Salses * Saint-Michel-de-Cuxa abbey * The THEMIS Solar Power tower * Beach in Canet-en-Roussillon * Martin-du-Canigou abbey ## Related pages * [Northern Catalonia](/wiki/Northern_Catalonia "Northern Catalonia") * [Arrondissements of the Pyrénées-Orientales department](/wiki/Arrondissements_of_the_Pyr%C3%A9n%C3%A9es-Orientales_department "Arrondissements of the Pyrénées-Orientales department") * [Communes of the Pyrénées-Orientales department](/wiki/Communes_of_the_Pyr%C3%A9n%C3%A9es-Orientales_department "Communes of the Pyrénées-Orientales department") ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["L'Assemblée départementale"](https://web.archive.org/web/20161003212238/http://www.ledepartement66.fr/1976-l-assemblee-departementale.htm) (in French). Conseil départemental des Pyrénées-Orientales. Archived from [the original](http://www.ledepartement66.fr/1976-l-assemblee-departementale.htm) on 3 October 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2017. 2. ↑ [2.0](#cite_ref-insee-geo_2-0) [2.1](#cite_ref-insee-geo_2-1) ["Département des Pyrénées-Orientales (66) - Comparateur de territoire"](https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/1405599?geo=DEP-66). *Publications et statistiques pour la France ou les régions* (in French). Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques - INSEE. Retrieved 6 February 2017. 3. ↑ [3.0](#cite_ref-insee_3-0) [3.1](#cite_ref-insee_3-1) ["Populations légales 2014 des départements et des collectivités d'outre-mer"](http://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/2525762?sommaire=2525768) (in French). Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques - INSEE. Retrieved 6 February 2017. 4. ↑ [4.0](#cite_ref-reliefs_4-0) [4.1](#cite_ref-reliefs_4-1) ["Le reliefs des Pyrénées-Orientales"](http://pyreneescatalanes.free.fr/Decouvrir/Reliefs.php) (in French). A la découverte des Pyrénées Catalanes. Retrieved 7 July 2013. 5. [↑](#cite_ref-5) ["Le département des Pyrénées-Orientales"](http://www.annuaire-mairie.fr/departement-pyrenees-orientales.html). *Annuaire-Mairie.fr* (in French). Retrieved 7 July 2013. 6. [↑](#cite_ref-insee1_6-0) ["Département des Pyrénées-Orientales (66)"](https://www.insee.fr/fr/metadonnees/cog/departement/DEP66-pyrenees-orientales). *Géographie administrative et d'étude* (in French). Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques - INSEE. Retrieved 8 February 2017. 7. ↑ [7.0](#cite_ref-insee2_7-0) [7.1](#cite_ref-insee2_7-1) [7.2](#cite_ref-insee2_7-2) [7.3](#cite_ref-insee2_7-3) ["Régions, départements, arrondissements, cantons et communes"](http://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/fichier/2525755/dep66.pdf) (PDF). *Populations légales 2014* (in French). Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques - INSEE. Retrieved 6 February 2017. 8. [↑](#cite_ref-8) ["Département des Pyrénées-Orientales (66)"](https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/1405599?geo=DEP-66+ARR-661+ARR-662+ARR-663). *Comparateur de territoire* (in French). Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques - INSEE. Retrieved 6 February 2017. 9. [↑](#cite_ref-9) ["Décret n° 2014-262 du 26 février 2014 portant délimitation des cantons dans le département des Pyrénées-Orientales"](http://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/affichTexte.do?cidTexte=JORFTEXT000028664484) (in French). Légifrance.gouv.fr. 2 March 2014. Retrieved 17 June 2015. 10. [↑](#cite_ref-10) ["Pyrénées-Orientales (66)"](http://www.habitants.fr/habitants_departement_pyrenees-orientales_66.html) (in French). habitants.fr. Retrieved 2 June 2014. 11. [↑](#cite_ref-11) See Article 1 of the ["Charter of the Catalan Language"](http://www.cg66.fr/202-charte-en-faveur-du-catalan.htm) [Archived](https://web.archive.org/web/20121222154353/http://www.cg66.fr/202-charte-en-faveur-du-catalan.htm) 2012-12-22 at the [Wayback Machine](/wiki/Wayback_Machine "Wayback Machine") ## Other websites Wikimedia Commons has media related to ***[Pyrénées-Orientales](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Pyr%C3%A9n%C3%A9es-Orientales "commons:Pyrénées-Orientales")***. Wikivoyage has a travel guide about: ***[Pyrénées-Orientales](https://en.wikivoyage.org/wiki/Pyr%C3%A9n%C3%A9es-Orientales "wikivoyage:Pyrénées-Orientales")*** [Wikisource](/wiki/Wikisource "Wikisource") has original writing related to this article: **[Pyrénées-Orientales](https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Special:Search/Pyr%C3%A9n%C3%A9es-Orientales "wikisource:Special:Search/Pyrénées-Orientales")** * [Departamental Council of Pyrénées-Orientales](http://www.cg66.fr/) (in French) * [Prefecture website](http://www.pyrenees-orientales.pref.gouv.fr/) (in French) * [Réseau Culturel Terre Catalane](http://www.reseauculturel.com/index.asp?lng=EN) | * [v](/wiki/Template:Departments_of_France "Template:Departments of France") * [t](/wiki/Template_talk:Departments_of_France "Template talk:Departments of France") * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Departments_of_France&action=edit) [Departments of France](/wiki/Departments_of_France "Departments of France") | | --- | | * 01 [Ain](/wiki/Ain "Ain") * 02 [Aisne](/wiki/Aisne "Aisne") * 03 [Allier](/wiki/Allier "Allier") * 04 [Alpes-de-Haute-Provence](/wiki/Alpes-de-Haute-Provence "Alpes-de-Haute-Provence") * 05 [Hautes-Alpes](/wiki/Hautes-Alpes "Hautes-Alpes") * 06 [Alpes-Maritimes](/wiki/Alpes-Maritimes "Alpes-Maritimes") * 07 [Ardèche](/wiki/Ard%C3%A8che "Ardèche") * 08 [Ardennes](/wiki/Ardennes_(department) "Ardennes (department)") * 09 [Ariège](/wiki/Ari%C3%A8ge_(department) "Ariège (department)") * 10 [Aube](/wiki/Aube "Aube") * 11 [Aude](/wiki/Aude "Aude") * 12 [Aveyron](/wiki/Aveyron "Aveyron") * 13 [Bouches-du-Rhône](/wiki/Bouches-du-Rh%C3%B4ne "Bouches-du-Rhône") * 14 [Calvados](/wiki/Calvados_(department) "Calvados (department)") * 15 [Cantal](/wiki/Cantal "Cantal") * 16 [Charente](/wiki/Charente "Charente") * 17 [Charente-Maritime](/wiki/Charente-Maritime "Charente-Maritime") * 18 [Cher](/wiki/Cher_(department) "Cher (department)") * 19 [Corrèze](/wiki/Corr%C3%A8ze "Corrèze") * 2A [Corse-du-Sud](/wiki/Corse-du-Sud "Corse-du-Sud") * 2B [Haute-Corse](/wiki/Haute-Corse "Haute-Corse") * 21 [Côte-d'Or](/wiki/C%C3%B4te-d%27Or "Côte-d'Or") * 22 [Côtes-d'Armor](/wiki/C%C3%B4tes-d%27Armor "Côtes-d'Armor") * 23 [Creuse](/wiki/Creuse "Creuse") * 24 [Dordogne](/wiki/Dordogne "Dordogne") * 25 [Doubs](/wiki/Doubs "Doubs") * 26 [Drôme](/wiki/Dr%C3%B4me "Drôme") * 27 [Eure](/wiki/Eure "Eure") * 28 [Eure-et-Loir](/wiki/Eure-et-Loir "Eure-et-Loir") * 29 [Finistère](/wiki/Finist%C3%A8re "Finistère") * 30 [Gard](/wiki/Gard "Gard") * 31 [Haute-Garonne](/wiki/Haute-Garonne "Haute-Garonne") * 32 [Gers](/wiki/Gers "Gers") * 33 [Gironde](/wiki/Gironde "Gironde") * 34 [Hérault](/wiki/H%C3%A9rault "Hérault") * 35 [Ille-et-Vilaine](/wiki/Ille-et-Vilaine "Ille-et-Vilaine") * 36 [Indre](/wiki/Indre_(department) "Indre (department)") * 37 [Indre-et-Loire](/wiki/Indre-et-Loire "Indre-et-Loire") * 38 [Isère](/wiki/Is%C3%A8re "Isère") * 39 [Jura](/wiki/Jura_(department) "Jura (department)") * 40 [Landes](/wiki/Landes_(department) "Landes (department)") * 41 [Loir-et-Cher](/wiki/Loir-et-Cher "Loir-et-Cher") * 42 [Loire](/wiki/Loire_(department) "Loire (department)") * 43 [Haute-Loire](/wiki/Haute-Loire "Haute-Loire") * 44 [Loire-Atlantique](/wiki/Loire-Atlantique "Loire-Atlantique") * 45 [Loiret](/wiki/Loiret "Loiret") * 46 [Lot](/wiki/Lot_(department) "Lot (department)") * 47 [Lot-et-Garonne](/wiki/Lot-et-Garonne "Lot-et-Garonne") * 48 [Lozère](/wiki/Loz%C3%A8re "Lozère") * 49 [Maine-et-Loire](/wiki/Maine-et-Loire "Maine-et-Loire") * 50 [Manche](/wiki/Manche "Manche") * 51 [Marne](/wiki/Marne "Marne") * 52 [Haute-Marne](/wiki/Haute-Marne "Haute-Marne") * 53 [Mayenne](/wiki/Mayenne "Mayenne") * 54 [Meurthe-et-Moselle](/wiki/Meurthe-et-Moselle "Meurthe-et-Moselle") * 55 [Meuse](/wiki/Meuse_(department) "Meuse (department)") * 56 [Morbihan](/wiki/Morbihan "Morbihan") * 57 [Moselle](/wiki/Moselle_(department) "Moselle (department)") * 58 [Nièvre](/wiki/Ni%C3%A8vre "Nièvre") * 59 [Nord](/wiki/Nord_(French_department) "Nord (French department)") * 60 [Oise](/wiki/Oise "Oise") * 61 [Orne](/wiki/Orne "Orne") * 62 [Pas-de-Calais](/wiki/Pas-de-Calais "Pas-de-Calais") * 63 [Puy-de-Dôme](/wiki/Puy-de-D%C3%B4me "Puy-de-Dôme") * 64 [Pyrénées-Atlantiques](/wiki/Pyr%C3%A9n%C3%A9es-Atlantiques "Pyrénées-Atlantiques") * 65 [Hautes-Pyrénées](/wiki/Hautes-Pyr%C3%A9n%C3%A9es "Hautes-Pyrénées") * 66 Pyrénées-Orientales * 67 [Bas-Rhin](/wiki/Bas-Rhin "Bas-Rhin") * 68 [Haut-Rhin](/wiki/Haut-Rhin "Haut-Rhin") * 69D [Rhône](/wiki/Rh%C3%B4ne_(department) "Rhône (department)") * 70 [Haute-Saône](/wiki/Haute-Sa%C3%B4ne "Haute-Saône") * 71 [Saône-et-Loire](/wiki/Sa%C3%B4ne-et-Loire "Saône-et-Loire") * 72 [Sarthe](/wiki/Sarthe "Sarthe") * 73 [Savoie](/wiki/Savoie "Savoie") * 74 [Haute-Savoie](/wiki/Haute-Savoie "Haute-Savoie") * 75 [Paris](/wiki/Paris "Paris") * 76 [Seine-Maritime](/wiki/Seine-Maritime "Seine-Maritime") * 77 [Seine-et-Marne](/wiki/Seine-et-Marne "Seine-et-Marne") * 78 [Yvelines](/wiki/Yvelines "Yvelines") * 79 [Deux-Sèvres](/wiki/Deux-S%C3%A8vres "Deux-Sèvres") * 80 [Somme](/wiki/Somme_(department) "Somme (department)") * 81 [Tarn](/wiki/Tarn_(department) "Tarn (department)") * 82 [Tarn-et-Garonne](/wiki/Tarn-et-Garonne "Tarn-et-Garonne") * 83 [Var](/wiki/Var_(department) "Var (department)") * 84 [Vaucluse](/wiki/Vaucluse "Vaucluse") * 85 [Vendée](/wiki/Vend%C3%A9e "Vendée") * 86 [Vienne](/wiki/Vienne "Vienne") * 87 [Haute-Vienne](/wiki/Haute-Vienne "Haute-Vienne") * 88 [Vosges](/wiki/Vosges_(department) "Vosges (department)") * 89 [Yonne](/wiki/Yonne "Yonne") * 90 [Territoire de Belfort](/wiki/Territoire_de_Belfort "Territoire de Belfort") * 91 [Essonne](/wiki/Essonne "Essonne") * 92 [Hauts-de-Seine](/wiki/Hauts-de-Seine "Hauts-de-Seine") * 93 [Seine-Saint-Denis](/wiki/Seine-Saint-Denis "Seine-Saint-Denis") * 94 [Val-de-Marne](/wiki/Val-de-Marne "Val-de-Marne") * 95 [Val-d'Oise](/wiki/Val-d%27Oise "Val-d'Oise") [Overseas departments](/wiki/Overseas_department "Overseas department") 971 [Guadeloupe](/wiki/Guadeloupe "Guadeloupe") 972 [Martinique](/wiki/Martinique "Martinique") 973 [French Guiana](/wiki/French_Guiana "French Guiana") 974 [Réunion](/wiki/R%C3%A9union "Réunion") 976 [Mayotte](/wiki/Mayotte "Mayotte") Metropolis with territorial collectivity statute 69M [Lyon](/wiki/Lyon_Metropolis "Lyon Metropolis") |
| Pyrénées-Orientales | | --- | | Department | | Le Canigou mountain, Pyrénées-Orientales | | FlagCoat of arms | | Location of Pyrénées-Orientales in France | | Coordinates: 42°30′N 2°45′E / 42.500°N 2.750°E / 42.500; 2.750Coordinates: 42°30′N 2°45′E / 42.500°N 2.750°E / 42.500; 2.750 | | Country | France | | Region | Occitanie | | Prefecture | Perpignan | | Subprefectures | Céret, Prades | | Government | |  • President | Hermeline Malherbe[1] | | Area[2] | |  • Total | 4,116 km2 (1,589 sq mi) | | Population (2014)[3] | |  • Total | 466,327 | |  • Density | 110/km2 (290/sq mi) | | Demonyms | Pyrénaliens, Pyrénaliennes | | Time zone | UTC+1 (CET) | |  • Summer (DST) | UTC+2 (CEST) | | ISO 3166 code | FR-66 | | Arrondissements | 3 | | Cantons | 17 | | Communes | 226 | | Website | http://www.cg66.fr | Pyrénées-Orientales (English: Eastern Pyrenees; Catalan: Pirineus Orientals; Occitan: Pirenèus Orientals) is a department in the region of Occitanie in southern France; it is next to the northern Spanish border and the Mediterranean Sea. The department is formed by the historically Catalan-speaking area of Rosillon (with its different parts: Roussillon (modern), Haute Cerdagne (or simply Cerdagne), Conflent, Vallespir and Capcir) and Fenouillèdes, an historically Occitan-speaking area. History Before 1659, most of the present department was part of the former Principality of Catalonia, within the Kingdom of Spain, so historically most of it has been Catalan-speaking, and it is still sometimes referred to as Northern Catalonia. Pyrénées-Orientales was created in 1790 during the French Revolution, when the whole of France was divided into departments, replacing the old provinces. Pyrénées-Orientales was formed by the province of Roussillon and Fenouillèdes (Occitan: Fenolheda), a small piece of territory which had formerly been on the southern edge of Languedoc. Geography Pyrénées-Orientales has an area of 4,116 km2 (1,589 sq mi).[2] It has the department of Aude to the north, the Mediterranean Sea to the east, Spain to the south, and Andorra and the department of Ariège to the west. | Places next to Pyrénées-Orientales | | --- | | | | | | | --- | --- | --- | | | Aude | | | Andorra and Ariège | Pyrénées-Orientales | Mediterranean Sea | | | Spain(Catalonia) | | | The department is dominated by the Pyrenees mountain range. The highest mountain is Pic Carlit (42°34′11″N 01°55′55″E / 42.56972°N 1.93194°E / 42.56972; 1.93194 (Pic Carlit)) that is 2,921 m (9,583 ft) high.[4] The best known mountain in the department is Le Canigou (42°31′08″N 02°27′24″E / 42.51889°N 2.45667°E / 42.51889; 2.45667 (Le Canigou)) that is 2,784 m (9,134 ft) high.[4] There are three main rivers in the department: from north to south, Agly, Têt (the largest river of the department) and Tech; the Agly has its source in the Corbières hills, in the southern part of the Aude department. The other two river has their sources in the Pyrenees. The three rivers flow into the eastern Plain of Roussillon before they flow into the Mediterranean Sea. Most of the population and agricultural production are concentrated in the Plain of Roussillon, with only 30% of the area. Llívia is a town of Cerdanya, province of Girona, Catalonia, Spain, that forms a Spanish exclave surrounded by French territory. Climate In the department, there are three subtypes of the group C in the Köppen climate classification:[5] Csa - Mediterranean climate with hot summers. Cfa - Subtropical humid climate with hot summers. Cfb - Oceanic climate with template summers. | Climate data for Perpignan, Pyrénées-Orientales, France | | --- | | Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year | | Daily mean °C (°F) | 8(46) | 8(46) | 11(52) | 13(55) | 16(61) | 20(68) | 23(73) | 23(73) | 20(68) | 16(61) | 11(52) | 9(48) | 15(59) | | Average rainfall mm (inches) | 50(2.0) | 40(1.6) | 50(2.0) | 40(1.6) | 50(2.0) | 30(1.2) | 20(0.8) | 20(0.8) | 50(2.0) | 70(2.8) | 50(2.0) | 50(2.0) | 520(20.8) | | Source: Weatherbase.com [1] | Administration The département is managed by the Departamental Council of the Pyrénées-Orientales in Perpignan. The Pyrénées-Orientales is part of the region of Occitanie. Administrative divisions The area is traditionally divided into comarques, of which five (French Cerdagne, Capcir, Conflent, Roussillon and Vallespir) are historically Catalan-speaking and one (Fenouillèdes) is historically Occitan-speaking. There are 3 arrondissements (districts), 17 cantons and 226 communes (municipalities) in the Pyrénées-Orientales.[6] | INSEEcode | Arrondissement | Capital | Population[7](2014) | Area[8](km²) | Density(inh./km²) | Communes | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | 661 | Céret | Céret | 73,192 | 953.5 | 76.8 | 40 | | 662 | Perpignan | Perpignan | 349,959 | 1,317.4 | 265.6 | 86 | | 663 | Prades | Prades | 43,176 | 1,845.1 | 23.4 | 100 | The following is a list of the 17 cantons of the Pyrénées-Orientales department (with their INSEE codes), following the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015:[9] Les Aspres (6601) Le Canigou (6602) La Côte Sableuse (6603) La Côte Salanquaise (6604) La Côte Vermeille (6605) Perpignan-1 (6606) Perpignan-2 (6607) Perpignan-3 (6608) Perpignan-4 (6609) Perpignan-5 (6610) Perpignan-6 (6611) La Plaine d'Illibéris (6612) Les Pyrénées catalanes (6613) Le Ribéral (6614) La Vallée de la Têt (6615) La Vallée de l'Agly (6616) Vallespir-Albères (6617) Cantons of the Pyrénées-Orientales 1- Les Aspres, 2- Le Canigou, 3- La Côte sableuse, 4- La Côte salanquaise, 5- La Côte Vermeille, 6- Perpignan-1, 7- Perpignan-2, 8- Perpignan-3, 9- Perpignan-4, 10- Perpignan-5, 11- Perpignan-6, 12- La Plaine d'Illibéris, 13- Les Pyrénées catalanes, 14- Le Ribéral, 15- La Vallée de l'Agly, 16- La Vallée de la Têt, 17- Vallespir-Albères Demographics Pyrénées-Orientales has a population, in 2014, of 466,327,[3] for a population density of 113.3 inhabitants/km2. The arrondissement of Perpignan, with 349,959 inhabitants, is by far the largest. The other two, Ceret and Prades, have respectively 73,192 and 43,176 inhabitants.[7] The only important city is Perpignan with 120,605 people living there in 2012. The subprefectures Céret and Prades have 7,663 and 5,927, respectively.[7] Evolution of the population in Pyrénées-Orientales The cities with more than 6,000 inhabitants in the department are: Albera Massif viewed from Saint-Génis-des-Fontaines | City | Population (2014)[7] | Arrondissement | | --- | --- | --- | | Perpignan | 120,605 | Perpignan | | Canet-en-Roussillon | 12,224 | Perpignan | | Saint-Estève | 11,925 | Perpignan | | Argelès-sur-Mer | 10,279 | Céret | | Saint-Laurent-de-la-Salanque | 10,269 | Perpignan | | Saint-Cyprien | 10,015 | Perpignan | | Cabestany | 9,683 | Perpignan | | Elne | 8,556 | Perpignan | | Rivesaltes | 8,550 | Perpignan | | Pia | 8,519 | Perpignan | | Céret | 7,663 | Céret | | Le Soler | 7,524 | Perpignan | | Thuir | 7,374 | Perpignan | | Bompas | 7,004 | Perpignan | | Toulouges | 6,690 | Perpignan | The inhabitants of Pyrénées-Orientales are known, in French, as Pyrénaliens (women: Pyrénaliennes) or Catalans (women: Catalanes).[10] French is spoken by almost all the population. Minority languages in the region are Catalan and Occitan, which between them are estimated to be spoken by rather more than a quarter of the population and understood by more than 40%. On 10 December 2007, the Departamental Council of the Pyrénées-Orientales recognized Catalan as a regional language of the department, though French is still the only official language in France, according to the Constitution.[11] Economy Pyrénées-Orientales is a wine-growing area and a tourist destination. The area is famous for its wine with the predominately red grape varieties grown all over the department. Places of interest Some places of interest are: Prades (Catalan: Prada de Conflent) - site of the Catalan Summer University (Universitat Catalana d'Estiu). Banyuls-sur-Mer (Catalan Banyuls de la Marenda) famous for its wines. Prats de Molló - important defensive castle of the 17th century facing south to the Pyrenees. Salses - important defensive castle of the 16th century, on the ancient frontier with Spain. Gallery Perpignan Château Royal de Collioure Fort de Salses Saint-Michel-de-Cuxa abbey The THEMIS Solar Power tower Beach in Canet-en-Roussillon Martin-du-Canigou abbey Related pages Northern Catalonia Arrondissements of the Pyrénées-Orientales department Communes of the Pyrénées-Orientales department References ↑ "L'Assemblée départementale" (in French). Conseil départemental des Pyrénées-Orientales. Archived from the original on 3 October 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2017. ↑ 2.0 2.1 "Département des Pyrénées-Orientales (66) - Comparateur de territoire". Publications et statistiques pour la France ou les régions (in French). Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques - INSEE. Retrieved 6 February 2017. ↑ 3.0 3.1 "Populations légales 2014 des départements et des collectivités d'outre-mer" (in French). Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques - INSEE. Retrieved 6 February 2017. ↑ 4.0 4.1 "Le reliefs des Pyrénées-Orientales" (in French). A la découverte des Pyrénées Catalanes. Retrieved 7 July 2013. ↑ "Le département des Pyrénées-Orientales". Annuaire-Mairie.fr (in French). Retrieved 7 July 2013. ↑ "Département des Pyrénées-Orientales (66)". Géographie administrative et d'étude (in French). Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques - INSEE. Retrieved 8 February 2017. ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 "Régions, départements, arrondissements, cantons et communes" (PDF). Populations légales 2014 (in French). Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques - INSEE. Retrieved 6 February 2017. ↑ "Département des Pyrénées-Orientales (66)". Comparateur de territoire (in French). Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques - INSEE. Retrieved 6 February 2017. ↑ "Décret n° 2014-262 du 26 février 2014 portant délimitation des cantons dans le département des Pyrénées-Orientales" (in French). Légifrance.gouv.fr. 2 March 2014. Retrieved 17 June 2015. ↑ "Pyrénées-Orientales (66)" (in French). habitants.fr. Retrieved 2 June 2014. ↑ See Article 1 of the "Charter of the Catalan Language" Archived 2012-12-22 at the Wayback Machine Other websites Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pyrénées-Orientales. Wikivoyage has a travel guide about: Pyrénées-Orientales Wikisource has original writing related to this article: Pyrénées-Orientales Departamental Council of Pyrénées-Orientales (in French) Prefecture website (in French) Réseau Culturel Terre Catalane | * v * t * e Departments of France | | --- | | * 01 Ain * 02 Aisne * 03 Allier * 04 Alpes-de-Haute-Provence * 05 Hautes-Alpes * 06 Alpes-Maritimes * 07 Ardèche * 08 Ardennes * 09 Ariège * 10 Aube * 11 Aude * 12 Aveyron * 13 Bouches-du-Rhône * 14 Calvados * 15 Cantal * 16 Charente * 17 Charente-Maritime * 18 Cher * 19 Corrèze * 2A Corse-du-Sud * 2B Haute-Corse * 21 Côte-d'Or * 22 Côtes-d'Armor * 23 Creuse * 24 Dordogne * 25 Doubs * 26 Drôme * 27 Eure * 28 Eure-et-Loir * 29 Finistère * 30 Gard * 31 Haute-Garonne * 32 Gers * 33 Gironde * 34 Hérault * 35 Ille-et-Vilaine * 36 Indre * 37 Indre-et-Loire * 38 Isère * 39 Jura * 40 Landes * 41 Loir-et-Cher * 42 Loire * 43 Haute-Loire * 44 Loire-Atlantique * 45 Loiret * 46 Lot * 47 Lot-et-Garonne * 48 Lozère * 49 Maine-et-Loire * 50 Manche * 51 Marne * 52 Haute-Marne * 53 Mayenne * 54 Meurthe-et-Moselle * 55 Meuse * 56 Morbihan * 57 Moselle * 58 Nièvre * 59 Nord * 60 Oise * 61 Orne * 62 Pas-de-Calais * 63 Puy-de-Dôme * 64 Pyrénées-Atlantiques * 65 Hautes-Pyrénées * 66 Pyrénées-Orientales * 67 Bas-Rhin * 68 Haut-Rhin * 69D Rhône * 70 Haute-Saône * 71 Saône-et-Loire * 72 Sarthe * 73 Savoie * 74 Haute-Savoie * 75 Paris * 76 Seine-Maritime * 77 Seine-et-Marne * 78 Yvelines * 79 Deux-Sèvres * 80 Somme * 81 Tarn * 82 Tarn-et-Garonne * 83 Var * 84 Vaucluse * 85 Vendée * 86 Vienne * 87 Haute-Vienne * 88 Vosges * 89 Yonne * 90 Territoire de Belfort * 91 Essonne * 92 Hauts-de-Seine * 93 Seine-Saint-Denis * 94 Val-de-Marne * 95 Val-d'Oise Overseas departments 971 Guadeloupe 972 Martinique 973 French Guiana 974 Réunion 976 Mayotte Metropolis with territorial collectivity statute 69M Lyon |
701,303
List_of_colonial_heads_of_the_Comoros
List of colonial heads of the Comoros
6,586,551
Redirect to: * [List of colonial governors of the Comoros](/wiki/List_of_colonial_governors_of_the_Comoros "List of colonial governors of the Comoros")
Redirect to: List of colonial governors of the Comoros
34,842
Orang-utan
Orang-utan
1,219,880
Redirect to: * [Orangutan](/wiki/Orangutan "Orangutan")
Redirect to: Orangutan
981,349
Rushford_Village,_Minnesota
Rushford Village, Minnesota
8,576,580
**Rushford Village** is a city in [Fillmore County](/wiki/Fillmore_County,_Minnesota "Fillmore County, Minnesota"), [Minnesota](/wiki/Minnesota "Minnesota"), [United States](/wiki/United_States "United States"). | * [v](/wiki/Template:Fillmore_County,_Minnesota "Template:Fillmore County, Minnesota") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Fillmore_County,_Minnesota&action=edit) Municipalities and communities of [Fillmore County, Minnesota](/wiki/Fillmore_County,_Minnesota "Fillmore County, Minnesota"), United States | | --- | | [County seat](/wiki/County_seat "County seat"): **[Preston](/wiki/Preston,_Minnesota "Preston, Minnesota")** | | [Cities](/wiki/City "City") | * [Canton](/wiki/Canton,_Minnesota "Canton, Minnesota") * [Chatfield](/wiki/Chatfield,_Minnesota "Chatfield, Minnesota")‡ * [Fountain](/wiki/Fountain,_Minnesota "Fountain, Minnesota") * [Harmony](/wiki/Harmony,_Minnesota "Harmony, Minnesota") * [Lanesboro](/wiki/Lanesboro,_Minnesota "Lanesboro, Minnesota") * [Mabel](/wiki/Mabel,_Minnesota "Mabel, Minnesota") * [Ostrander](/wiki/Ostrander,_Minnesota "Ostrander, Minnesota") * [Peterson](/wiki/Peterson,_Minnesota "Peterson, Minnesota") * [Preston](/wiki/Preston,_Minnesota "Preston, Minnesota") * Rushford Village * [Rushford](/wiki/Rushford,_Minnesota "Rushford, Minnesota") * [Spring Valley](/wiki/Spring_Valley,_Minnesota "Spring Valley, Minnesota") * [Whalan](/wiki/Whalan,_Minnesota "Whalan, Minnesota") * [Wykoff](/wiki/Wykoff,_Minnesota "Wykoff, Minnesota") | Map of Minnesota highlighting Fillmore County | | [Townships](/wiki/Civil_township "Civil township") | * Amherst * Arendahl * Beaver * Bloomfield * Bristol * Canton * Carimona * Carrollton * Chatfield * Fillmore * Forestville * Fountain * Harmony * Holt * Jordan * Newburg * Norway * Pilot Mound * Preble * Preston * Spring Valley * Sumner * York | | [Unincorporatedcommunities](/wiki/Unincorporated_area "Unincorporated area") | * Bratsberg * Cherry Grove * Etna * Fillmore * Granger * Greenleafton * Hamilton * Henrytown * Highland * Lenora * Newburg * Prosper | | [Ghost towns](/wiki/Ghost_town "Ghost town") | * Clear Grit * Elliota * Forestville | | Footnotes | ‡This populated place also has portions in an adjacent county or counties | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature in the United States](/wiki/Category:United_States_geography_stubs "Category:United States geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rushford_Village,_Minnesota&action=edit)*.
Rushford Village is a city in Fillmore County, Minnesota, United States. | * v * t * e Municipalities and communities of Fillmore County, Minnesota, United States | | --- | | County seat: Preston | | Cities | * Canton * Chatfield‡ * Fountain * Harmony * Lanesboro * Mabel * Ostrander * Peterson * Preston * Rushford Village * Rushford * Spring Valley * Whalan * Wykoff | Map of Minnesota highlighting Fillmore County | | Townships | * Amherst * Arendahl * Beaver * Bloomfield * Bristol * Canton * Carimona * Carrollton * Chatfield * Fillmore * Forestville * Fountain * Harmony * Holt * Jordan * Newburg * Norway * Pilot Mound * Preble * Preston * Spring Valley * Sumner * York | | Unincorporatedcommunities | * Bratsberg * Cherry Grove * Etna * Fillmore * Granger * Greenleafton * Hamilton * Henrytown * Highland * Lenora * Newburg * Prosper | | Ghost towns | * Clear Grit * Elliota * Forestville | | Footnotes | ‡This populated place also has portions in an adjacent county or counties | This short article about a place or feature in the United States can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
122,090
Rocles,_Ardèche
Rocles, Ardèche
7,159,482
| Rocles | | --- | | | | Location of Rocles | | RoclesShow map of FranceRoclesShow map of Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes | | Coordinates: [44°33′48″N 4°13′00″E / 44.5633333333°N 4.21666666667°E / 44.5633333333; 4.21666666667](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Rocles,_Ard%C3%A8che&params=44.5633333333_N_4.21666666667_E_type:city(208)_region:FR-ARA)[Coordinates](/wiki/Geographic_coordinate_system "Geographic coordinate system"): [44°33′48″N 4°13′00″E / 44.5633333333°N 4.21666666667°E / 44.5633333333; 4.21666666667](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Rocles,_Ard%C3%A8che&params=44.5633333333_N_4.21666666667_E_type:city(208)_region:FR-ARA) | | Country | [France](/wiki/France "France") | | [Region](/wiki/Regions_of_France "Regions of France") | [Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes](/wiki/Auvergne-Rh%C3%B4ne-Alpes "Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes") | | [Department](/wiki/Departments_of_France "Departments of France") | [Ardèche](/wiki/Ard%C3%A8che "Ardèche") | | [Arrondissement](/wiki/Arrondissements_of_France "Arrondissements of France") | [Largentière](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Largenti%C3%A8re "Arrondissement of Largentière") | | [Canton](/wiki/Cantons_of_France "Cantons of France") | Largentière | | [Intercommunality](/wiki/Communes_of_France#Intercommunality "Communes of France") | Pays Beaume Drobie | | Government | |  • Mayor (2001-2008) | Joël Nicolet | | Area**1** | 16.51 km2 (6.37 sq mi) | | Population (1999) | 208 | |  • Density | 13/km2 (33/sq mi) | | [Time zone](/wiki/Time_zone "Time zone") | [UTC+01:00](/wiki/UTC%2B01:00 "UTC+01:00") ([CET](/wiki/Central_European_Time "Central European Time")) | |  • Summer ([DST](/wiki/Daylight_saving_time "Daylight saving time")) | [UTC+02:00](/wiki/UTC%2B02:00 "UTC+02:00") ([CEST](/wiki/Central_European_Summer_Time "Central European Summer Time")) | | [INSEE](/wiki/INSEE_code "INSEE code")/Postal code | [07196](https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/1405599?geo=COM-07196) /07110 | | Elevation | 270–1,207 m (886–3,960 ft) (avg. 500 m or 1,600 ft) | | **1** French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries. | **Rocles** is a [commune](/wiki/Communes_of_France "Communes of France") in the [Ardèche](/wiki/Ard%C3%A8che "Ardèche") *[département](/wiki/Departments_of_France "Departments of France")* in southern [France](/wiki/France "France"). | [Communes](/wiki/Communes_of_the_Ard%C3%A8che_department "Communes of the Ardèche department") in the [Ardèche](/wiki/Ard%C3%A8che "Ardèche") department   | | --- | | [Accons](/wiki/Accons "Accons")  **·** [Ailhon](/wiki/Ailhon "Ailhon")  **·** [Aizac](/wiki/Aizac "Aizac")  **·** [Ajoux](/wiki/Ajoux "Ajoux")  **·** [Alba-la-Romaine](/wiki/Alba-la-Romaine "Alba-la-Romaine")  **·** [Albon-d'Ardèche](/wiki/Albon-d%27Ard%C3%A8che "Albon-d'Ardèche")  **·** [Alboussière](/wiki/Alboussi%C3%A8re "Alboussière")  **·** [Alissas](/wiki/Alissas "Alissas")  **·** [Andance](/wiki/Andance "Andance")  **·** [Annonay](/wiki/Annonay "Annonay")  **·** [Arcens](/wiki/Arcens "Arcens")  **·** [Ardoix](/wiki/Ardoix "Ardoix")  **·** [Arlebosc](/wiki/Arlebosc "Arlebosc")  **·** [Arras-sur-Rhône](/wiki/Arras-sur-Rh%C3%B4ne "Arras-sur-Rhône")  **·** [Les Assions](/wiki/Les_Assions "Les Assions")  **·** [Astet](/wiki/Astet "Astet")  **·** [Aubenas](/wiki/Aubenas "Aubenas")  **·** [Aubignas](/wiki/Aubignas "Aubignas")  **·** [Baix](/wiki/Baix "Baix")  **·** [Banne](/wiki/Banne "Banne")  **·** [Barnas](/wiki/Barnas "Barnas")  **·** [Le Béage](/wiki/Le_B%C3%A9age "Le Béage")  **·** [Beauchastel](/wiki/Beauchastel "Beauchastel")  **·** [Beaulieu](/wiki/Beaulieu,_Ard%C3%A8che "Beaulieu, Ardèche")  **·** [Beaumont](/wiki/Beaumont,_Ard%C3%A8che "Beaumont, Ardèche")  **·** [Beauvène](/wiki/Beauv%C3%A8ne "Beauvène")  **·** [Belsentes](/wiki/Belsentes "Belsentes")  **·** [Berrias-et-Casteljau](/wiki/Berrias-et-Casteljau "Berrias-et-Casteljau")  **·** [Berzème](/wiki/Berz%C3%A8me "Berzème")  **·** [Bessas](/wiki/Bessas "Bessas")  **·** [Bidon](/wiki/Bidon "Bidon")  **·** [Boffres](/wiki/Boffres "Boffres")  **·** [Bogy](/wiki/Bogy "Bogy")  **·** [Borée](/wiki/Bor%C3%A9e "Borée")  **·** [Borne](/wiki/Borne,_Ard%C3%A8che "Borne, Ardèche")  **·** [Boucieu-le-Roi](/wiki/Boucieu-le-Roi "Boucieu-le-Roi")  **·** [Boulieu-lès-Annonay](/wiki/Boulieu-l%C3%A8s-Annonay "Boulieu-lès-Annonay")  **·** [Bourg-Saint-Andéol](/wiki/Bourg-Saint-And%C3%A9ol "Bourg-Saint-Andéol")  **·** [Bozas](/wiki/Bozas "Bozas")  **·** [Brossainc](/wiki/Brossainc "Brossainc")  **·** [Burzet](/wiki/Burzet "Burzet")  **·** [Cellier-du-Luc](/wiki/Cellier-du-Luc "Cellier-du-Luc")  **·** [Chalencon](/wiki/Chalencon "Chalencon")  **·** [Le Chambon](/wiki/Le_Chambon,_Ard%C3%A8che "Le Chambon, Ardèche")  **·** [Chambonas](/wiki/Chambonas "Chambonas")  **·** [Champagne](/wiki/Champagne,_Ard%C3%A8che "Champagne, Ardèche")  **·** [Champis](/wiki/Champis,_Ard%C3%A8che "Champis, Ardèche")  **·** [Chandolas](/wiki/Chandolas "Chandolas")  **·** [Chanéac](/wiki/Chan%C3%A9ac "Chanéac")  **·** [Charmes-sur-Rhône](/wiki/Charmes-sur-Rh%C3%B4ne "Charmes-sur-Rhône")  **·** [Charnas](/wiki/Charnas "Charnas")  **·** [Chassiers](/wiki/Chassiers "Chassiers")  **·** [Châteaubourg](/wiki/Ch%C3%A2teaubourg,_Ard%C3%A8che "Châteaubourg, Ardèche")  **·** [Châteauneuf-de-Vernoux](/wiki/Ch%C3%A2teauneuf-de-Vernoux "Châteauneuf-de-Vernoux")  **·** [Chauzon](/wiki/Chauzon "Chauzon")  **·** [Chazeaux](/wiki/Chazeaux "Chazeaux")  **·** [Cheminas](/wiki/Cheminas "Cheminas")  **·** [Le Cheylard](/wiki/Le_Cheylard "Le Cheylard")  **·** [Chirols](/wiki/Chirols "Chirols")  **·** [Chomérac](/wiki/Chom%C3%A9rac "Chomérac")  **·** [Colombier-le-Cardinal](/wiki/Colombier-le-Cardinal "Colombier-le-Cardinal")  **·** [Colombier-le-Jeune](/wiki/Colombier-le-Jeune "Colombier-le-Jeune")  **·** [Colombier-le-Vieux](/wiki/Colombier-le-Vieux "Colombier-le-Vieux")  **·** [Cornas](/wiki/Cornas "Cornas")  **·** [Coucouron](/wiki/Coucouron "Coucouron")  **·** [Coux](/wiki/Coux,_Ard%C3%A8che "Coux, Ardèche")  **·** [Le Crestet](/wiki/Le_Crestet "Le Crestet")  **·** [Creysseilles](/wiki/Creysseilles "Creysseilles")  **·** [Cros-de-Géorand](/wiki/Cros-de-G%C3%A9orand "Cros-de-Géorand")  **·** [Cruas](/wiki/Cruas "Cruas")  **·** [Darbres](/wiki/Darbres "Darbres")  **·** [Davézieux](/wiki/Dav%C3%A9zieux "Davézieux")  **·** [Désaignes](/wiki/D%C3%A9saignes "Désaignes")  **·** [Devesset](/wiki/Devesset "Devesset")  **·** [Dompnac](/wiki/Dompnac "Dompnac")  **·** [Dornas](/wiki/Dornas "Dornas")  **·** [Dunières-sur-Eyrieux](/wiki/Duni%C3%A8res-sur-Eyrieux "Dunières-sur-Eyrieux")  **·** [Eclassan](/wiki/Eclassan "Eclassan")  **·** [Empurany](/wiki/Empurany "Empurany")  **·** [Étables](/wiki/%C3%89tables "Étables")  **·** [Fabras](/wiki/Fabras "Fabras")  **·** [Faugères](/wiki/Faug%C3%A8res,_Ard%C3%A8che "Faugères, Ardèche")  **·** [Félines](/wiki/F%C3%A9lines,_Ard%C3%A8che "Félines, Ardèche")  **·** [Flaviac](/wiki/Flaviac "Flaviac")  **·** [Fons](/wiki/Fons,_Ard%C3%A8che "Fons, Ardèche")  **·** [Freyssenet](/wiki/Freyssenet "Freyssenet")  **·** [Genestelle](/wiki/Genestelle "Genestelle")  **·** [Gilhac-et-Bruzac](/wiki/Gilhac-et-Bruzac "Gilhac-et-Bruzac")  **·** [Gilhoc-sur-Ormèze](/wiki/Gilhoc-sur-Orm%C3%A8ze "Gilhoc-sur-Ormèze")  **·** [Gluiras](/wiki/Gluiras "Gluiras")  **·** [Glun](/wiki/Glun "Glun")  **·** [Gourdon](/wiki/Gourdon,_Ard%C3%A8che "Gourdon, Ardèche")  **·** [Gras](/wiki/Gras "Gras")  **·** [Gravières](/wiki/Gravi%C3%A8res "Gravières")  **·** [Grospierres](/wiki/Grospierres "Grospierres")  **·** [Guilherand-Granges](/wiki/Guilherand-Granges "Guilherand-Granges")  **·** [Issamoulenc](/wiki/Issamoulenc "Issamoulenc")  **·** [Issanlas](/wiki/Issanlas "Issanlas")  **·** [Issarlès](/wiki/Issarl%C3%A8s "Issarlès")  **·** [Jaujac](/wiki/Jaujac "Jaujac")  **·** [Jaunac](/wiki/Jaunac "Jaunac")  **·** [Joannas](/wiki/Joannas "Joannas")  **·** [Joyeuse](/wiki/Joyeuse,_Ard%C3%A8che "Joyeuse, Ardèche")  **·** [Juvinas](/wiki/Juvinas "Juvinas")  **·** [Labastide-de-Virac](/wiki/Labastide-de-Virac "Labastide-de-Virac")  **·** [Labastide-sur-Bésorgues](/wiki/Labastide-sur-B%C3%A9sorgues "Labastide-sur-Bésorgues")  **·** [Labatie-d'Andaure](/wiki/Labatie-d%27Andaure "Labatie-d'Andaure")  **·** [Labeaume](/wiki/Labeaume "Labeaume")  **·** [Labégude](/wiki/Lab%C3%A9gude "Labégude")  **·** [Lablachère](/wiki/Lablach%C3%A8re "Lablachère")  **·** [Laboule](/wiki/Laboule "Laboule")  **·** [Le Lac-d'Issarlès](/wiki/Le_Lac-d%27Issarl%C3%A8s "Le Lac-d'Issarlès")  **·** [Lachamp-Raphaël](/wiki/Lachamp-Rapha%C3%ABl "Lachamp-Raphaël")  **·** [Lachapelle-Graillouse](/wiki/Lachapelle-Graillouse "Lachapelle-Graillouse")  **·** [Lachapelle-sous-Aubenas](/wiki/Lachapelle-sous-Aubenas "Lachapelle-sous-Aubenas")  **·** [Lachapelle-sous-Chanéac](/wiki/Lachapelle-sous-Chan%C3%A9ac "Lachapelle-sous-Chanéac")  **·** [Lafarre](/wiki/Lafarre,_Ard%C3%A8che "Lafarre, Ardèche")  **·** [Lagorce](/wiki/Lagorce,_Ard%C3%A8che "Lagorce, Ardèche")  **·** [Lalevade-d'Ardèche](/wiki/Lalevade-d%27Ard%C3%A8che "Lalevade-d'Ardèche")  **·** [Lalouvesc](/wiki/Lalouvesc "Lalouvesc")  **·** [Lamastre](/wiki/Lamastre "Lamastre")  **·** [Lanarce](/wiki/Lanarce "Lanarce")  **·** [Lanas](/wiki/Lanas "Lanas")  **·** [Largentière](/wiki/Largenti%C3%A8re "Largentière")  **·** [Larnas](/wiki/Larnas "Larnas")  **·** [Laurac-en-Vivarais](/wiki/Laurac-en-Vivarais "Laurac-en-Vivarais")  **·** [Laveyrune](/wiki/Laveyrune "Laveyrune")  **·** [Lavillatte](/wiki/Lavillatte "Lavillatte")  **·** [Lavilledieu](/wiki/Lavilledieu "Lavilledieu")  **·** [Laviolle](/wiki/Laviolle "Laviolle")  **·** [Lemps](/wiki/Lemps,_Ard%C3%A8che "Lemps, Ardèche")  **·** [Lentillères](/wiki/Lentill%C3%A8res "Lentillères")  **·** [Lespéron](/wiki/Lesp%C3%A9ron "Lespéron")  **·** [Limony](/wiki/Limony "Limony")  **·** [Loubaresse](/wiki/Loubaresse,_Ard%C3%A8che "Loubaresse, Ardèche")  **·** [Lussas](/wiki/Lussas "Lussas")  **·** [Lyas](/wiki/Lyas "Lyas")  **·** [Malarce-sur-la-Thines](/wiki/Malarce-sur-la-Thines "Malarce-sur-la-Thines")  **·** [Malbosc](/wiki/Malbosc "Malbosc")  **·** [Marcols-les-Eaux](/wiki/Marcols-les-Eaux "Marcols-les-Eaux")  **·** [Mariac](/wiki/Mariac "Mariac")  **·** [Mars](/wiki/Mars,_Ard%C3%A8che "Mars, Ardèche")  **·** [Mauves](/wiki/Mauves "Mauves")  **·** [Mayres](/wiki/Mayres,_Ard%C3%A8che "Mayres, Ardèche")  **·** [Mazan-l'Abbaye](/wiki/Mazan-l%27Abbaye "Mazan-l'Abbaye")  **·** [Mercuer](/wiki/Mercuer "Mercuer")  **·** [Meyras](/wiki/Meyras "Meyras")  **·** [Meysse](/wiki/Meysse "Meysse")  **·** [Mézilhac](/wiki/M%C3%A9zilhac "Mézilhac")  **·** [Mirabel](/wiki/Mirabel,_Ard%C3%A8che "Mirabel, Ardèche")  **·** [Monestier](/wiki/Monestier,_Ard%C3%A8che "Monestier, Ardèche")  **·** [Montpezat-sous-Bauzon](/wiki/Montpezat-sous-Bauzon "Montpezat-sous-Bauzon")  **·** [Montréal](/wiki/Montr%C3%A9al,_Ard%C3%A8che "Montréal, Ardèche")  **·** [Montselgues](/wiki/Montselgues "Montselgues")  **·** [Nozières](/wiki/Nozi%C3%A8res,_Ard%C3%A8che "Nozières, Ardèche")  **·** [Les Ollières-sur-Eyrieux](/wiki/Les_Olli%C3%A8res-sur-Eyrieux "Les Ollières-sur-Eyrieux")  **·** [Orgnac-l'Aven](/wiki/Orgnac-l%27Aven "Orgnac-l'Aven")  **·** [Ozon](/wiki/Ozon,_Ard%C3%A8che "Ozon, Ardèche")  **·** [Pailharès](/wiki/Pailhar%C3%A8s "Pailharès")  **·** [Payzac](/wiki/Payzac,_Ard%C3%A8che "Payzac, Ardèche")  **·** [Peaugres](/wiki/Peaugres "Peaugres")  **·** [Péreyres](/wiki/P%C3%A9reyres "Péreyres")  **·** [Peyraud](/wiki/Peyraud "Peyraud")  **·** [Le Plagnal](/wiki/Le_Plagnal "Le Plagnal")  **·** [Planzolles](/wiki/Planzolles "Planzolles")  **·** [Plats](/wiki/Plats "Plats")  **·** [Pont-de-Labeaume](/wiki/Pont-de-Labeaume "Pont-de-Labeaume")  **·** [Pourchères](/wiki/Pourch%C3%A8res "Pourchères")  **·** [Le Pouzin](/wiki/Le_Pouzin "Le Pouzin")  **·** [Prades](/wiki/Prades,_Ard%C3%A8che "Prades, Ardèche")  **·** [Pradons](/wiki/Pradons "Pradons")  **·** [Pranles](/wiki/Pranles "Pranles")  **·** [Préaux](/wiki/Pr%C3%A9aux,_Ard%C3%A8che "Préaux, Ardèche")  **·** [Privas](/wiki/Privas "Privas")  **·** [Prunet](/wiki/Prunet,_Ard%C3%A8che "Prunet, Ardèche")  **·** [Quintenas](/wiki/Quintenas "Quintenas")  **·** [Ribes](/wiki/Ribes,_Ard%C3%A8che "Ribes, Ardèche")  **·** [Rochecolombe](/wiki/Rochecolombe "Rochecolombe")  **·** [Rochemaure](/wiki/Rochemaure "Rochemaure")  **·** [Rochepaule](/wiki/Rochepaule "Rochepaule")  **·** [Rocher](/wiki/Rocher,_Ard%C3%A8che "Rocher, Ardèche")  **·** [Rochessauve](/wiki/Rochessauve "Rochessauve")  **·** [La Rochette](/wiki/La_Rochette,_Ard%C3%A8che "La Rochette, Ardèche")  **·** Rocles  **·** [Roiffieux](/wiki/Roiffieux "Roiffieux")  **·** [Rompon](/wiki/Rompon "Rompon")  **·** [Rosières](/wiki/Rosi%C3%A8res,_Ard%C3%A8che "Rosières, Ardèche")  **·** [Le Roux](/wiki/Le_Roux,_Ard%C3%A8che "Le Roux, Ardèche")  **·** [Ruoms](/wiki/Ruoms "Ruoms")  **·** [Sablières](/wiki/Sabli%C3%A8res "Sablières")  **·** [Sagnes-et-Goudoulet](/wiki/Sagnes-et-Goudoulet "Sagnes-et-Goudoulet")  **·** [Saint-Agrève](/wiki/Saint-Agr%C3%A8ve "Saint-Agrève")  **·** [Saint-Alban-Auriolles](/wiki/Saint-Alban-Auriolles "Saint-Alban-Auriolles")  **·** [Saint-Alban-d'Ay](/wiki/Saint-Alban-d%27Ay "Saint-Alban-d'Ay")  **·** [Saint-Alban-en-Montagne](/wiki/Saint-Alban-en-Montagne "Saint-Alban-en-Montagne")  **·** [Saint-Andéol-de-Berg](/wiki/Saint-And%C3%A9ol-de-Berg "Saint-Andéol-de-Berg")  **·** [Saint-Andéol-de-Fourchades](/wiki/Saint-And%C3%A9ol-de-Fourchades "Saint-Andéol-de-Fourchades")  **·** [Saint-Andéol-de-Vals](/wiki/Saint-And%C3%A9ol-de-Vals "Saint-Andéol-de-Vals")  **·** [Saint-André-de-Cruzières](/wiki/Saint-Andr%C3%A9-de-Cruzi%C3%A8res "Saint-André-de-Cruzières")  **·** [Saint-André-en-Vivarais](/wiki/Saint-Andr%C3%A9-en-Vivarais "Saint-André-en-Vivarais")  **·** [Saint-André-Lachamp](/wiki/Saint-Andr%C3%A9-Lachamp "Saint-André-Lachamp")  **·** [Saint-Apollinaire-de-Rias](/wiki/Saint-Apollinaire-de-Rias "Saint-Apollinaire-de-Rias")  **·** [Saint-Barthélemy-Grozon](/wiki/Saint-Barth%C3%A9lemy-Grozon "Saint-Barthélemy-Grozon")  **·** [Saint-Barthélemy-le-Meil](/wiki/Saint-Barth%C3%A9lemy-le-Meil "Saint-Barthélemy-le-Meil")  **·** [Saint-Barthélemy-le-Plain](/wiki/Saint-Barth%C3%A9lemy-le-Plain "Saint-Barthélemy-le-Plain")  **·** [Saint-Basile](/wiki/Saint-Basile,_Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Basile, Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Bauzile](/wiki/Saint-Bauzile,_Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Bauzile, Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Christol](/wiki/Saint-Christol,_Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Christol, Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Cierge-la-Serre](/wiki/Saint-Cierge-la-Serre "Saint-Cierge-la-Serre")  **·** [Saint-Cierge-sous-le-Cheylard](/wiki/Saint-Cierge-sous-le-Cheylard "Saint-Cierge-sous-le-Cheylard")  **·** [Saint-Cirgues-de-Prades](/wiki/Saint-Cirgues-de-Prades "Saint-Cirgues-de-Prades")  **·** [Saint-Cirgues-en-Montagne](/wiki/Saint-Cirgues-en-Montagne "Saint-Cirgues-en-Montagne")  **·** [Saint-Clair](/wiki/Saint-Clair,_Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Clair, Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Clément](/wiki/Saint-Cl%C3%A9ment,_Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Clément, Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Cyr](/wiki/Saint-Cyr,_Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Cyr, Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Désirat](/wiki/Saint-D%C3%A9sirat "Saint-Désirat")  **·** [Saint-Didier-sous-Aubenas](/wiki/Saint-Didier-sous-Aubenas "Saint-Didier-sous-Aubenas")  **·** [Sainte-Eulalie](/wiki/Sainte-Eulalie,_Ard%C3%A8che "Sainte-Eulalie, Ardèche")  **·** [Sainte-Marguerite-Lafigère](/wiki/Sainte-Marguerite-Lafig%C3%A8re "Sainte-Marguerite-Lafigère")  **·** [Saint-Étienne-de-Boulogne](/wiki/Saint-%C3%89tienne-de-Boulogne "Saint-Étienne-de-Boulogne")  **·** [Saint-Étienne-de-Fontbellon](/wiki/Saint-%C3%89tienne-de-Fontbellon "Saint-Étienne-de-Fontbellon")  **·** [Saint-Étienne-de-Lugdarès](/wiki/Saint-%C3%89tienne-de-Lugdar%C3%A8s "Saint-Étienne-de-Lugdarès")  **·** [Saint-Étienne-de-Serre](/wiki/Saint-%C3%89tienne-de-Serre "Saint-Étienne-de-Serre")  **·** [Saint-Étienne-de-Valoux](/wiki/Saint-%C3%89tienne-de-Valoux "Saint-Étienne-de-Valoux")  **·** [Saint-Félicien](/wiki/Saint-F%C3%A9licien,_Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Félicien, Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Fortunat-sur-Eyrieux](/wiki/Saint-Fortunat-sur-Eyrieux "Saint-Fortunat-sur-Eyrieux")  **·** [Saint-Genest-de-Beauzon](/wiki/Saint-Genest-de-Beauzon "Saint-Genest-de-Beauzon")  **·** [Saint-Genest-Lachamp](/wiki/Saint-Genest-Lachamp "Saint-Genest-Lachamp")  **·** [Saint-Georges-les-Bains](/wiki/Saint-Georges-les-Bains "Saint-Georges-les-Bains")  **·** [Saint-Germain](/wiki/Saint-Germain,_Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Germain, Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Gineis-en-Coiron](/wiki/Saint-Gineis-en-Coiron "Saint-Gineis-en-Coiron")  **·** [Saint-Jacques-d'Atticieux](/wiki/Saint-Jacques-d%27Atticieux "Saint-Jacques-d'Atticieux")  **·** [Saint-Jean-Chambre](/wiki/Saint-Jean-Chambre "Saint-Jean-Chambre")  **·** [Saint-Jean-de-Muzols](/wiki/Saint-Jean-de-Muzols "Saint-Jean-de-Muzols")  **·** [Saint-Jean-le-Centenier](/wiki/Saint-Jean-le-Centenier "Saint-Jean-le-Centenier")  **·** [Saint-Jean-Roure](/wiki/Saint-Jean-Roure "Saint-Jean-Roure")  **·** [Saint-Jeure-d'Andaure](/wiki/Saint-Jeure-d%27Andaure "Saint-Jeure-d'Andaure")  **·** [Saint-Jeure-d'Ay](/wiki/Saint-Jeure-d%27Ay "Saint-Jeure-d'Ay")  **·** [Saint-Joseph-des-Bancs](/wiki/Saint-Joseph-des-Bancs "Saint-Joseph-des-Bancs")  **·** [Saint-Julien-d'Intres](/wiki/Saint-Julien-d%27Intres "Saint-Julien-d'Intres")  **·** [Saint-Julien-du-Gua](/wiki/Saint-Julien-du-Gua "Saint-Julien-du-Gua")  **·** [Saint-Julien-du-Serre](/wiki/Saint-Julien-du-Serre "Saint-Julien-du-Serre")  **·** [Saint-Julien-en-Saint-Alban](/wiki/Saint-Julien-en-Saint-Alban "Saint-Julien-en-Saint-Alban")  **·** [Saint-Julien-le-Roux](/wiki/Saint-Julien-le-Roux "Saint-Julien-le-Roux")  **·** [Saint-Julien-Vocance](/wiki/Saint-Julien-Vocance "Saint-Julien-Vocance")  **·** [Saint-Just-d'Ardèche](/wiki/Saint-Just-d%27Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Just-d'Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Lager-Bressac](/wiki/Saint-Lager-Bressac "Saint-Lager-Bressac")  **·** [Saint-Laurent-du-Pape](/wiki/Saint-Laurent-du-Pape "Saint-Laurent-du-Pape")  **·** [Saint-Laurent-les-Bains-Laval-d'Aurelle](/wiki/Saint-Laurent-les-Bains-Laval-d%27Aurelle "Saint-Laurent-les-Bains-Laval-d'Aurelle")  **·** [Saint-Laurent-sous-Coiron](/wiki/Saint-Laurent-sous-Coiron "Saint-Laurent-sous-Coiron")  **·** [Saint-Marcel-d'Ardèche](/wiki/Saint-Marcel-d%27Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Marcel-d'Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Marcel-lès-Annonay](/wiki/Saint-Marcel-l%C3%A8s-Annonay "Saint-Marcel-lès-Annonay")  **·** [Saint-Martial](/wiki/Saint-Martial,_Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Martial, Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Martin-d'Ardèche](/wiki/Saint-Martin-d%27Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Martin-d'Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Martin-de-Valamas](/wiki/Saint-Martin-de-Valamas "Saint-Martin-de-Valamas")  **·** [Saint-Martin-sur-Lavezon](/wiki/Saint-Martin-sur-Lavezon "Saint-Martin-sur-Lavezon")  **·** [Saint-Maurice-d'Ardèche](/wiki/Saint-Maurice-d%27Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Maurice-d'Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Maurice-d'Ibie](/wiki/Saint-Maurice-d%27Ibie "Saint-Maurice-d'Ibie")  **·** [Saint-Maurice-en-Chalencon](/wiki/Saint-Maurice-en-Chalencon "Saint-Maurice-en-Chalencon")  **·** [Saint-Mélany](/wiki/Saint-M%C3%A9lany "Saint-Mélany")  **·** [Saint-Michel-d'Aurance](/wiki/Saint-Michel-d%27Aurance "Saint-Michel-d'Aurance")  **·** [Saint-Michel-de-Boulogne](/wiki/Saint-Michel-de-Boulogne "Saint-Michel-de-Boulogne")  **·** [Saint-Michel-de-Chabrillanoux](/wiki/Saint-Michel-de-Chabrillanoux "Saint-Michel-de-Chabrillanoux")  **·** [Saint-Montan](/wiki/Saint-Montan "Saint-Montan")  **·** [Saint-Paul-le-Jeune](/wiki/Saint-Paul-le-Jeune "Saint-Paul-le-Jeune")  **·** [Saint-Péray](/wiki/Saint-P%C3%A9ray "Saint-Péray")  **·** [Saint-Pierre-de-Colombier](/wiki/Saint-Pierre-de-Colombier "Saint-Pierre-de-Colombier")  **·** [Saint-Pierre-la-Roche](/wiki/Saint-Pierre-la-Roche "Saint-Pierre-la-Roche")  **·** [Saint-Pierre-Saint-Jean](/wiki/Saint-Pierre-Saint-Jean "Saint-Pierre-Saint-Jean")  **·** [Saint-Pierre-sur-Doux](/wiki/Saint-Pierre-sur-Doux "Saint-Pierre-sur-Doux")  **·** [Saint-Pierreville](/wiki/Saint-Pierreville "Saint-Pierreville")  **·** [Saint-Pons](/wiki/Saint-Pons,_Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Pons, Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Priest](/wiki/Saint-Priest,_Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Priest, Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Privat](/wiki/Saint-Privat,_Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Privat, Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Prix](/wiki/Saint-Prix,_Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Prix, Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Remèze](/wiki/Saint-Rem%C3%A8ze "Saint-Remèze")  **·** [Saint-Romain-d'Ay](/wiki/Saint-Romain-d%27Ay "Saint-Romain-d'Ay")  **·** [Saint-Romain-de-Lerps](/wiki/Saint-Romain-de-Lerps "Saint-Romain-de-Lerps")  **·** [Saint-Sauveur-de-Cruzières](/wiki/Saint-Sauveur-de-Cruzi%C3%A8res "Saint-Sauveur-de-Cruzières")  **·** [Saint-Sauveur-de-Montagut](/wiki/Saint-Sauveur-de-Montagut "Saint-Sauveur-de-Montagut")  **·** [Saint-Sernin](/wiki/Saint-Sernin,_Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Sernin, Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Sylvestre](/wiki/Saint-Sylvestre,_Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Sylvestre, Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Symphorien-de-Mahun](/wiki/Saint-Symphorien-de-Mahun "Saint-Symphorien-de-Mahun")  **·** [Saint-Symphorien-sous-Chomérac](/wiki/Saint-Symphorien-sous-Chom%C3%A9rac "Saint-Symphorien-sous-Chomérac")  **·** [Saint-Thomé](/wiki/Saint-Thom%C3%A9 "Saint-Thomé")  **·** [Saint-Victor](/wiki/Saint-Victor,_Ard%C3%A8che "Saint-Victor, Ardèche")  **·** [Saint-Vincent-de-Barrès](/wiki/Saint-Vincent-de-Barr%C3%A8s "Saint-Vincent-de-Barrès")  **·** [Saint-Vincent-de-Durfort](/wiki/Saint-Vincent-de-Durfort "Saint-Vincent-de-Durfort")  **·** [Salavas](/wiki/Salavas "Salavas")  **·** [Les Salelles](/wiki/Les_Salelles,_Ard%C3%A8che "Les Salelles, Ardèche")  **·** [Sampzon](/wiki/Sampzon "Sampzon")  **·** [Sanilhac](/wiki/Sanilhac "Sanilhac")  **·** [Sarras](/wiki/Sarras,_Ard%C3%A8che "Sarras, Ardèche")  **·** [Satillieu](/wiki/Satillieu "Satillieu")  **·** [Savas](/wiki/Savas "Savas")  **·** [Sceautres](/wiki/Sceautres "Sceautres")  **·** [Sécheras](/wiki/S%C3%A9cheras "Sécheras")  **·** [Serrières](/wiki/Serri%C3%A8res,_Ard%C3%A8che "Serrières, Ardèche")  **·** [Silhac](/wiki/Silhac "Silhac")  **·** [La Souche](/wiki/La_Souche "La Souche")  **·** [Soyons](/wiki/Soyons "Soyons")  **·** [Talencieux](/wiki/Talencieux "Talencieux")  **·** [Tauriers](/wiki/Tauriers "Tauriers")  **·** [Le Teil](/wiki/Le_Teil "Le Teil")  **·** [Thorrenc](/wiki/Thorrenc "Thorrenc")  **·** [Thueyts](/wiki/Thueyts "Thueyts")  **·** [Toulaud](/wiki/Toulaud "Toulaud")  **·** [Tournon-sur-Rhône](/wiki/Tournon-sur-Rh%C3%B4ne "Tournon-sur-Rhône")  **·** [Ucel](/wiki/Ucel "Ucel")  **·** [Usclades-et-Rieutord](/wiki/Usclades-et-Rieutord "Usclades-et-Rieutord")  **·** [Uzer](/wiki/Uzer,_Ard%C3%A8che "Uzer, Ardèche")  **·** [Vagnas](/wiki/Vagnas "Vagnas")  **·** [Valgorge](/wiki/Valgorge "Valgorge")  **·** [Vallées-d'Antraigues-Asperjoc](/wiki/Vall%C3%A9es-d%27Antraigues-Asperjoc "Vallées-d'Antraigues-Asperjoc")  **·** [Vallon-Pont-d'Arc](/wiki/Vallon-Pont-d%27Arc "Vallon-Pont-d'Arc")  **·** [Vals-les-Bains](/wiki/Vals-les-Bains "Vals-les-Bains")  **·** [Valvignères](/wiki/Valvign%C3%A8res "Valvignères")  **·** [Vanosc](/wiki/Vanosc "Vanosc")  **·** [Les Vans](/wiki/Les_Vans "Les Vans")  **·** [Vaudevant](/wiki/Vaudevant "Vaudevant")  **·** [Vernon](/wiki/Vernon,_Ard%C3%A8che "Vernon, Ardèche")  **·** [Vernosc-lès-Annonay](/wiki/Vernosc-l%C3%A8s-Annonay "Vernosc-lès-Annonay")  **·** [Vernoux-en-Vivarais](/wiki/Vernoux-en-Vivarais "Vernoux-en-Vivarais")  **·** [Vesseaux](/wiki/Vesseaux "Vesseaux")  **·** [Veyras](/wiki/Veyras,_Ard%C3%A8che "Veyras, Ardèche")  **·** [Villeneuve-de-Berg](/wiki/Villeneuve-de-Berg "Villeneuve-de-Berg")  **·** [Villevocance](/wiki/Villevocance "Villevocance")  **·** [Vinezac](/wiki/Vinezac "Vinezac")  **·** [Vinzieux](/wiki/Vinzieux "Vinzieux")  **·** [Vion](/wiki/Vion,_Ard%C3%A8che "Vion, Ardèche")  **·** [Viviers](/wiki/Viviers,_Ard%C3%A8che "Viviers, Ardèche")  **·** [Vocance](/wiki/Vocance "Vocance")  **·** [Vogüé](/wiki/Vog%C3%BC%C3%A9 "Vogüé")  **·** [La Voulte-sur-Rhône](/wiki/La_Voulte-sur-Rh%C3%B4ne "La Voulte-sur-Rhône") | Wikimedia Commons has media related to ***[Rocles (Ardèche)](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Rocles_(Ard%C3%A8che) "commons:Category:Rocles (Ardèche)")***. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature in France](/wiki/Category:France_geography_stubs "Category:France geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rocles,_Ard%C3%A8che&action=edit)*.
| Rocles | | --- | | | | Location of Rocles | | RoclesShow map of FranceRoclesShow map of Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes | | Coordinates: 44°33′48″N 4°13′00″E / 44.5633333333°N 4.21666666667°E / 44.5633333333; 4.21666666667Coordinates: 44°33′48″N 4°13′00″E / 44.5633333333°N 4.21666666667°E / 44.5633333333; 4.21666666667 | | Country | France | | Region | Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes | | Department | Ardèche | | Arrondissement | Largentière | | Canton | Largentière | | Intercommunality | Pays Beaume Drobie | | Government | |  • Mayor (2001-2008) | Joël Nicolet | | Area1 | 16.51 km2 (6.37 sq mi) | | Population (1999) | 208 | |  • Density | 13/km2 (33/sq mi) | | Time zone | UTC+01:00 (CET) | |  • Summer (DST) | UTC+02:00 (CEST) | | INSEE/Postal code | 07196 /07110 | | Elevation | 270–1,207 m (886–3,960 ft) (avg. 500 m or 1,600 ft) | | 1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries. | Rocles is a commune in the Ardèche département in southern France. | Communes in the Ardèche department   | | --- | | Accons  · Ailhon  · Aizac  · Ajoux  · Alba-la-Romaine  · Albon-d'Ardèche  · Alboussière  · Alissas  · Andance  · Annonay  · Arcens  · Ardoix  · Arlebosc  · Arras-sur-Rhône  · Les Assions  · Astet  · Aubenas  · Aubignas  · Baix  · Banne  · Barnas  · Le Béage  · Beauchastel  · Beaulieu  · Beaumont  · Beauvène  · Belsentes  · Berrias-et-Casteljau  · Berzème  · Bessas  · Bidon  · Boffres  · Bogy  · Borée  · Borne  · Boucieu-le-Roi  · Boulieu-lès-Annonay  · Bourg-Saint-Andéol  · Bozas  · Brossainc  · Burzet  · Cellier-du-Luc  · Chalencon  · Le Chambon  · Chambonas  · Champagne  · Champis  · Chandolas  · Chanéac  · Charmes-sur-Rhône  · Charnas  · Chassiers  · Châteaubourg  · Châteauneuf-de-Vernoux  · Chauzon  · Chazeaux  · Cheminas  · Le Cheylard  · Chirols  · Chomérac  · Colombier-le-Cardinal  · Colombier-le-Jeune  · Colombier-le-Vieux  · Cornas  · Coucouron  · Coux  · Le Crestet  · Creysseilles  · Cros-de-Géorand  · Cruas  · Darbres  · Davézieux  · Désaignes  · Devesset  · Dompnac  · Dornas  · Dunières-sur-Eyrieux  · Eclassan  · Empurany  · Étables  · Fabras  · Faugères  · Félines  · Flaviac  · Fons  · Freyssenet  · Genestelle  · Gilhac-et-Bruzac  · Gilhoc-sur-Ormèze  · Gluiras  · Glun  · Gourdon  · Gras  · Gravières  · Grospierres  · Guilherand-Granges  · Issamoulenc  · Issanlas  · Issarlès  · Jaujac  · Jaunac  · Joannas  · Joyeuse  · Juvinas  · Labastide-de-Virac  · Labastide-sur-Bésorgues  · Labatie-d'Andaure  · Labeaume  · Labégude  · Lablachère  · Laboule  · Le Lac-d'Issarlès  · Lachamp-Raphaël  · Lachapelle-Graillouse  · Lachapelle-sous-Aubenas  · Lachapelle-sous-Chanéac  · Lafarre  · Lagorce  · Lalevade-d'Ardèche  · Lalouvesc  · Lamastre  · Lanarce  · Lanas  · Largentière  · Larnas  · Laurac-en-Vivarais  · Laveyrune  · Lavillatte  · Lavilledieu  · Laviolle  · Lemps  · Lentillères  · Lespéron  · Limony  · Loubaresse  · Lussas  · Lyas  · Malarce-sur-la-Thines  · Malbosc  · Marcols-les-Eaux  · Mariac  · Mars  · Mauves  · Mayres  · Mazan-l'Abbaye  · Mercuer  · Meyras  · Meysse  · Mézilhac  · Mirabel  · Monestier  · Montpezat-sous-Bauzon  · Montréal  · Montselgues  · Nozières  · Les Ollières-sur-Eyrieux  · Orgnac-l'Aven  · Ozon  · Pailharès  · Payzac  · Peaugres  · Péreyres  · Peyraud  · Le Plagnal  · Planzolles  · Plats  · Pont-de-Labeaume  · Pourchères  · Le Pouzin  · Prades  · Pradons  · Pranles  · Préaux  · Privas  · Prunet  · Quintenas  · Ribes  · Rochecolombe  · Rochemaure  · Rochepaule  · Rocher  · Rochessauve  · La Rochette  · Rocles  · Roiffieux  · Rompon  · Rosières  · Le Roux  · Ruoms  · Sablières  · Sagnes-et-Goudoulet  · Saint-Agrève  · Saint-Alban-Auriolles  · Saint-Alban-d'Ay  · Saint-Alban-en-Montagne  · Saint-Andéol-de-Berg  · Saint-Andéol-de-Fourchades  · Saint-Andéol-de-Vals  · Saint-André-de-Cruzières  · Saint-André-en-Vivarais  · Saint-André-Lachamp  · Saint-Apollinaire-de-Rias  · Saint-Barthélemy-Grozon  · Saint-Barthélemy-le-Meil  · Saint-Barthélemy-le-Plain  · Saint-Basile  · Saint-Bauzile  · Saint-Christol  · Saint-Cierge-la-Serre  · Saint-Cierge-sous-le-Cheylard  · Saint-Cirgues-de-Prades  · Saint-Cirgues-en-Montagne  · Saint-Clair  · Saint-Clément  · Saint-Cyr  · Saint-Désirat  · Saint-Didier-sous-Aubenas  · Sainte-Eulalie  · Sainte-Marguerite-Lafigère  · Saint-Étienne-de-Boulogne  · Saint-Étienne-de-Fontbellon  · Saint-Étienne-de-Lugdarès  · Saint-Étienne-de-Serre  · Saint-Étienne-de-Valoux  · Saint-Félicien  · Saint-Fortunat-sur-Eyrieux  · Saint-Genest-de-Beauzon  · Saint-Genest-Lachamp  · Saint-Georges-les-Bains  · Saint-Germain  · Saint-Gineis-en-Coiron  · Saint-Jacques-d'Atticieux  · Saint-Jean-Chambre  · Saint-Jean-de-Muzols  · Saint-Jean-le-Centenier  · Saint-Jean-Roure  · Saint-Jeure-d'Andaure  · Saint-Jeure-d'Ay  · Saint-Joseph-des-Bancs  · Saint-Julien-d'Intres  · Saint-Julien-du-Gua  · Saint-Julien-du-Serre  · Saint-Julien-en-Saint-Alban  · Saint-Julien-le-Roux  · Saint-Julien-Vocance  · Saint-Just-d'Ardèche  · Saint-Lager-Bressac  · Saint-Laurent-du-Pape  · Saint-Laurent-les-Bains-Laval-d'Aurelle  · Saint-Laurent-sous-Coiron  · Saint-Marcel-d'Ardèche  · Saint-Marcel-lès-Annonay  · Saint-Martial  · Saint-Martin-d'Ardèche  · Saint-Martin-de-Valamas  · Saint-Martin-sur-Lavezon  · Saint-Maurice-d'Ardèche  · Saint-Maurice-d'Ibie  · Saint-Maurice-en-Chalencon  · Saint-Mélany  · Saint-Michel-d'Aurance  · Saint-Michel-de-Boulogne  · Saint-Michel-de-Chabrillanoux  · Saint-Montan  · Saint-Paul-le-Jeune  · Saint-Péray  · Saint-Pierre-de-Colombier  · Saint-Pierre-la-Roche  · Saint-Pierre-Saint-Jean  · Saint-Pierre-sur-Doux  · Saint-Pierreville  · Saint-Pons  · Saint-Priest  · Saint-Privat  · Saint-Prix  · Saint-Remèze  · Saint-Romain-d'Ay  · Saint-Romain-de-Lerps  · Saint-Sauveur-de-Cruzières  · Saint-Sauveur-de-Montagut  · Saint-Sernin  · Saint-Sylvestre  · Saint-Symphorien-de-Mahun  · Saint-Symphorien-sous-Chomérac  · Saint-Thomé  · Saint-Victor  · Saint-Vincent-de-Barrès  · Saint-Vincent-de-Durfort  · Salavas  · Les Salelles  · Sampzon  · Sanilhac  · Sarras  · Satillieu  · Savas  · Sceautres  · Sécheras  · Serrières  · Silhac  · La Souche  · Soyons  · Talencieux  · Tauriers  · Le Teil  · Thorrenc  · Thueyts  · Toulaud  · Tournon-sur-Rhône  · Ucel  · Usclades-et-Rieutord  · Uzer  · Vagnas  · Valgorge  · Vallées-d'Antraigues-Asperjoc  · Vallon-Pont-d'Arc  · Vals-les-Bains  · Valvignères  · Vanosc  · Les Vans  · Vaudevant  · Vernon  · Vernosc-lès-Annonay  · Vernoux-en-Vivarais  · Vesseaux  · Veyras  · Villeneuve-de-Berg  · Villevocance  · Vinezac  · Vinzieux  · Vion  · Viviers  · Vocance  · Vogüé  · La Voulte-sur-Rhône | Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rocles (Ardèche). This short article about a place or feature in France can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
860,897
Kleenex
Kleenex
8,328,255
Box of Kleenex facial tissues **Kleenex** is a [brand](/wiki/Brand "Brand") [name](/wiki/Name "Name") for many paper products, such as [facial tissue](/wiki/Facial_tissue "Facial tissue"), [bathroom tissue](/wiki/Toilet_paper "Toilet paper"), [paper towels](/wiki/Paper_towel "Paper towel"), [tampons](/wiki/Tampon "Tampon"), and [diapers](/wiki/Diaper "Diaper"). The name is a popular genericized trademark for facial tissue in the United States.[[1]](#cite_note-1) It is a [trademark](/wiki/Trademark "Trademark") of Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Kleenex products are made in 30 countries and sold in more than 170 countries. ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) Minkova, Donka; Curzan, Anne; Stockwell, Robert P.; Emmons, Kimberly (2004). [*Studies in the History of the English Language II: Unfolding Conversations*](https://books.google.com/books?id=VWkfaTRQa5YC&q=kleenex+generic&pg=PA118). Walter de Gruyter. [ISBN](/wiki/ISBN_(identifier) "ISBN (identifier)") [978-3-11-018097-8](/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-3-11-018097-8 "Special:BookSources/978-3-11-018097-8"). ## Other websites * [Official website](https://www.kleenex.com/en-us/)
Box of Kleenex facial tissues Kleenex is a brand name for many paper products, such as facial tissue, bathroom tissue, paper towels, tampons, and diapers. The name is a popular genericized trademark for facial tissue in the United States.[1] It is a trademark of Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Kleenex products are made in 30 countries and sold in more than 170 countries. References ↑ Minkova, Donka; Curzan, Anne; Stockwell, Robert P.; Emmons, Kimberly (2004). Studies in the History of the English Language II: Unfolding Conversations. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-018097-8. Other websites Official website
678,841
Soultzmatt
Soultzmatt
8,302,335
| Soultzmatt | | --- | | [Commune](/wiki/Communes_of_France "Communes of France") | | The main road through Soultzmatt | | Coat of arms | | Location of Soultzmatt | | SoultzmattShow map of FranceSoultzmattShow map of Grand Est | | Coordinates: [47°57′45″N 7°14′20″E / 47.9625°N 7.2389°E / 47.9625; 7.2389](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Soultzmatt&params=47.9625_N_7.2389_E_type:city(2257)_region:FR-GES)[Coordinates](/wiki/Geographic_coordinate_system "Geographic coordinate system"): [47°57′45″N 7°14′20″E / 47.9625°N 7.2389°E / 47.9625; 7.2389](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Soultzmatt&params=47.9625_N_7.2389_E_type:city(2257)_region:FR-GES) | | Country | [France](/wiki/France "France") | | [Region](/wiki/Regions_of_France "Regions of France") | [Grand Est](/wiki/Grand_Est "Grand Est") | | [Department](/wiki/Departments_of_France "Departments of France") | [Haut-Rhin](/wiki/Haut-Rhin "Haut-Rhin") | | [Arrondissement](/wiki/Arrondissements_of_France "Arrondissements of France") | [Thann-Guebwiller](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Thann-Guebwiller "Arrondissement of Thann-Guebwiller") | | [Canton](/wiki/Cantons_of_France "Cantons of France") | Wintzenheim | | [Intercommunality](/wiki/Communes_of_France#Intercommunality "Communes of France") | Pays de Rouffach | | Government | |  • Mayor (2001–2008) | Jean-Paul Diringer | | Area**1** | 19.57 km2 (7.56 sq mi) | | Population (2006) | 2,257 | |  • Density | 120/km2 (300/sq mi) | | [Time zone](/wiki/Time_zone "Time zone") | [UTC+01:00](/wiki/UTC%2B01:00 "UTC+01:00") ([CET](/wiki/Central_European_Time "Central European Time")) | |  • Summer ([DST](/wiki/Daylight_saving_time "Daylight saving time")) | [UTC+02:00](/wiki/UTC%2B02:00 "UTC+02:00") ([CEST](/wiki/Central_European_Summer_Time "Central European Summer Time")) | | [INSEE](/wiki/INSEE_code "INSEE code")/Postal code | [68318](https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/1405599?geo=COM-68318) /68570 | | Elevation | 236–773 m (774–2,536 ft) (avg. 280 m or 920 ft) | | **1** French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries. | **Soultzmatt** is a [commune](/wiki/Communes_of_France "Communes of France"). It is in the [Haut-Rhin](/wiki/Haut-Rhin "Haut-Rhin") [department](/wiki/Departments_of_France "Departments of France") of eastern [France](/wiki/France "France"). Its [vineyards](/wiki/Vineyard "Vineyard") produce one of the finest Alsacian wines: the *Grand Cru* Zinnkoepflé. ## Related pages * [Communes of the Haut-Rhin department](/wiki/Communes_of_the_Haut-Rhin_department "Communes of the Haut-Rhin department") ## References * [INSEE commune file](http://www.insee.fr/en/home/home_page.asp) ## Other websites Media related to [Soultzmatt](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Soultzmatt "commons:Category:Soultzmatt") at Wikimedia Commons | * [v](/wiki/Template:Haut-Rhin_communes "Template:Haut-Rhin communes") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Haut-Rhin_communes&action=edit) [Communes](/wiki/Communes_of_the_Haut-Rhin_department "Communes of the Haut-Rhin department") of the [Haut-Rhin](/wiki/Haut-Rhin "Haut-Rhin") department | | --- | | * [Algolsheim](/wiki/Algolsheim "Algolsheim") * [Altenach](/wiki/Altenach "Altenach") * [Altkirch](/wiki/Altkirch "Altkirch") * [Ammerschwihr](/wiki/Ammerschwihr "Ammerschwihr") * [Andolsheim](/wiki/Andolsheim "Andolsheim") * [Appenwihr](/wiki/Appenwihr "Appenwihr") * [Artzenheim](/wiki/Artzenheim "Artzenheim") * [Aspach](/wiki/Aspach,_Haut-Rhin "Aspach, Haut-Rhin") * [Aspach-le-Bas](/wiki/Aspach-le-Bas "Aspach-le-Bas") * [Aspach-Michelbach](/wiki/Aspach-Michelbach "Aspach-Michelbach") * [Attenschwiller](/wiki/Attenschwiller "Attenschwiller") * [Aubure](/wiki/Aubure "Aubure") * [Baldersheim](/wiki/Baldersheim "Baldersheim") * [Balgau](/wiki/Balgau "Balgau") * [Ballersdorf](/wiki/Ballersdorf "Ballersdorf") * [Balschwiller](/wiki/Balschwiller "Balschwiller") * [Baltzenheim](/wiki/Baltzenheim "Baltzenheim") * [Bantzenheim](/wiki/Bantzenheim "Bantzenheim") * [Bartenheim](/wiki/Bartenheim "Bartenheim") * [Battenheim](/wiki/Battenheim "Battenheim") * [Beblenheim](/wiki/Beblenheim "Beblenheim") * [Bellemagny](/wiki/Bellemagny "Bellemagny") * [Bendorf](/wiki/Bendorf,_Haut-Rhin "Bendorf, Haut-Rhin") * [Bennwihr](/wiki/Bennwihr "Bennwihr") * [Berentzwiller](/wiki/Berentzwiller "Berentzwiller") * [Bergheim](/wiki/Bergheim,_Haut-Rhin "Bergheim, Haut-Rhin") * [Bergholtz](/wiki/Bergholtz,_Haut-Rhin "Bergholtz, Haut-Rhin") * [Bergholtzzell](/wiki/Bergholtzzell "Bergholtzzell") * [Bernwiller](/wiki/Bernwiller "Bernwiller") * [Berrwiller](/wiki/Berrwiller "Berrwiller") * [Bettendorf](/wiki/Bettendorf,_Haut-Rhin "Bettendorf, Haut-Rhin") * [Bettlach](/wiki/Bettlach,_Haut-Rhin "Bettlach, Haut-Rhin") * [Biederthal](/wiki/Biederthal "Biederthal") * [Biesheim](/wiki/Biesheim "Biesheim") * [Biltzheim](/wiki/Biltzheim "Biltzheim") * [Bischwihr](/wiki/Bischwihr "Bischwihr") * [Bisel](/wiki/Bisel "Bisel") * [Bitschwiller-lès-Thann](/wiki/Bitschwiller-l%C3%A8s-Thann "Bitschwiller-lès-Thann") * [Blodelsheim](/wiki/Blodelsheim "Blodelsheim") * [Blotzheim](/wiki/Blotzheim "Blotzheim") * [Bollwiller](/wiki/Bollwiller "Bollwiller") * [Le Bonhomme](/wiki/Le_Bonhomme "Le Bonhomme") * [Bourbach-le-Bas](/wiki/Bourbach-le-Bas "Bourbach-le-Bas") * [Bourbach-le-Haut](/wiki/Bourbach-le-Haut "Bourbach-le-Haut") * [Bouxwiller](/wiki/Bouxwiller,_Haut-Rhin "Bouxwiller, Haut-Rhin") * [Bréchaumont](/wiki/Br%C3%A9chaumont "Bréchaumont") * [Breitenbach-Haut-Rhin](/wiki/Breitenbach-Haut-Rhin "Breitenbach-Haut-Rhin") * [Bretten](/wiki/Bretten,_Haut-Rhin "Bretten, Haut-Rhin") * [Brinckheim](/wiki/Brinckheim "Brinckheim") * [Bruebach](/wiki/Bruebach "Bruebach") * [Brunstatt-Didenheim](/wiki/Brunstatt-Didenheim "Brunstatt-Didenheim") * [Buethwiller](/wiki/Buethwiller "Buethwiller") * [Buhl](/wiki/Buhl,_Haut-Rhin "Buhl, Haut-Rhin") * [Burnhaupt-le-Bas](/wiki/Burnhaupt-le-Bas "Burnhaupt-le-Bas") * [Burnhaupt-le-Haut](/wiki/Burnhaupt-le-Haut "Burnhaupt-le-Haut") * [Buschwiller](/wiki/Buschwiller "Buschwiller") * [Carspach](/wiki/Carspach "Carspach") * [Cernay](/wiki/Cernay,_Haut-Rhin "Cernay, Haut-Rhin") * [Chalampé](/wiki/Chalamp%C3%A9 "Chalampé") * [Chavannes-sur-l'Étang](/wiki/Chavannes-sur-l%27%C3%89tang "Chavannes-sur-l'Étang") * [Colmar](/wiki/Colmar "Colmar") * [Courtavon](/wiki/Courtavon "Courtavon") * [Dannemarie](/wiki/Dannemarie,_Haut-Rhin "Dannemarie, Haut-Rhin") * [Dessenheim](/wiki/Dessenheim "Dessenheim") * [Diefmatten](/wiki/Diefmatten "Diefmatten") * [Dietwiller](/wiki/Dietwiller "Dietwiller") * [Dolleren](/wiki/Dolleren "Dolleren") * [Durlinsdorf](/wiki/Durlinsdorf "Durlinsdorf") * [Durmenach](/wiki/Durmenach "Durmenach") * [Durrenentzen](/wiki/Durrenentzen "Durrenentzen") * [Eglingen](/wiki/Eglingen "Eglingen") * [Eguisheim](/wiki/Eguisheim "Eguisheim") * [Elbach](/wiki/Elbach "Elbach") * [Emlingen](/wiki/Emlingen "Emlingen") * [Ensisheim](/wiki/Ensisheim "Ensisheim") * [Eschbach-au-Val](/wiki/Eschbach-au-Val "Eschbach-au-Val") * [Eschentzwiller](/wiki/Eschentzwiller "Eschentzwiller") * [Eteimbes](/wiki/Eteimbes "Eteimbes") * [Falkwiller](/wiki/Falkwiller "Falkwiller") * [Feldbach](/wiki/Feldbach,_Haut-Rhin "Feldbach, Haut-Rhin") * [Feldkirch](/wiki/Feldkirch,_Haut-Rhin "Feldkirch, Haut-Rhin") * [Fellering](/wiki/Fellering "Fellering") * [Ferrette](/wiki/Ferrette "Ferrette") * [Fessenheim](/wiki/Fessenheim "Fessenheim") * [Fislis](/wiki/Fislis "Fislis") * [Flaxlanden](/wiki/Flaxlanden "Flaxlanden") * [Folgensbourg](/wiki/Folgensbourg "Folgensbourg") * [Fortschwihr](/wiki/Fortschwihr "Fortschwihr") * [Franken](/wiki/Franken,_Haut-Rhin "Franken, Haut-Rhin") * [Fréland](/wiki/Fr%C3%A9land "Fréland") * [Friesen](/wiki/Friesen "Friesen") * [Frœningen](/wiki/Fr%C5%93ningen "Frœningen") * [Fulleren](/wiki/Fulleren "Fulleren") * [Galfingue](/wiki/Galfingue "Galfingue") * [Geishouse](/wiki/Geishouse "Geishouse") * [Geispitzen](/wiki/Geispitzen "Geispitzen") * [Geiswasser](/wiki/Geiswasser "Geiswasser") * [Gildwiller](/wiki/Gildwiller "Gildwiller") * [Goldbach-Altenbach](/wiki/Goldbach-Altenbach "Goldbach-Altenbach") * [Gommersdorf](/wiki/Gommersdorf "Gommersdorf") * [Griesbach-au-Val](/wiki/Griesbach-au-Val "Griesbach-au-Val") * [Grussenheim](/wiki/Grussenheim "Grussenheim") * [Gueberschwihr](/wiki/Gueberschwihr "Gueberschwihr") * [Guebwiller](/wiki/Guebwiller "Guebwiller") * [Guémar](/wiki/Gu%C3%A9mar "Guémar") * [Guevenatten](/wiki/Guevenatten "Guevenatten") * [Guewenheim](/wiki/Guewenheim "Guewenheim") * [Gundolsheim](/wiki/Gundolsheim "Gundolsheim") * [Gunsbach](/wiki/Gunsbach "Gunsbach") * [Habsheim](/wiki/Habsheim "Habsheim") * [Hagenbach](/wiki/Hagenbach,_Haut-Rhin "Hagenbach, Haut-Rhin") * [Hagenthal-le-Bas](/wiki/Hagenthal-le-Bas "Hagenthal-le-Bas") * [Hagenthal-le-Haut](/wiki/Hagenthal-le-Haut "Hagenthal-le-Haut") * [Hartmannswiller](/wiki/Hartmannswiller "Hartmannswiller") * [Hattstatt](/wiki/Hattstatt "Hattstatt") * [Hausgauen](/wiki/Hausgauen "Hausgauen") * [Le Haut-Soultzbach](/wiki/Le_Haut-Soultzbach "Le Haut-Soultzbach") * [Hecken](/wiki/Hecken,_Haut-Rhin "Hecken, Haut-Rhin") * [Hégenheim](/wiki/H%C3%A9genheim "Hégenheim") * [Heidwiller](/wiki/Heidwiller "Heidwiller") * [Heimersdorf](/wiki/Heimersdorf "Heimersdorf") * [Heimsbrunn](/wiki/Heimsbrunn "Heimsbrunn") * [Heiteren](/wiki/Heiteren "Heiteren") * [Heiwiller](/wiki/Heiwiller "Heiwiller") * [Helfrantzkirch](/wiki/Helfrantzkirch "Helfrantzkirch") * [Herrlisheim-près-Colmar](/wiki/Herrlisheim-pr%C3%A8s-Colmar "Herrlisheim-près-Colmar") * [Hésingue](/wiki/H%C3%A9singue "Hésingue") * [Hettenschlag](/wiki/Hettenschlag "Hettenschlag") * [Hindlingen](/wiki/Hindlingen "Hindlingen") * [Hirsingue](/wiki/Hirsingue "Hirsingue") * [Hirtzbach](/wiki/Hirtzbach "Hirtzbach") * [Hirtzfelden](/wiki/Hirtzfelden "Hirtzfelden") * [Hochstatt](/wiki/Hochstatt "Hochstatt") * [Hohrod](/wiki/Hohrod "Hohrod") * [Hombourg](/wiki/Hombourg "Hombourg") * [Horbourg-Wihr](/wiki/Horbourg-Wihr "Horbourg-Wihr") * [Houssen](/wiki/Houssen "Houssen") * [Hunawihr](/wiki/Hunawihr "Hunawihr") * [Hundsbach](/wiki/Hundsbach,_Haut-Rhin "Hundsbach, Haut-Rhin") * [Huningue](/wiki/Huningue "Huningue") * [Husseren-les-Châteaux](/wiki/Husseren-les-Ch%C3%A2teaux "Husseren-les-Châteaux") * [Husseren-Wesserling](/wiki/Husseren-Wesserling "Husseren-Wesserling") * [Illfurth](/wiki/Illfurth "Illfurth") * [Illhaeusern](/wiki/Illhaeusern "Illhaeusern") * [Illtal](/wiki/Illtal "Illtal") * [Illzach](/wiki/Illzach "Illzach") * [Ingersheim](/wiki/Ingersheim,_Haut-Rhin "Ingersheim, Haut-Rhin") * [Issenheim](/wiki/Issenheim "Issenheim") * [Jebsheim](/wiki/Jebsheim "Jebsheim") * [Jettingen](/wiki/Jettingen,_Haut-Rhin "Jettingen, Haut-Rhin") * [Jungholtz](/wiki/Jungholtz "Jungholtz") * [Kappelen](/wiki/Kappelen,_Haut-Rhin "Kappelen, Haut-Rhin") * [Katzenthal](/wiki/Katzenthal "Katzenthal") * [Kaysersberg-Vignoble](/wiki/Kaysersberg-Vignoble "Kaysersberg-Vignoble") * [Kembs](/wiki/Kembs "Kembs") * [Kiffis](/wiki/Kiffis "Kiffis") * [Kingersheim](/wiki/Kingersheim "Kingersheim") * [Kirchberg](/wiki/Kirchberg,_Haut-Rhin "Kirchberg, Haut-Rhin") * [Knœringue](/wiki/Kn%C5%93ringue "Knœringue") * [Kœstlach](/wiki/K%C5%93stlach "Kœstlach") * [Kœtzingue](/wiki/K%C5%93tzingue "Kœtzingue") * [Kruth](/wiki/Kruth "Kruth") * [Kunheim](/wiki/Kunheim "Kunheim") * [Labaroche](/wiki/Labaroche "Labaroche") * [Landser](/wiki/Landser,_Haut-Rhin "Landser, Haut-Rhin") * [Lapoutroie](/wiki/Lapoutroie "Lapoutroie") * [Largitzen](/wiki/Largitzen "Largitzen") * [Lautenbach](/wiki/Lautenbach,_Haut-Rhin "Lautenbach, Haut-Rhin") * [Lautenbachzell](/wiki/Lautenbachzell "Lautenbachzell") * [Lauw](/wiki/Lauw "Lauw") * [Leimbach](/wiki/Leimbach,_Haut-Rhin "Leimbach, Haut-Rhin") * [Levoncourt](/wiki/Levoncourt,_Haut-Rhin "Levoncourt, Haut-Rhin") * [Leymen](/wiki/Leymen "Leymen") * [Liebenswiller](/wiki/Liebenswiller "Liebenswiller") * [Liebsdorf](/wiki/Liebsdorf "Liebsdorf") * [Lièpvre](/wiki/Li%C3%A8pvre "Lièpvre") * [Ligsdorf](/wiki/Ligsdorf "Ligsdorf") * [Linsdorf](/wiki/Linsdorf "Linsdorf") * [Linthal](/wiki/Linthal,_Haut-Rhin "Linthal, Haut-Rhin") * [Logelheim](/wiki/Logelheim "Logelheim") * [Lucelle](/wiki/Lucelle,_Haut-Rhin "Lucelle, Haut-Rhin") * [Luemschwiller](/wiki/Luemschwiller "Luemschwiller") * [Luttenbach-près-Munster](/wiki/Luttenbach-pr%C3%A8s-Munster "Luttenbach-près-Munster") * [Lutter](/wiki/Lutter,_Haut-Rhin "Lutter, Haut-Rhin") * [Lutterbach](/wiki/Lutterbach "Lutterbach") * [Magny](/wiki/Magny,_Haut-Rhin "Magny, Haut-Rhin") * [Magstatt-le-Bas](/wiki/Magstatt-le-Bas "Magstatt-le-Bas") * [Magstatt-le-Haut](/wiki/Magstatt-le-Haut "Magstatt-le-Haut") * [Malmerspach](/wiki/Malmerspach "Malmerspach") * [Manspach](/wiki/Manspach "Manspach") * [Masevaux-Niederbruck](/wiki/Masevaux-Niederbruck "Masevaux-Niederbruck") * [Mertzen](/wiki/Mertzen "Mertzen") * [Merxheim](/wiki/Merxheim,_Haut-Rhin "Merxheim, Haut-Rhin") * [Metzeral](/wiki/Metzeral "Metzeral") * [Meyenheim](/wiki/Meyenheim "Meyenheim") * [Michelbach-le-Bas](/wiki/Michelbach-le-Bas "Michelbach-le-Bas") * [Michelbach-le-Haut](/wiki/Michelbach-le-Haut "Michelbach-le-Haut") * [Mittelwihr](/wiki/Mittelwihr "Mittelwihr") * [Mittlach](/wiki/Mittlach "Mittlach") * [Mitzach](/wiki/Mitzach "Mitzach") * [Mœrnach](/wiki/M%C5%93rnach "Mœrnach") * [Mollau](/wiki/Mollau "Mollau") * [Montreux-Jeune](/wiki/Montreux-Jeune "Montreux-Jeune") * [Montreux-Vieux](/wiki/Montreux-Vieux "Montreux-Vieux") * [Moosch](/wiki/Moosch "Moosch") * [Mooslargue](/wiki/Mooslargue "Mooslargue") * [Morschwiller-le-Bas](/wiki/Morschwiller-le-Bas "Morschwiller-le-Bas") * [Muespach](/wiki/Muespach "Muespach") * [Muespach-le-Haut](/wiki/Muespach-le-Haut "Muespach-le-Haut") * [Muhlbach-sur-Munster](/wiki/Muhlbach-sur-Munster "Muhlbach-sur-Munster") * [Mulhouse](/wiki/Mulhouse "Mulhouse") * [Munchhouse](/wiki/Munchhouse "Munchhouse") * [Munster](/wiki/Munster,_Haut-Rhin "Munster, Haut-Rhin") * [Muntzenheim](/wiki/Muntzenheim "Muntzenheim") * [Munwiller](/wiki/Munwiller "Munwiller") * [Murbach](/wiki/Murbach "Murbach") * [Nambsheim](/wiki/Nambsheim "Nambsheim") * [Neuf-Brisach](/wiki/Neuf-Brisach "Neuf-Brisach") * [Neuwiller](/wiki/Neuwiller "Neuwiller") * [Niederentzen](/wiki/Niederentzen "Niederentzen") * [Niederhergheim](/wiki/Niederhergheim "Niederhergheim") * [Niedermorschwihr](/wiki/Niedermorschwihr "Niedermorschwihr") * [Niffer](/wiki/Niffer "Niffer") * [Oberbruck](/wiki/Oberbruck "Oberbruck") * [Oberentzen](/wiki/Oberentzen "Oberentzen") * [Oberhergheim](/wiki/Oberhergheim "Oberhergheim") * [Oberlarg](/wiki/Oberlarg "Oberlarg") * [Obermorschwihr](/wiki/Obermorschwihr "Obermorschwihr") * [Obermorschwiller](/wiki/Obermorschwiller "Obermorschwiller") * [Obersaasheim](/wiki/Obersaasheim "Obersaasheim") * [Oderen](/wiki/Oderen "Oderen") * [Oltingue](/wiki/Oltingue "Oltingue") * [Orbey](/wiki/Orbey "Orbey") * [Orschwihr](/wiki/Orschwihr "Orschwihr") * [Osenbach](/wiki/Osenbach "Osenbach") * [Ostheim](/wiki/Ostheim,_Haut-Rhin "Ostheim, Haut-Rhin") * [Ottmarsheim](/wiki/Ottmarsheim "Ottmarsheim") * [Petit-Landau](/wiki/Petit-Landau "Petit-Landau") * [Pfaffenheim](/wiki/Pfaffenheim "Pfaffenheim") * [Pfastatt](/wiki/Pfastatt "Pfastatt") * [Pfetterhouse](/wiki/Pfetterhouse "Pfetterhouse") * [Porte-du-Ried](/wiki/Porte-du-Ried "Porte-du-Ried") * [Pulversheim](/wiki/Pulversheim "Pulversheim") * [Raedersdorf](/wiki/Raedersdorf "Raedersdorf") * [Raedersheim](/wiki/Raedersheim "Raedersheim") * [Rammersmatt](/wiki/Rammersmatt "Rammersmatt") * [Ranspach](/wiki/Ranspach "Ranspach") * [Ranspach-le-Bas](/wiki/Ranspach-le-Bas "Ranspach-le-Bas") * [Ranspach-le-Haut](/wiki/Ranspach-le-Haut "Ranspach-le-Haut") * [Rantzwiller](/wiki/Rantzwiller "Rantzwiller") * [Réguisheim](/wiki/R%C3%A9guisheim "Réguisheim") * [Reiningue](/wiki/Reiningue "Reiningue") * [Retzwiller](/wiki/Retzwiller "Retzwiller") * [Ribeauvillé](/wiki/Ribeauvill%C3%A9 "Ribeauvillé") * [Richwiller](/wiki/Richwiller "Richwiller") * [Riedisheim](/wiki/Riedisheim "Riedisheim") * [Riespach](/wiki/Riespach "Riespach") * [Rimbach-près-Guebwiller](/wiki/Rimbach-pr%C3%A8s-Guebwiller "Rimbach-près-Guebwiller") * [Rimbach-près-Masevaux](/wiki/Rimbach-pr%C3%A8s-Masevaux "Rimbach-près-Masevaux") * [Rimbachzell](/wiki/Rimbachzell "Rimbachzell") * [Riquewihr](/wiki/Riquewihr "Riquewihr") * [Rixheim](/wiki/Rixheim "Rixheim") * [Roderen](/wiki/Roderen "Roderen") * [Rodern](/wiki/Rodern "Rodern") * [Roggenhouse](/wiki/Roggenhouse "Roggenhouse") * [Romagny](/wiki/Romagny,_Haut-Rhin "Romagny, Haut-Rhin") * [Rombach-le-Franc](/wiki/Rombach-le-Franc "Rombach-le-Franc") * [Roppentzwiller](/wiki/Roppentzwiller "Roppentzwiller") * [Rorschwihr](/wiki/Rorschwihr "Rorschwihr") * [Rosenau](/wiki/Rosenau,_Haut-Rhin "Rosenau, Haut-Rhin") * [Rouffach](/wiki/Rouffach "Rouffach") * [Ruederbach](/wiki/Ruederbach "Ruederbach") * [Ruelisheim](/wiki/Ruelisheim "Ruelisheim") * [Rumersheim-le-Haut](/wiki/Rumersheim-le-Haut "Rumersheim-le-Haut") * [Rustenhart](/wiki/Rustenhart "Rustenhart") * [Saint-Amarin](/wiki/Saint-Amarin "Saint-Amarin") * [Saint-Bernard](/wiki/Saint-Bernard,_Haut-Rhin "Saint-Bernard, Haut-Rhin") * [Saint-Cosme](/wiki/Saint-Cosme "Saint-Cosme") * [Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines](/wiki/Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines "Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines") * [Sainte-Croix-en-Plaine](/wiki/Sainte-Croix-en-Plaine "Sainte-Croix-en-Plaine") * [Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines](/wiki/Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines "Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines") * [Saint-Hippolyte](/wiki/Saint-Hippolyte,_Haut-Rhin "Saint-Hippolyte, Haut-Rhin") * [Saint-Louis](/wiki/Saint-Louis,_Haut-Rhin "Saint-Louis, Haut-Rhin") * [Saint-Ulrich](/wiki/Saint-Ulrich "Saint-Ulrich") * [Sausheim](/wiki/Sausheim "Sausheim") * [Schlierbach](/wiki/Schlierbach,_Haut-Rhin "Schlierbach, Haut-Rhin") * [Schweighouse-Thann](/wiki/Schweighouse-Thann "Schweighouse-Thann") * [Schwoben](/wiki/Schwoben "Schwoben") * [Sentheim](/wiki/Sentheim "Sentheim") * [Seppois-le-Bas](/wiki/Seppois-le-Bas "Seppois-le-Bas") * [Seppois-le-Haut](/wiki/Seppois-le-Haut "Seppois-le-Haut") * [Sewen](/wiki/Sewen "Sewen") * [Sickert](/wiki/Sickert,_Haut-Rhin "Sickert, Haut-Rhin") * [Sierentz](/wiki/Sierentz "Sierentz") * [Sondernach](/wiki/Sondernach "Sondernach") * [Sondersdorf](/wiki/Sondersdorf "Sondersdorf") * [Soppe-le-Bas](/wiki/Soppe-le-Bas "Soppe-le-Bas") * [Soultzbach-les-Bains](/wiki/Soultzbach-les-Bains "Soultzbach-les-Bains") * [Soultzeren](/wiki/Soultzeren "Soultzeren") * [Soultz-Haut-Rhin](/wiki/Soultz-Haut-Rhin "Soultz-Haut-Rhin") * Soultzmatt * [Spechbach](/wiki/Spechbach,_Haut-Rhin "Spechbach, Haut-Rhin") * [Staffelfelden](/wiki/Staffelfelden "Staffelfelden") * [Steinbach](/wiki/Steinbach,_Haut-Rhin "Steinbach, Haut-Rhin") * [Steinbrunn-le-Bas](/wiki/Steinbrunn-le-Bas "Steinbrunn-le-Bas") * [Steinbrunn-le-Haut](/wiki/Steinbrunn-le-Haut "Steinbrunn-le-Haut") * [Steinsoultz](/wiki/Steinsoultz "Steinsoultz") * [Sternenberg](/wiki/Sternenberg,_Haut-Rhin "Sternenberg, Haut-Rhin") * [Stetten](/wiki/Stetten,_Haut-Rhin "Stetten, Haut-Rhin") * [Storckensohn](/wiki/Storckensohn "Storckensohn") * [Stosswihr](/wiki/Stosswihr "Stosswihr") * [Strueth](/wiki/Strueth "Strueth") * [Sundhoffen](/wiki/Sundhoffen "Sundhoffen") * [Tagolsheim](/wiki/Tagolsheim "Tagolsheim") * [Tagsdorf](/wiki/Tagsdorf "Tagsdorf") * [Thann](/wiki/Thann,_Haut-Rhin "Thann, Haut-Rhin") * [Thannenkirch](/wiki/Thannenkirch "Thannenkirch") * [Traubach-le-Bas](/wiki/Traubach-le-Bas "Traubach-le-Bas") * [Traubach-le-Haut](/wiki/Traubach-le-Haut "Traubach-le-Haut") * [Turckheim](/wiki/Turckheim "Turckheim") * [Ueberstrass](/wiki/Ueberstrass "Ueberstrass") * [Uffheim](/wiki/Uffheim "Uffheim") * [Uffholtz](/wiki/Uffholtz "Uffholtz") * [Ungersheim](/wiki/Ungersheim "Ungersheim") * [Urbès](/wiki/Urb%C3%A8s "Urbès") * [Urschenheim](/wiki/Urschenheim "Urschenheim") * [Valdieu-Lutran](/wiki/Valdieu-Lutran "Valdieu-Lutran") * [Vieux-Ferrette](/wiki/Vieux-Ferrette "Vieux-Ferrette") * [Vieux-Thann](/wiki/Vieux-Thann "Vieux-Thann") * [Village-Neuf](/wiki/Village-Neuf "Village-Neuf") * [Vœgtlinshoffen](/wiki/V%C5%93gtlinshoffen "Vœgtlinshoffen") * [Vogelgrun](/wiki/Vogelgrun "Vogelgrun") * [Volgelsheim](/wiki/Volgelsheim "Volgelsheim") * [Wahlbach](/wiki/Wahlbach,_Haut-Rhin "Wahlbach, Haut-Rhin") * [Walbach](/wiki/Walbach "Walbach") * [Waldighofen](/wiki/Waldighofen "Waldighofen") * [Walheim](/wiki/Walheim,_Haut-Rhin "Walheim, Haut-Rhin") * [Waltenheim](/wiki/Waltenheim "Waltenheim") * [Wasserbourg](/wiki/Wasserbourg "Wasserbourg") * [Wattwiller](/wiki/Wattwiller "Wattwiller") * [Weckolsheim](/wiki/Weckolsheim "Weckolsheim") * [Wegscheid](/wiki/Wegscheid,_Haut-Rhin "Wegscheid, Haut-Rhin") * [Wentzwiller](/wiki/Wentzwiller "Wentzwiller") * [Werentzhouse](/wiki/Werentzhouse "Werentzhouse") * [Westhalten](/wiki/Westhalten "Westhalten") * [Wettolsheim](/wiki/Wettolsheim "Wettolsheim") * [Wickerschwihr](/wiki/Wickerschwihr "Wickerschwihr") * [Widensolen](/wiki/Widensolen "Widensolen") * [Wihr-au-Val](/wiki/Wihr-au-Val "Wihr-au-Val") * [Wildenstein](/wiki/Wildenstein "Wildenstein") * [Willer](/wiki/Willer "Willer") * [Willer-sur-Thur](/wiki/Willer-sur-Thur "Willer-sur-Thur") * [Winkel](/wiki/Winkel,_Haut-Rhin "Winkel, Haut-Rhin") * [Wintzenheim](/wiki/Wintzenheim "Wintzenheim") * [Wittelsheim](/wiki/Wittelsheim "Wittelsheim") * [Wittenheim](/wiki/Wittenheim "Wittenheim") * [Wittersdorf](/wiki/Wittersdorf "Wittersdorf") * [Wolfersdorf](/wiki/Wolfersdorf,_Haut-Rhin "Wolfersdorf, Haut-Rhin") * [Wolfgantzen](/wiki/Wolfgantzen "Wolfgantzen") * [Wolschwiller](/wiki/Wolschwiller "Wolschwiller") * [Wuenheim](/wiki/Wuenheim "Wuenheim") * [Zaessingue](/wiki/Zaessingue "Zaessingue") * [Zellenberg](/wiki/Zellenberg "Zellenberg") * [Zillisheim](/wiki/Zillisheim "Zillisheim") * [Zimmerbach](/wiki/Zimmerbach "Zimmerbach") * [Zimmersheim](/wiki/Zimmersheim "Zimmersheim") | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature in France](/wiki/Category:France_geography_stubs "Category:France geography stubs") can be made longer. 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| Soultzmatt | | --- | | Commune | | The main road through Soultzmatt | | Coat of arms | | Location of Soultzmatt | | SoultzmattShow map of FranceSoultzmattShow map of Grand Est | | Coordinates: 47°57′45″N 7°14′20″E / 47.9625°N 7.2389°E / 47.9625; 7.2389Coordinates: 47°57′45″N 7°14′20″E / 47.9625°N 7.2389°E / 47.9625; 7.2389 | | Country | France | | Region | Grand Est | | Department | Haut-Rhin | | Arrondissement | Thann-Guebwiller | | Canton | Wintzenheim | | Intercommunality | Pays de Rouffach | | Government | |  • Mayor (2001–2008) | Jean-Paul Diringer | | Area1 | 19.57 km2 (7.56 sq mi) | | Population (2006) | 2,257 | |  • Density | 120/km2 (300/sq mi) | | Time zone | UTC+01:00 (CET) | |  • Summer (DST) | UTC+02:00 (CEST) | | INSEE/Postal code | 68318 /68570 | | Elevation | 236–773 m (774–2,536 ft) (avg. 280 m or 920 ft) | | 1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries. | Soultzmatt is a commune. It is in the Haut-Rhin department of eastern France. Its vineyards produce one of the finest Alsacian wines: the Grand Cru Zinnkoepflé. Related pages Communes of the Haut-Rhin department References INSEE commune file Other websites Media related to Soultzmatt at Wikimedia Commons | * v * t * e Communes of the Haut-Rhin department | | --- | | * Algolsheim * Altenach * Altkirch * Ammerschwihr * Andolsheim * Appenwihr * Artzenheim * Aspach * Aspach-le-Bas * Aspach-Michelbach * Attenschwiller * Aubure * Baldersheim * Balgau * Ballersdorf * Balschwiller * Baltzenheim * Bantzenheim * Bartenheim * Battenheim * Beblenheim * Bellemagny * Bendorf * Bennwihr * Berentzwiller * Bergheim * Bergholtz * Bergholtzzell * Bernwiller * Berrwiller * Bettendorf * Bettlach * Biederthal * Biesheim * Biltzheim * Bischwihr * Bisel * Bitschwiller-lès-Thann * Blodelsheim * Blotzheim * Bollwiller * Le Bonhomme * Bourbach-le-Bas * Bourbach-le-Haut * Bouxwiller * Bréchaumont * Breitenbach-Haut-Rhin * Bretten * Brinckheim * Bruebach * Brunstatt-Didenheim * Buethwiller * Buhl * Burnhaupt-le-Bas * Burnhaupt-le-Haut * Buschwiller * Carspach * Cernay * Chalampé * Chavannes-sur-l'Étang * Colmar * Courtavon * Dannemarie * Dessenheim * Diefmatten * Dietwiller * Dolleren * Durlinsdorf * Durmenach * Durrenentzen * Eglingen * Eguisheim * Elbach * Emlingen * Ensisheim * Eschbach-au-Val * Eschentzwiller * Eteimbes * Falkwiller * Feldbach * Feldkirch * Fellering * Ferrette * Fessenheim * Fislis * Flaxlanden * Folgensbourg * Fortschwihr * Franken * Fréland * Friesen * Frœningen * Fulleren * Galfingue * Geishouse * Geispitzen * Geiswasser * Gildwiller * Goldbach-Altenbach * Gommersdorf * Griesbach-au-Val * Grussenheim * Gueberschwihr * Guebwiller * Guémar * Guevenatten * Guewenheim * Gundolsheim * Gunsbach * Habsheim * Hagenbach * Hagenthal-le-Bas * Hagenthal-le-Haut * Hartmannswiller * Hattstatt * Hausgauen * Le Haut-Soultzbach * Hecken * Hégenheim * Heidwiller * Heimersdorf * Heimsbrunn * Heiteren * Heiwiller * Helfrantzkirch * Herrlisheim-près-Colmar * Hésingue * Hettenschlag * Hindlingen * Hirsingue * Hirtzbach * Hirtzfelden * Hochstatt * Hohrod * Hombourg * Horbourg-Wihr * Houssen * Hunawihr * Hundsbach * Huningue * Husseren-les-Châteaux * Husseren-Wesserling * Illfurth * Illhaeusern * Illtal * Illzach * Ingersheim * Issenheim * Jebsheim * Jettingen * Jungholtz * Kappelen * Katzenthal * Kaysersberg-Vignoble * Kembs * Kiffis * Kingersheim * Kirchberg * Knœringue * Kœstlach * Kœtzingue * Kruth * Kunheim * Labaroche * Landser * Lapoutroie * Largitzen * Lautenbach * Lautenbachzell * Lauw * Leimbach * Levoncourt * Leymen * Liebenswiller * Liebsdorf * Lièpvre * Ligsdorf * Linsdorf * Linthal * Logelheim * Lucelle * Luemschwiller * Luttenbach-près-Munster * Lutter * Lutterbach * Magny * Magstatt-le-Bas * Magstatt-le-Haut * Malmerspach * Manspach * Masevaux-Niederbruck * Mertzen * Merxheim * Metzeral * Meyenheim * Michelbach-le-Bas * Michelbach-le-Haut * Mittelwihr * Mittlach * Mitzach * Mœrnach * Mollau * Montreux-Jeune * Montreux-Vieux * Moosch * Mooslargue * Morschwiller-le-Bas * Muespach * Muespach-le-Haut * Muhlbach-sur-Munster * Mulhouse * Munchhouse * Munster * Muntzenheim * Munwiller * Murbach * Nambsheim * Neuf-Brisach * Neuwiller * Niederentzen * Niederhergheim * Niedermorschwihr * Niffer * Oberbruck * Oberentzen * Oberhergheim * Oberlarg * Obermorschwihr * Obermorschwiller * Obersaasheim * Oderen * Oltingue * Orbey * Orschwihr * Osenbach * Ostheim * Ottmarsheim * Petit-Landau * Pfaffenheim * Pfastatt * Pfetterhouse * Porte-du-Ried * Pulversheim * Raedersdorf * Raedersheim * Rammersmatt * Ranspach * Ranspach-le-Bas * Ranspach-le-Haut * Rantzwiller * Réguisheim * Reiningue * Retzwiller * Ribeauvillé * Richwiller * Riedisheim * Riespach * Rimbach-près-Guebwiller * Rimbach-près-Masevaux * Rimbachzell * Riquewihr * Rixheim * Roderen * Rodern * Roggenhouse * Romagny * Rombach-le-Franc * Roppentzwiller * Rorschwihr * Rosenau * Rouffach * Ruederbach * Ruelisheim * Rumersheim-le-Haut * Rustenhart * Saint-Amarin * Saint-Bernard * Saint-Cosme * Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines * Sainte-Croix-en-Plaine * Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines * Saint-Hippolyte * Saint-Louis * Saint-Ulrich * Sausheim * Schlierbach * Schweighouse-Thann * Schwoben * Sentheim * Seppois-le-Bas * Seppois-le-Haut * Sewen * Sickert * Sierentz * Sondernach * Sondersdorf * Soppe-le-Bas * Soultzbach-les-Bains * Soultzeren * Soultz-Haut-Rhin * Soultzmatt * Spechbach * Staffelfelden * Steinbach * Steinbrunn-le-Bas * Steinbrunn-le-Haut * Steinsoultz * Sternenberg * Stetten * Storckensohn * Stosswihr * Strueth * Sundhoffen * Tagolsheim * Tagsdorf * Thann * Thannenkirch * Traubach-le-Bas * Traubach-le-Haut * Turckheim * Ueberstrass * Uffheim * Uffholtz * Ungersheim * Urbès * Urschenheim * Valdieu-Lutran * Vieux-Ferrette * Vieux-Thann * Village-Neuf * Vœgtlinshoffen * Vogelgrun * Volgelsheim * Wahlbach * Walbach * Waldighofen * Walheim * Waltenheim * Wasserbourg * Wattwiller * Weckolsheim * Wegscheid * Wentzwiller * Werentzhouse * Westhalten * Wettolsheim * Wickerschwihr * Widensolen * Wihr-au-Val * Wildenstein * Willer * Willer-sur-Thur * Winkel * Wintzenheim * Wittelsheim * Wittenheim * Wittersdorf * Wolfersdorf * Wolfgantzen * Wolschwiller * Wuenheim * Zaessingue * Zellenberg * Zillisheim * Zimmerbach * Zimmersheim | This short article about a place or feature in France can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
35,750
Rosa_Parks
Rosa Parks
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**Rosa Louise McCauley Parks** (February 4, 1913 – October 24, 2005) was an African-American civil rights activist. She was called "the mother of the Modern-Day American civil rights movement" and "the mother of the freedom movement". Parks is best known for what she did in her home town of Montgomery, Alabama on December 1, 1955. While she sat in a seat in the middle of the bus, the bus driver told her to move to the back of the bus so a white passenger could take the seat in the front of the bus. During this time, when there were no white seats for white people, black people were told to get up out of their seat. Parks refused to move. She was a member of the local chapter of National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Like so many others she was tired of being treated as a lower class person because of the color of her skin. She was arrested. This led to the Montgomery bus boycott. The boycott lasted 381 days. This caused a change in the law. After that, black people were able to sit wherever they wanted to on the bus. Her refusal to let others treat her differently was an important symbol in the campaign against racial segregation. ## Early years Rosa Parks was born in [Tuskegee, Alabama](/wiki/Tuskegee,_Alabama "Tuskegee, Alabama"), on February 4, 1913.[[1]](#cite_note-Shores6-1) Her parents were James and Leona McCauley.[[1]](#cite_note-Shores6-1) She was mainly of African [ancestry](/wiki/Ancestry "Ancestry"). One of her great-grandfathers was [Scots-Irish](/wiki/Ulster_Scots_people "Ulster Scots people") and went to [Charleston, South Carolina](/wiki/Charleston,_South_Carolina "Charleston, South Carolina") as an [indentured servant](/wiki/Indentured_servant "Indentured servant").[[2]](#cite_note-2) Her father left home to find work when Rosa was 2 years old.[[3]](#cite_note-Dubois7-3) Her mother [taught](/wiki/Teacher "Teacher") [school](/wiki/School "School") in another town. Rosa and her brother Sylvester were brought up by their [grandparents](/wiki/Grandparent "Grandparent").[[3]](#cite_note-Dubois7-3) Rosa started school in 1919 when she was 6 years old. At that time, schools were segregated. There were black schools and white schools. Later, Parks remembered how buses took white students to their school, but black students had to walk to theirs: > *I'd see the bus pass every day... But to me, that was a way of life; we had no choice but to accept what was the [custom](/wiki/Custom "Custom"). The bus was among the first ways I realized there was a black world and a white world.*[[4]](#cite_note-4) > > In 1924 she went to the Montgomery Industrial School for Girls in [Montgomery, Alabama](/wiki/Montgomery,_Alabama "Montgomery, Alabama").[[5]](#cite_note-Shores9-5) After 5 years, she left school and went to work in a [shirt](/wiki/Shirt "Shirt") [factory](/wiki/Factory "Factory").[[5]](#cite_note-Shores9-5) She also took care of her grandmother. On December 1, 1955, Parks got onto a city bus to go home after work.[[6]](#cite_note-Phibbs13.15-6) She paid her 10¢ and sat down in the first row of seats behind the painted line on the floor which marked the black section.[[a]](#cite_note-8) After several stops, more white passengers got on the bus. The bus driver ordered Parks and three other black people to give up their seats so the white people could sit down. The other three moved to the back of the bus, but Parks slid over to the window.[[8]](#cite_note-Neary-9) She said she was following the law by sitting in the right section. Later, she said that when she was told to go to the back of the bus, "I thought of [Emmett Till](/wiki/Emmett_Till "Emmett Till") and I just couldn't go back."[[9]](#cite_note-10) (Till was a black 14-year-old boy who was [lynched](/wiki/Lynching "Lynching") in [Mississippi](/wiki/Mississippi "Mississippi") about three months earlier.)[[10]](#cite_note-11) The driver stopped the bus and called the police.[[6]](#cite_note-Phibbs13.15-6) Two police officers arrested Parks and took her to jail for violating Alabama's bus laws. Parks being [fingerprinted](/wiki/Fingerprint "Fingerprint") after her arrest Her mother called upon Edgar Nixon to bail her out. Nixon was the [president](/wiki/President "President") of the local NAACP chapter. Nixon knew the danger Parks was in and immediately arranged her [bail](/wiki/Bail "Bail").[[6]](#cite_note-Phibbs13.15-6) The local [NAACP](/wiki/NAACP "NAACP") had been looking for a [test case](/wiki/Test_case_(law) "Test case (law)") to challenge the bus segregation laws.[[6]](#cite_note-Phibbs13.15-6) Parks was a respected working woman. She was well-spoken, and her case would be a good way to challenge the law. It was decided that on December 5, a boycott of all the buses in Montgomery would be held.[[11]](#cite_note-Crewe16.18-12) The word was spread throughout the black community of the intended bus boycott. Black [ministers](/wiki/Minister_(Christianity) "Minister (Christianity)") told their [congregations](/wiki/Congregation "Congregation") to support the boycott.[[12]](#cite_note-13) On Monday, December 5th, Rosa Parks had to appear in court.[[13]](#cite_note-Tisdale12.13-14) This was also the first day black riders would stay off the Montgomery buses. The streets of Montgomery were filled with black people walking to work.[[13]](#cite_note-Tisdale12.13-14) Black children walked to school.[[13]](#cite_note-Tisdale12.13-14) That same morning, all Montgomery buses were assigned two [motorcycle](/wiki/Motorcycle "Motorcycle") [policemen](/wiki/Police "Police") to guard against any black gangs intimidating riders.[[14]](#cite_note-Hanson97-15) There were no black gangs. The black community simply cooperated with the boycott. The buses remained empty all day. White riders fearing trouble stayed off the buses as well.[[14]](#cite_note-Hanson97-15) In addition to the [charge](/wiki/Indictment "Indictment") of violating the bus laws, Parks was also charged with disorderly conduct. Her [trial](/wiki/Trial "Trial") was quick, only about 30 minutes. The [court](/wiki/Court "Court") found her [guilty](/wiki/Guilt_(law) "Guilt (law)") of all charges and [fined](/wiki/Fine "Fine") her $14.[[15]](#cite_note-16) The boycott continued. ## *Browder v. Gayle* Parks [appealed](/wiki/Appeal "Appeal") her [conviction](/wiki/Conviction "Conviction"). Her [attorney](/wiki/Attorney "Attorney"), Fred Gray, and others in the NAACP brought an appeal named *[Browder v. Gayle](/wiki/Browder_v._Gayle "Browder v. Gayle")*.[[b]](#cite_note-18)[[16]](#cite_note-Emanuel169.172-17) The [appeals court](/wiki/Appellate_court "Appellate court") ruled on June 19, 1956 in favor of the black citizens of Montgomery. But the city appealed the decision. On September 13, 1956, the [Supreme Court of the United States](/wiki/Supreme_Court_of_the_United_States "Supreme Court of the United States") upheld the lower court. The bus boycott ended.[[16]](#cite_note-Emanuel169.172-17) It had lasted 381 days.[[17]](#cite_note-19) Black citizens of Montgomery could ride the buses and sit where they chose.[[16]](#cite_note-Emanuel169.172-17) Rosa Parks rode the bus again on December 21, 1956.[[18]](#cite_note-Aitken378-20) This time it was an integrated bus. [Ironically](/wiki/Irony "Irony"), she had the same bus driver who had her arrested the year before. In an [interview](/wiki/Interview "Interview"), Parks said "He didn't react (pause) and neither did I".[[18]](#cite_note-Aitken378-20) Rosa Parks was a [heroine](/wiki/Heroine "Heroine") of the black community. While she didn't do it alone, her actions sparked a fire that led to great changes.[[19]](#cite_note-21) ## After the boycott After the Montgomery Bus Boycott, Parks went through many difficulties. She lost her [job](/wiki/Job "Job") at the [department store](/wiki/Department_store "Department store"). Her husband was forced to quit his job. In 1957, Parks and her husband left Montgomery for [Hampton, Virginia](/wiki/Hampton,_Virginia "Hampton, Virginia") to find work. In Hampton, Parks found a job as a hostess in an inn at Hampton Institute, a historically black college. Later, Parks and her husband moved to [Detroit, Michigan](/wiki/Detroit,_Michigan "Detroit, Michigan"). Parks continued to work as an activist. For years, she worked for United States Congressman [John Conyers](/wiki/John_Conyers "John Conyers"). After that, she worked as an activist against [apartheid](/wiki/Apartheid "Apartheid") in [South Africa](/wiki/South_Africa "South Africa"). She also opened a center in Detroit that gave advice to black youth about [careers](/wiki/Career "Career") and job opportunities.[[20]](#cite_note-nprobit-22) President [Bill Clinton](/wiki/Bill_Clinton "Bill Clinton") awarding Parks the [Presidential Medal of Freedom](/wiki/Presidential_Medal_of_Freedom "Presidential Medal of Freedom"). In 1999, President [Bill Clinton](/wiki/Bill_Clinton "Bill Clinton") [awarded](/wiki/Award "Award") Parks a [Congressional Gold Medal](/wiki/Congressional_Gold_Medal "Congressional Gold Medal"). This is the United States' highest honor (most important award) for [civilians](/wiki/Civilian "Civilian"). When he gave her the award, President Clinton said: > *We must never ever, when this [ceremony](/wiki/Ceremony "Ceremony") is over, forget about the power of [ordinary](https://simple.wiktionary.org/wiki/ordinary "wikt:ordinary") people to stand in the fire for the cause of the human [dignity](/wiki/Dignity "Dignity").* [[20]](#cite_note-nprobit-22) > > Parks died on October 24, 2005, at her home in Detroit due to [dementia](/wiki/Dementia "Dementia").[[21]](#cite_note-23) On October 30, her [casket](/wiki/Casket "Casket") [lay in state](/wiki/Lying_in_state "Lying in state") in the [United States Capitol](/wiki/United_States_Capitol "United States Capitol").[[20]](#cite_note-nprobit-22) This is a great honor for people in the United States. ## Notes 1. [↑](#cite_ref-8) The Montgomery city [code](/wiki/Law "Law") made [bus drivers](/wiki/Driver "Driver") [segregate](/wiki/Racial_segregation "Racial segregation") white and black passengers. They were directed to assign seats based on a person's color.[[6]](#cite_note-Phibbs13.15-6) Black people in Montgomery made up 75 to 80 percent of bus riders.[[7]](#cite_note-Phibbs12-7) But they were crowded into the back seats of the buses and many had to stand while the front seats remained empty.[[7]](#cite_note-Phibbs12-7) 2. [↑](#cite_ref-18) Aurelia Browder, another black woman who had been [discriminated](/wiki/Discriminated "Discriminated") against by the bus system, was the lead [plaintiff](/wiki/Plaintiff "Plaintiff"). Three other woman joined her but not Rosa Parks. Her legal advisers felt her case could not go beyond the state courts. The case was also named for the lead [defendant](/wiki/Defendant "Defendant") W.A. Gayle, who was the [mayor](/wiki/Mayor "Mayor") of Montgomery.[[16]](#cite_note-Emanuel169.172-17) ## References Wikimedia Commons has media related to ***[Rosa Parks](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Rosa_Parks "commons:Rosa Parks")***. 1. ↑ [1.0](#cite_ref-Shores6_1-0) [1.1](#cite_ref-Shores6_1-1) Erika L. Shores, *Rosa Parks: Civil Rights Pioneer* (Mankato, MN: Capstone Press, 2005), p. 6 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2) Duncan A. Bruce, *The Mark of the Scots: Their Astonishing Contributions to History, Science, Democracy, Literature, and the Arts* (Secaucus, NJ: Carol Publishing Group, 1998), p. 271 3. ↑ [3.0](#cite_ref-Dubois7_3-0) [3.1](#cite_ref-Dubois7_3-1) Muriel L. Dubois, *Rosa Parks* (Mankato, MN: Bridgestone Books, 2003), p. 7 4. [↑](#cite_ref-4) *Congressional Record, V. 152, Pt. 11, July 13, 2006 to July 24, 2006, Part 11*. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office. United States Congress. 2006. p. 15310. [ISBN](/wiki/ISBN_(identifier) "ISBN (identifier)") [978-0-1608-6155-0](/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-0-1608-6155-0 "Special:BookSources/978-0-1608-6155-0"). 5. ↑ [5.0](#cite_ref-Shores9_5-0) [5.1](#cite_ref-Shores9_5-1) Erika L. Shores, *Rosa Parks: Civil Rights Pioneer* (Mankato, MN: Capstone Press, 2005), p. 9 6. ↑ [6.0](#cite_ref-Phibbs13.15_6-0) [6.1](#cite_ref-Phibbs13.15_6-1) [6.2](#cite_ref-Phibbs13.15_6-2) [6.3](#cite_ref-Phibbs13.15_6-3) [6.4](#cite_ref-Phibbs13.15_6-4) Cheryl Fisher Phibbs, *The Montgomery Bus Boycott: A History and Reference Guide* (Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood, 2009), pp. 13–15 7. ↑ [7.0](#cite_ref-Phibbs12_7-0) [7.1](#cite_ref-Phibbs12_7-1) Cheryl Fisher Phibbs, *The Montgomery Bus Boycott: A History and Reference Guide* (Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood, 2009), p. 12 8. [↑](#cite_ref-Neary_9-0) "Parks Recalls Bus Boycott, Excerpts from an interview with Lynn Neary", *[National Public Radio](/wiki/National_Public_Radio "National Public Radio")*, 1992, linked at ["Civil Rights Icon Rosa Parks Dies"](https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4973548), NPR, October 25, 2005. Retrieved July 4, 2008. 9. [↑](#cite_ref-10) Houck, Davis; Grindy, Matthew (2008). *Emmett Till and the Mississippi Press*. Jackson, Miss.: University Press of Mississippi. p. x. [ISBN](/wiki/ISBN_(identifier) "ISBN (identifier)") [9781604733044](/wiki/Special:BookSources/9781604733044 "Special:BookSources/9781604733044"). 10. [↑](#cite_ref-11) [Federal Bureau of Investigation](/wiki/Federal_Bureau_of_Investigation "Federal Bureau of Investigation") (February 9, 2006). [Prosecutive Report of Investigation Concerning (Emmett Till)](https://vault.fbi.gov/Emmett%20Till%20/) (Flash Video or PDF). Retrieved March 2, 2016. 11. [↑](#cite_ref-Crewe16.18_12-0) Sabrina Crewe, Frank Walsh, *The Montgomery Bus Boycott* (Milwaukee, WI: Gareth Stevens Publishing, 2003), pp. 16–18 12. [↑](#cite_ref-13) Jake Miller, *The Montgomery Bus Boycott: Integrating Public Buses* (New York: Rosen Pub. Group, 2004), p. 9 13. ↑ [13.0](#cite_ref-Tisdale12.13_14-0) [13.1](#cite_ref-Tisdale12.13_14-1) [13.2](#cite_ref-Tisdale12.13_14-2) Rachel Tisdale, *The Montgomery Bus Boycott* (New York: PowerKids Press, 2014), pp. 12–13 14. ↑ [14.0](#cite_ref-Hanson97_15-0) [14.1](#cite_ref-Hanson97_15-1) Joyce A. Hanson, *Rosa Parks: A Biography* (Westport, CT: Greenwood; Brighton: Roundhouse, 2010), p. 97 15. [↑](#cite_ref-16) Ajay Moholtra (1 June 2008). ["Rosa Parks & the Montgomery Bus Boycott"](https://web.archive.org/web/20140927104455/http://www.rosaparksfacts.com/montgomery-bus-boycott.php). Rosa Parks Facts.com. Archived from [the original](http://www.rosaparksfacts.com/montgomery-bus-boycott.php) on 27 September 2014. Retrieved 3 July 2014. 16. ↑ [16.0](#cite_ref-Emanuel169.172_17-0) [16.1](#cite_ref-Emanuel169.172_17-1) [16.2](#cite_ref-Emanuel169.172_17-2) [16.3](#cite_ref-Emanuel169.172_17-3) Anne Emanuel, *Elbert Parr Tuttle: Chief Jurist of the Civil Rights Revolution* (Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 2011), pp. 169–172 17. [↑](#cite_ref-19) Joyce A. Hanson, *Rosa Parks: A Biography* (Westport, CT: Greenwood; Brighton: Roundhouse, 2010), p. xi 18. ↑ [18.0](#cite_ref-Aitken378_20-0) [18.1](#cite_ref-Aitken378_20-1) Robert Aitken; Marilyn Aitken, *Law Makers, Law Breakers, and Uncommon Trials* (Chicago, IL: American Bar Association, 2007), p. 378 19. [↑](#cite_ref-21) Joyce A. Hanson, *Rosa Parks: A Biography* (Westport, CT: Greenwood; Brighton: Roundhouse, 2010), p. 89 20. ↑ [20.0](#cite_ref-nprobit_22-0) [20.1](#cite_ref-nprobit_22-1) [20.2](#cite_ref-nprobit_22-2) ["Civil Rights Icon Rosa Parks Dies"](https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4973548). *NPR Online*. October 25, 2005. Retrieved February 17, 2016. 21. [↑](#cite_ref-23) ["Rosa Parks"](https://www.biography.com/activist/rosa-parks). ## Other websites * [Academy of Achievement Profile](http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/par0pro-1) * [Rosa Parks Library and Museum](http://montgomery.troy.edu/museum/) [Archived](https://web.archive.org/web/20051125132114/http://montgomery.troy.edu/museum/) 2005-11-25 at the [Wayback Machine](/wiki/Wayback_Machine "Wayback Machine") at Troy University * [The Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development](http://www.rosaparks.org) * [*Civil Rights Icon Rosa Parks Dies* - National Public Radio](https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4973548&sourceCode=gaw) * [Complete audio/video and newspaper archive of the Montgomery Bus Boycott](http://www.montgomeryboycott.com) [Archived](https://web.archive.org/web/20121213121035/http://www.montgomeryboycott.com/) 2012-12-13 at the [Wayback Machine](/wiki/Wayback_Machine "Wayback Machine") * [Rose Parks Biography](http://womenshistory.about.com/od/parksrosa/p/rosa_parks.htm) [Archived](https://web.archive.org/web/20170130190829/http://womenshistory.about.com/od/parksrosa/p/rosa_parks.htm) 2017-01-30 at the [Wayback Machine](/wiki/Wayback_Machine "Wayback Machine") * [Rosa Parks Quotes](http://womenshistory.about.com/od/quotes/a/rosa_parks.htm) [Archived](https://web.archive.org/web/20120609093232/http://womenshistory.about.com/od/quotes/a/rosa_parks.htm) 2012-06-09 at the [Wayback Machine](/wiki/Wayback_Machine "Wayback Machine") * [Rosa Parks interview and photographs](http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/par0int-1) | * [v](/wiki/Template:African_American_topics "Template:African American topics") * [t](/wiki/Template_talk:African_American_topics "Template talk:African American topics") * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:African_American_topics&action=edit) [African Americans](/wiki/African_Americans "African Americans") | | --- | | History | * [Abolitionism](/wiki/Abolitionism "Abolitionism") * [American Civil War](/wiki/American_Civil_War "American Civil War") * [Atlantic slave trade](/wiki/Atlantic_slave_trade "Atlantic slave trade") * [Black Lives Matter](/wiki/Black_Lives_Matter "Black Lives Matter") * *[Brown v. 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Rosa Louise McCauley Parks (February 4, 1913 – October 24, 2005) was an African-American civil rights activist. She was called "the mother of the Modern-Day American civil rights movement" and "the mother of the freedom movement". Parks is best known for what she did in her home town of Montgomery, Alabama on December 1, 1955. While she sat in a seat in the middle of the bus, the bus driver told her to move to the back of the bus so a white passenger could take the seat in the front of the bus. During this time, when there were no white seats for white people, black people were told to get up out of their seat. Parks refused to move. She was a member of the local chapter of National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Like so many others she was tired of being treated as a lower class person because of the color of her skin. She was arrested. This led to the Montgomery bus boycott. The boycott lasted 381 days. This caused a change in the law. After that, black people were able to sit wherever they wanted to on the bus. Her refusal to let others treat her differently was an important symbol in the campaign against racial segregation. Early years Rosa Parks was born in Tuskegee, Alabama, on February 4, 1913.[1] Her parents were James and Leona McCauley.[1] She was mainly of African ancestry. One of her great-grandfathers was Scots-Irish and went to Charleston, South Carolina as an indentured servant.[2] Her father left home to find work when Rosa was 2 years old.[3] Her mother taught school in another town. Rosa and her brother Sylvester were brought up by their grandparents.[3] Rosa started school in 1919 when she was 6 years old. At that time, schools were segregated. There were black schools and white schools. Later, Parks remembered how buses took white students to their school, but black students had to walk to theirs: I'd see the bus pass every day... But to me, that was a way of life; we had no choice but to accept what was the custom. The bus was among the first ways I realized there was a black world and a white world.[4] In 1924 she went to the Montgomery Industrial School for Girls in Montgomery, Alabama.[5] After 5 years, she left school and went to work in a shirt factory.[5] She also took care of her grandmother. On December 1, 1955, Parks got onto a city bus to go home after work.[6] She paid her 10¢ and sat down in the first row of seats behind the painted line on the floor which marked the black section.[a] After several stops, more white passengers got on the bus. The bus driver ordered Parks and three other black people to give up their seats so the white people could sit down. The other three moved to the back of the bus, but Parks slid over to the window.[8] She said she was following the law by sitting in the right section. Later, she said that when she was told to go to the back of the bus, "I thought of Emmett Till and I just couldn't go back."[9] (Till was a black 14-year-old boy who was lynched in Mississippi about three months earlier.)[10] The driver stopped the bus and called the police.[6] Two police officers arrested Parks and took her to jail for violating Alabama's bus laws. Parks being fingerprinted after her arrest Her mother called upon Edgar Nixon to bail her out. Nixon was the president of the local NAACP chapter. Nixon knew the danger Parks was in and immediately arranged her bail.[6] The local NAACP had been looking for a test case to challenge the bus segregation laws.[6] Parks was a respected working woman. She was well-spoken, and her case would be a good way to challenge the law. It was decided that on December 5, a boycott of all the buses in Montgomery would be held.[11] The word was spread throughout the black community of the intended bus boycott. Black ministers told their congregations to support the boycott.[12] On Monday, December 5th, Rosa Parks had to appear in court.[13] This was also the first day black riders would stay off the Montgomery buses. The streets of Montgomery were filled with black people walking to work.[13] Black children walked to school.[13] That same morning, all Montgomery buses were assigned two motorcycle policemen to guard against any black gangs intimidating riders.[14] There were no black gangs. The black community simply cooperated with the boycott. The buses remained empty all day. White riders fearing trouble stayed off the buses as well.[14] In addition to the charge of violating the bus laws, Parks was also charged with disorderly conduct. Her trial was quick, only about 30 minutes. The court found her guilty of all charges and fined her $14.[15] The boycott continued. Browder v. Gayle Parks appealed her conviction. Her attorney, Fred Gray, and others in the NAACP brought an appeal named Browder v. Gayle.[b][16] The appeals court ruled on June 19, 1956 in favor of the black citizens of Montgomery. But the city appealed the decision. On September 13, 1956, the Supreme Court of the United States upheld the lower court. The bus boycott ended.[16] It had lasted 381 days.[17] Black citizens of Montgomery could ride the buses and sit where they chose.[16] Rosa Parks rode the bus again on December 21, 1956.[18] This time it was an integrated bus. Ironically, she had the same bus driver who had her arrested the year before. In an interview, Parks said "He didn't react (pause) and neither did I".[18] Rosa Parks was a heroine of the black community. While she didn't do it alone, her actions sparked a fire that led to great changes.[19] After the boycott After the Montgomery Bus Boycott, Parks went through many difficulties. She lost her job at the department store. Her husband was forced to quit his job. In 1957, Parks and her husband left Montgomery for Hampton, Virginia to find work. In Hampton, Parks found a job as a hostess in an inn at Hampton Institute, a historically black college. Later, Parks and her husband moved to Detroit, Michigan. Parks continued to work as an activist. For years, she worked for United States Congressman John Conyers. After that, she worked as an activist against apartheid in South Africa. She also opened a center in Detroit that gave advice to black youth about careers and job opportunities.[20] President Bill Clinton awarding Parks the Presidential Medal of Freedom. In 1999, President Bill Clinton awarded Parks a Congressional Gold Medal. This is the United States' highest honor (most important award) for civilians. When he gave her the award, President Clinton said: We must never ever, when this ceremony is over, forget about the power of ordinary people to stand in the fire for the cause of the human dignity. [20] Parks died on October 24, 2005, at her home in Detroit due to dementia.[21] On October 30, her casket lay in state in the United States Capitol.[20] This is a great honor for people in the United States. Notes ↑ The Montgomery city code made bus drivers segregate white and black passengers. They were directed to assign seats based on a person's color.[6] Black people in Montgomery made up 75 to 80 percent of bus riders.[7] But they were crowded into the back seats of the buses and many had to stand while the front seats remained empty.[7] ↑ Aurelia Browder, another black woman who had been discriminated against by the bus system, was the lead plaintiff. Three other woman joined her but not Rosa Parks. Her legal advisers felt her case could not go beyond the state courts. The case was also named for the lead defendant W.A. Gayle, who was the mayor of Montgomery.[16] References Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rosa Parks. ↑ 1.0 1.1 Erika L. Shores, Rosa Parks: Civil Rights Pioneer (Mankato, MN: Capstone Press, 2005), p. 6 ↑ Duncan A. Bruce, The Mark of the Scots: Their Astonishing Contributions to History, Science, Democracy, Literature, and the Arts (Secaucus, NJ: Carol Publishing Group, 1998), p. 271 ↑ 3.0 3.1 Muriel L. Dubois, Rosa Parks (Mankato, MN: Bridgestone Books, 2003), p. 7 ↑ Congressional Record, V. 152, Pt. 11, July 13, 2006 to July 24, 2006, Part 11. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office. United States Congress. 2006. p. 15310. ISBN 978-0-1608-6155-0. ↑ 5.0 5.1 Erika L. Shores, Rosa Parks: Civil Rights Pioneer (Mankato, MN: Capstone Press, 2005), p. 9 ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 Cheryl Fisher Phibbs, The Montgomery Bus Boycott: A History and Reference Guide (Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood, 2009), pp. 13–15 ↑ 7.0 7.1 Cheryl Fisher Phibbs, The Montgomery Bus Boycott: A History and Reference Guide (Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood, 2009), p. 12 ↑ "Parks Recalls Bus Boycott, Excerpts from an interview with Lynn Neary", National Public Radio, 1992, linked at "Civil Rights Icon Rosa Parks Dies", NPR, October 25, 2005. Retrieved July 4, 2008. ↑ Houck, Davis; Grindy, Matthew (2008). Emmett Till and the Mississippi Press. Jackson, Miss.: University Press of Mississippi. p. x. ISBN 9781604733044. ↑ Federal Bureau of Investigation (February 9, 2006). Prosecutive Report of Investigation Concerning (Emmett Till) (Flash Video or PDF). Retrieved March 2, 2016. ↑ Sabrina Crewe, Frank Walsh, The Montgomery Bus Boycott (Milwaukee, WI: Gareth Stevens Publishing, 2003), pp. 16–18 ↑ Jake Miller, The Montgomery Bus Boycott: Integrating Public Buses (New York: Rosen Pub. Group, 2004), p. 9 ↑ 13.0 13.1 13.2 Rachel Tisdale, The Montgomery Bus Boycott (New York: PowerKids Press, 2014), pp. 12–13 ↑ 14.0 14.1 Joyce A. Hanson, Rosa Parks: A Biography (Westport, CT: Greenwood; Brighton: Roundhouse, 2010), p. 97 ↑ Ajay Moholtra (1 June 2008). "Rosa Parks & the Montgomery Bus Boycott". Rosa Parks Facts.com. Archived from the original on 27 September 2014. Retrieved 3 July 2014. ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 Anne Emanuel, Elbert Parr Tuttle: Chief Jurist of the Civil Rights Revolution (Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 2011), pp. 169–172 ↑ Joyce A. Hanson, Rosa Parks: A Biography (Westport, CT: Greenwood; Brighton: Roundhouse, 2010), p. xi ↑ 18.0 18.1 Robert Aitken; Marilyn Aitken, Law Makers, Law Breakers, and Uncommon Trials (Chicago, IL: American Bar Association, 2007), p. 378 ↑ Joyce A. Hanson, Rosa Parks: A Biography (Westport, CT: Greenwood; Brighton: Roundhouse, 2010), p. 89 ↑ 20.0 20.1 20.2 "Civil Rights Icon Rosa Parks Dies". NPR Online. October 25, 2005. Retrieved February 17, 2016. ↑ "Rosa Parks". Other websites Academy of Achievement Profile Rosa Parks Library and Museum Archived 2005-11-25 at the Wayback Machine at Troy University The Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development Civil Rights Icon Rosa Parks Dies - National Public Radio Complete audio/video and newspaper archive of the Montgomery Bus Boycott Archived 2012-12-13 at the Wayback Machine Rose Parks Biography Archived 2017-01-30 at the Wayback Machine Rosa Parks Quotes Archived 2012-06-09 at the Wayback Machine Rosa Parks interview and photographs | * v * t * e African Americans | | --- | | History | * Abolitionism * American Civil War * Atlantic slave trade * Black Lives Matter * Brown v. Board of Education * Civil Rights Act of 1964 * Voting Rights Act of 1965 * Civil Rights Act of 1968 * Civil Rights Movement * Dred Scott v. Sandford * Free people of color * Great Migration * Inauguration of Barack Obama 2009 / Inauguration of Barack Obama 2013 * Jim Crow laws * Lynching * Plessy v. Ferguson * Reconstruction Amendments * Reconstruction era * Redlining * Separate but equal * Slavery + Underground Railroad | | Culture | * Harlem Renaissance * Juneteenth * Kwanzaa * Music * Soul food * Stereotypes | | Notable people | * Ralph Abernathy * Crispus Attucks * Julian Bond * Amelia Boynton * Carol Moseley Braun * Edward Brooke * Ralph Bunche * George Washington Carver * Shirley Chisholm * Frederick Douglass * W. E. B. Du Bois * Fannie Lou Hamer * Kamala Harris * Jesse Jackson * Michael Jackson * Harriet Jacobs * Martin Luther King Jr. * John Lewis * Joseph Lowery * Malcolm X * Thurgood Marshall * Bob Moses * Barack Obama * Rosa Parks * A. Philip Randolph * Al Sharpton * Fred Shuttlesworth * Spingarn Medal winners * Clarence Thomas * Emmett Till * Sojourner Truth * Harriet Tubman * Nat Turner * Booker T. Washington * Ida B. Wells * Oprah Winfrey * Andrew Young | | Religion | * Azusa Street Revival * Black Church * Nation of Islam | | Political movements | * Back-to-Africa movement * Black Power + Movement * Garveyism * Pan-Africanism * Nationalism | | Civic and economicgroups | * Black Panther Party * National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) * Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) * Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) * United Negro College Fund (UNCF) | | Sports | * Negro league baseball + Baseball color line * SWAC | | Ethnic subdivisions | * Black Indians * Black Seminoles * Black Southerners * Gullah | | Languages | * English + American English + African-American Vernacular English | | By state/city | * Alabama * Georgia + Atlanta | | Diaspora | * Canada * Ghana * Liberia * Mexico | | * Category:African-American people | | Authority control | | --- | | International | * FAST * ISNI + 2 * VIAF * WorldCat Identities | | National | * Spain * France * BnF data * Germany * Israel * United States * Sweden * Japan * Czech Republic * Greece * Korea * Netherlands * Poland | | Artists | * MusicBrainz artist | | People | * Germany | | Other | * NARA * SNAC + 2 * IdRef |
303,100
Rostislav_Olesz
Rostislav Olesz
9,095,556
| Rostislav Olesz | | --- | | | | Born | (1985-10-10) October 10, 1985 (age 38)[Ostrava](/wiki/Ostrava "Ostrava"), [Czechoslovakia](/wiki/Czechoslovakia "Czechoslovakia") | | Height | 6 ft 0 in (183 cm) | | Weight | 214 lb (97 kg; 15 st 4 lb) | | Position | [Left Wing](/wiki/Winger_(ice_hockey) "Winger (ice hockey)")/[Centre](/wiki/Centre_(ice_hockey) "Centre (ice hockey)") | | [Shoots](/wiki/Shot_(ice_hockey) "Shot (ice hockey)") | Left | | [NLA](/wiki/National_League_A "National League A") teamFormer teams | *SC Bern***[NHL](/wiki/National_Hockey_League "National Hockey League")**:[Florida Panthers](/wiki/Florida_Panthers "Florida Panthers")[Chicago Blackhawks](/wiki/Chicago_Blackhawks "Chicago Blackhawks")[New Jersey Devils](/wiki/New_Jersey_Devils "New Jersey Devils")**[CZE](/wiki/Czech_Extraliga "Czech Extraliga")**:HC VítkoviceHC Sparta Praha | | National team |  Czech Republic | | [NHL Draft](/wiki/NHL_Entry_Draft "NHL Entry Draft") | 7th overall, 2004[Florida Panthers](/wiki/Florida_Panthers "Florida Panthers") | | Playing career | 2005–present | **Rostislav Olesz** (born [October 10](/wiki/October_10 "October 10"), [1985](/wiki/1985 "1985") in [Ostrava](/wiki/Ostrava "Ostrava"), [Czechoslovakia](/wiki/Czechoslovakia "Czechoslovakia")) is a professional [Czech](/wiki/Czechs "Czechs") ice hockey [left winger](/wiki/Winger_(ice_hockey) "Winger (ice hockey)") and [center](/wiki/Centre_(ice_hockey) "Centre (ice hockey)"). He currently plays for SC Bern of the [National League A](/wiki/National_League_A "National League A") (NLA). He was drafted by the Florida Panthers with the 7th overall pick in the 2004 NHL Entry Draft. He also played in the NHL for the [Florida Panthers](/wiki/Florida_Panthers "Florida Panthers") for 6 seasons. He was traded by the Florida Panthers to the Chicago Blackhawks for defenceman [Brian Campbell](/wiki/Brian_Campbell "Brian Campbell") on June 24, 2011.[[1]](#cite_note-1) He played 6 games with the Blackhawks and played a season with their AHL farm team, the [Rockford IceHogs](/wiki/Rockford_IceHogs "Rockford IceHogs"). On July 5, 2013, Olesz signed a 1-year deal with the New Jersey Devils.[[2]](#cite_note-2) On November 21, 2013, he signed a contract with SC Bern of the [NLA](/wiki/National_League_A "National League A").[[3]](#cite_note-3) ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["Blackhawks trade Campbell to Panthers for Olesz"](http://www.nhl.com/ice/news.htm?id=567200). 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2) ["Devils sign forward Rostislav Olesz"](http://devils.nhl.com/club/news.htm?id=676913). New Jersey Devil. Retrieved 2014-03-06. 3. [↑](#cite_ref-3) ["Rostislav Olesz Zum SC Bern"](https://web.archive.org/web/20131203001147/http://www.scb.ch/news/meldung/newsitem/rostislav-olesz-zum-sc-bern.html). SC Bern (in German). Archived from [the original](http://www.scb.ch/news/meldung/newsitem/rostislav-olesz-zum-sc-bern.html) on 2013-12-03. Retrieved 2014-03-06. ## Other websites * [Rostislav Olesz player profile](https://www.nhl.com/player/8471220) at [NHL.com](https://www.nhl.com) *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [sports person](/wiki/Category:Sportspeople_stubs "Category:Sportspeople stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rostislav_Olesz&action=edit)*.
| Rostislav Olesz | | --- | | | | Born | (1985-10-10) October 10, 1985 (age 38)Ostrava, Czechoslovakia | | Height | 6 ft 0 in (183 cm) | | Weight | 214 lb (97 kg; 15 st 4 lb) | | Position | Left Wing/Centre | | Shoots | Left | | NLA teamFormer teams | SC BernNHL:Florida PanthersChicago BlackhawksNew Jersey DevilsCZE:HC VítkoviceHC Sparta Praha | | National team |  Czech Republic | | NHL Draft | 7th overall, 2004Florida Panthers | | Playing career | 2005–present | Rostislav Olesz (born October 10, 1985 in Ostrava, Czechoslovakia) is a professional Czech ice hockey left winger and center. He currently plays for SC Bern of the National League A (NLA). He was drafted by the Florida Panthers with the 7th overall pick in the 2004 NHL Entry Draft. He also played in the NHL for the Florida Panthers for 6 seasons. He was traded by the Florida Panthers to the Chicago Blackhawks for defenceman Brian Campbell on June 24, 2011.[1] He played 6 games with the Blackhawks and played a season with their AHL farm team, the Rockford IceHogs. On July 5, 2013, Olesz signed a 1-year deal with the New Jersey Devils.[2] On November 21, 2013, he signed a contract with SC Bern of the NLA.[3] References ↑ "Blackhawks trade Campbell to Panthers for Olesz". ↑ "Devils sign forward Rostislav Olesz". New Jersey Devil. Retrieved 2014-03-06. ↑ "Rostislav Olesz Zum SC Bern". SC Bern (in German). Archived from the original on 2013-12-03. Retrieved 2014-03-06. Other websites Rostislav Olesz player profile at NHL.com This short article about a sports person can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
250,600
Ram'ses
Ram'ses
2,264,489
Redirect to: * [Ramesses II](/wiki/Ramesses_II "Ramesses II")
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851,333
National_Library_of_Bangladesh
National Library of Bangladesh
8,251,922
The **National Library of Bangladesh** (**NLB**) is the legal depository of all new books and other printed materials published in [Bangladesh](/wiki/Bangladesh "Bangladesh") under the copyright law of Bangladesh. It was founded in [1973](/wiki/1973 "1973"), but it traces its origins back to [1967](/wiki/1967 "1967"). After the [Partition of the Subcontinent in 1947](/wiki/Partition_of_Bengal "Partition of Bengal"), the [federal government](/wiki/Federal_government "Federal government") of [Pakistan](/wiki/Pakistan "Pakistan") established the *National Library of Pakistan* in [Karachi](/wiki/Karachi "Karachi") in 1962 and a provincial book deposit branch of the *Pakistan National Library* in [Dhaka](/wiki/Dhaka "Dhaka") in 1967. After the secession war of the nation, it was keenly felt by all quarters that a national library is indispensable for the new-born nation. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [Asia](/wiki/Category:Asia_stubs "Category:Asia stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=National_Library_of_Bangladesh&action=edit)*.
The National Library of Bangladesh (NLB) is the legal depository of all new books and other printed materials published in Bangladesh under the copyright law of Bangladesh. It was founded in 1973, but it traces its origins back to 1967. After the Partition of the Subcontinent in 1947, the federal government of Pakistan established the National Library of Pakistan in Karachi in 1962 and a provincial book deposit branch of the Pakistan National Library in Dhaka in 1967. After the secession war of the nation, it was keenly felt by all quarters that a national library is indispensable for the new-born nation. This short article about Asia can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
1,020,471
Sometimes_We_Cry
Sometimes We Cry
8,874,579
| "Sometimes We Cry" | | --- | | [Song](/wiki/Song "Song") by [Van Morrison](/wiki/Van_Morrison "Van Morrison") | | from the album *The Healing Game* | | Released | 4 March 1997 (1997-03-04) | | [Genre](/wiki/Music_genre "Music genre") | [Folk rock](/wiki/Folk_rock "Folk rock") | | Length | 5:14 | | [Label](/wiki/Record_label "Record label") | [Mercury](/wiki/Mercury_Records "Mercury Records") | | [Songwriter(s)](/wiki/Songwriter "Songwriter") | Van Morrison | | [Producer(s)](/wiki/Record_producer "Record producer") | Van Morrison | "**Sometimes We Cry**" is a 1997 song by Northern Irish singer [Van Morrison](/wiki/Van_Morrison "Van Morrison"). It is the eighth single from his 26th studio album *The Healing Game*. The version features the backing vocals of Georgie Fame and Brian Kennedy. In 1999, it was performed as a duet with [Tom Jones](/wiki/Tom_Jones_(singer) "Tom Jones (singer)") for his album *Reload*. ## References *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [music](/wiki/Category:Music_stubs "Category:Music stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sometimes_We_Cry&action=edit)*.
| "Sometimes We Cry" | | --- | | Song by Van Morrison | | from the album The Healing Game | | Released | 4 March 1997 (1997-03-04) | | Genre | Folk rock | | Length | 5:14 | | Label | Mercury | | Songwriter(s) | Van Morrison | | Producer(s) | Van Morrison | "Sometimes We Cry" is a 1997 song by Northern Irish singer Van Morrison. It is the eighth single from his 26th studio album The Healing Game. The version features the backing vocals of Georgie Fame and Brian Kennedy. In 1999, it was performed as a duet with Tom Jones for his album Reload. References This short article about music can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
807,553
Zoltan_Sabo
Zoltan Sabo
8,099,288
Zoltan Sabo| Personal information | | --- | | Full name | Zoltan Sabo | | Date of birth | (1972-05-26)26 May 1972 | | Place of birth | Sombor, [SR Serbia](/wiki/SR_Serbia "SR Serbia"),[SFR Yugoslavia](/wiki/SFR_Yugoslavia "SFR Yugoslavia") | | Date of death | 15 December 2020(2020-12-15) (aged 48) | | Place of death | Sremska Kamenica, [Serbia](/wiki/Serbia "Serbia")[[1]](#cite_note-Preminuo_Zoltan_Sabo-1) | | Height | 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in) | | Position(s) | [Defender](/wiki/Defender_(association_football) "Defender (association football)") | | Club information | | Current team | TSC Bačka Topola (head coach) | | Youth career | | | Jedinstvo Svetozar Miletić | | | Radnički Sombor | | Senior career\* | | Years | **Team** | **Apps** | **(Gls)** | | 1991–1992 | Hajduk Kula | 31 | (1) | | 1992–1996 | [Vojvodina](/wiki/FK_Vojvodina "FK Vojvodina") | 114 | (2) | | 1996–2000 | [Partizan](/wiki/FK_Partizan "FK Partizan") | 67 | (1) | | 2000–2002 | [Suwon Samsung Bluewings](/wiki/Suwon_Samsung_Bluewings "Suwon Samsung Bluewings") | 48 | (0) | | 2002 | [Avispa Fukuoka](/wiki/Avispa_Fukuoka "Avispa Fukuoka") | 17 | (1) | | 2003 | Zalaegerszeg | 12 | (2) | | 2003–2004 | AEK Larnaca | 20 | (4) | | 2004 | Mladost Apatin | 4 | (0) | | 2005–2008 | Cement Beočin | 83 | (1) | | Total | | **396** | **(12)** | | Teams managed | | 2007–2009 | Kecskemét (assistant) | | 2009–2011 | Radnički Sombor | | 2011–2012 | Hajduk Kula | | 2012 | [Vojvodina](/wiki/FK_Vojvodina "FK Vojvodina") (assistant) | | 2013–2014 | Litex Lovech (assistant) | | 2014–2015 | Donji Srem (assistant) | | 2015 | [Vojvodina](/wiki/FK_Vojvodina "FK Vojvodina") (assistant) | | 2016 | Proleter Novi Sad | | 2016 | Jagodina | | 2016–2017 | Proleter Novi Sad | | 2017–2020 | TSC Bačka Topola | | \* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only | **Zoltan Sabo** ([Serbian Cyrillic](/wiki/Serbian_Cyrillic_alphabet "Serbian Cyrillic alphabet"): Золтан Сабо, [Hungarian](/wiki/Hungarian_language "Hungarian language"): *Szabó Zoltán*; 26 May 1972 — 15 December 2020) was a [Serbian](/wiki/Serbia "Serbia") professional [footballer](/wiki/Association_football "Association football"). He played as a [defender](/wiki/Defender_(association_football) "Defender (association football)"). He also held Hungarian citizenship.[[2]](#cite_note-2) Sabo played for Hajduk Kula, [Vojvodina](/wiki/FK_Vojvodina "FK Vojvodina"), and [Partizan](/wiki/FK_Partizan "FK Partizan"). Sabo began his managerial career at the helm of his hometown club Radnički Sombor in October 2009. Sabo died on 15 December 2020 in Sremska Kamenica, [Serbia](/wiki/Serbia "Serbia") from [pulmonary embolism](/wiki/Pulmonary_embolism "Pulmonary embolism")-related problems at the age of 48.[[1]](#cite_note-Preminuo_Zoltan_Sabo-1) ## References 1. ↑ [1.0](#cite_ref-Preminuo_Zoltan_Sabo_1-0) [1.1](#cite_ref-Preminuo_Zoltan_Sabo_1-1) [Preminuo Zoltan Sabo](https://sportklub.rs/fudbal/srbija-super-liga/preminuo-zoltan-sabo/) 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2) ["Szabó Zoltán"](http://www.nela.hu/nch_pid.php?id=2657) (in Hungarian). nela.hu. Retrieved 24 December 2017. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [sports person](/wiki/Category:Sportspeople_stubs "Category:Sportspeople stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Zoltan_Sabo&action=edit)*.
Zoltan Sabo| Personal information | | --- | | Full name | Zoltan Sabo | | Date of birth | (1972-05-26)26 May 1972 | | Place of birth | Sombor, SR Serbia,SFR Yugoslavia | | Date of death | 15 December 2020(2020-12-15) (aged 48) | | Place of death | Sremska Kamenica, Serbia[1] | | Height | 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in) | | Position(s) | Defender | | Club information | | Current team | TSC Bačka Topola (head coach) | | Youth career | | | Jedinstvo Svetozar Miletić | | | Radnički Sombor | | Senior career* | | Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) | | 1991–1992 | Hajduk Kula | 31 | (1) | | 1992–1996 | Vojvodina | 114 | (2) | | 1996–2000 | Partizan | 67 | (1) | | 2000–2002 | Suwon Samsung Bluewings | 48 | (0) | | 2002 | Avispa Fukuoka | 17 | (1) | | 2003 | Zalaegerszeg | 12 | (2) | | 2003–2004 | AEK Larnaca | 20 | (4) | | 2004 | Mladost Apatin | 4 | (0) | | 2005–2008 | Cement Beočin | 83 | (1) | | Total | | 396 | (12) | | Teams managed | | 2007–2009 | Kecskemét (assistant) | | 2009–2011 | Radnički Sombor | | 2011–2012 | Hajduk Kula | | 2012 | Vojvodina (assistant) | | 2013–2014 | Litex Lovech (assistant) | | 2014–2015 | Donji Srem (assistant) | | 2015 | Vojvodina (assistant) | | 2016 | Proleter Novi Sad | | 2016 | Jagodina | | 2016–2017 | Proleter Novi Sad | | 2017–2020 | TSC Bačka Topola | | * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only | Zoltan Sabo (Serbian Cyrillic: Золтан Сабо, Hungarian: Szabó Zoltán; 26 May 1972 — 15 December 2020) was a Serbian professional footballer. He played as a defender. He also held Hungarian citizenship.[2] Sabo played for Hajduk Kula, Vojvodina, and Partizan. Sabo began his managerial career at the helm of his hometown club Radnički Sombor in October 2009. Sabo died on 15 December 2020 in Sremska Kamenica, Serbia from pulmonary embolism-related problems at the age of 48.[1] References ↑ 1.0 1.1 Preminuo Zoltan Sabo ↑ "Szabó Zoltán" (in Hungarian). nela.hu. Retrieved 24 December 2017. This short article about a sports person can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
83,364
Gazette_(band)
Gazette (band)
643,729
Redirect to: * [The Gazette (band)](/wiki/The_Gazette_(band) "The Gazette (band)")
Redirect to: The Gazette (band)
138,864
Capra_falconeri_falconeri
Capra falconeri falconeri
5,124,243
Redirect to: * [Astor markhor](/wiki/Astor_markhor "Astor markhor")
Redirect to: Astor markhor
381,968
Saint-Palais,_Allier
Saint-Palais, Allier
5,897,978
| Saint-Palais | | --- | | Location of Saint-Palais | | Saint-PalaisShow map of FranceSaint-PalaisShow map of Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes | | Coordinates: [46°26′25″N 2°18′03″E / 46.4403°N 2.3008°E / 46.4403; 2.3008](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Saint-Palais,_Allier&params=46.4403_N_2.3008_E_type:city(191)_region:FR-ARA)[Coordinates](/wiki/Geographic_coordinate_system "Geographic coordinate system"): [46°26′25″N 2°18′03″E / 46.4403°N 2.3008°E / 46.4403; 2.3008](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Saint-Palais,_Allier&params=46.4403_N_2.3008_E_type:city(191)_region:FR-ARA) | | Country | [France](/wiki/France "France") | | [Region](/wiki/Regions_of_France "Regions of France") | [Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes](/wiki/Auvergne-Rh%C3%B4ne-Alpes "Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes") | | [Department](/wiki/Departments_of_France "Departments of France") | [Allier](/wiki/Allier "Allier") | | [Arrondissement](/wiki/Arrondissements_of_France "Arrondissements of France") | [Montluçon](/wiki/Arrondissement_of_Montlu%C3%A7on "Arrondissement of Montluçon") | | [Canton](/wiki/Cantons_of_France "Cantons of France") | Huriel | | [Intercommunality](/wiki/Communes_of_France#Intercommunality "Communes of France") | Pays d'Huriel | | Government | |  • Mayor (2008–2014) | Arlette Philippon | | Area**1** | 20.3 km2 (7.8 sq mi) | | Population (2008) | 191 | |  • Density | 9.4/km2 (24/sq mi) | | [Time zone](/wiki/Time_zone "Time zone") | [UTC+01:00](/wiki/UTC%2B01:00 "UTC+01:00") ([CET](/wiki/Central_European_Time "Central European Time")) | |  • Summer ([DST](/wiki/Daylight_saving_time "Daylight saving time")) | [UTC+02:00](/wiki/UTC%2B02:00 "UTC+02:00") ([CEST](/wiki/Central_European_Summer_Time "Central European Summer Time")) | | [INSEE](/wiki/INSEE_code "INSEE code")/Postal code | [03249](https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/1405599?geo=COM-03249) /03370 | | Elevation | 304–448 m (997–1,470 ft) (avg. 380 m or 1,250 ft) | | **1** French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries. | **Saint-Palais** is a [commune](/wiki/Communes_of_France "Communes of France"). It is found in the [Allier](/wiki/Allier "Allier") [department](/wiki/Departments_of_France "Departments of France") in the center of [France](/wiki/France "France"). ## References * [INSEE](http://www.insee.fr/en/home/home_page.asp) | * [v](/wiki/Template:Allier_communes "Template:Allier communes") * [t](/wiki/Template_talk:Allier_communes "Template talk:Allier communes") * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Allier_communes&action=edit) [Communes of the Allier department](/wiki/Communes_of_the_Allier_department "Communes of the Allier department") | | --- | | * [Abrest](/wiki/Abrest "Abrest") * [Agonges](/wiki/Agonges "Agonges") * [Ainay-le-Château](/wiki/Ainay-le-Ch%C3%A2teau "Ainay-le-Château") * [Andelaroche](/wiki/Andelaroche "Andelaroche") * [Archignat](/wiki/Archignat "Archignat") * [Arfeuilles](/wiki/Arfeuilles "Arfeuilles") * [Arpheuilles-Saint-Priest](/wiki/Arpheuilles-Saint-Priest "Arpheuilles-Saint-Priest") * [Arronnes](/wiki/Arronnes "Arronnes") * [Aubigny](/wiki/Aubigny,_Allier "Aubigny, Allier") * [Audes](/wiki/Audes "Audes") * [Aurouër](/wiki/Aurou%C3%ABr "Aurouër") * [Autry-Issards](/wiki/Autry-Issards "Autry-Issards") * [Avermes](/wiki/Avermes "Avermes") * [Avrilly](/wiki/Avrilly,_Allier "Avrilly, Allier") * [Bagneux](/wiki/Bagneux,_Allier "Bagneux, Allier") * [Barberier](/wiki/Barberier "Barberier") * [Barrais-Bussolles](/wiki/Barrais-Bussolles "Barrais-Bussolles") * [Bayet](/wiki/Bayet "Bayet") * [Beaulon](/wiki/Beaulon "Beaulon") * [Beaune-d'Allier](/wiki/Beaune-d%27Allier "Beaune-d'Allier") * [Bègues](/wiki/B%C3%A8gues "Bègues") * [Bellenaves](/wiki/Bellenaves "Bellenaves") * [Bellerive-sur-Allier](/wiki/Bellerive-sur-Allier "Bellerive-sur-Allier") * [Bert](/wiki/Bert,_Allier "Bert, Allier") * [Bessay-sur-Allier](/wiki/Bessay-sur-Allier "Bessay-sur-Allier") * [Besson](/wiki/Besson,_Allier "Besson, Allier") * [Bézenet](/wiki/B%C3%A9zenet "Bézenet") * [Billezois](/wiki/Billezois "Billezois") * [Billy](/wiki/Billy,_Allier "Billy, Allier") * [Biozat](/wiki/Biozat "Biozat") * [Bizeneuille](/wiki/Bizeneuille "Bizeneuille") * [Blomard](/wiki/Blomard "Blomard") * [Bost](/wiki/Bost,_Allier "Bost, Allier") * [Boucé](/wiki/Bouc%C3%A9,_Allier "Boucé, Allier") * [Le Bouchaud](/wiki/Le_Bouchaud "Le Bouchaud") * [Bourbon-l'Archambault](/wiki/Bourbon-l%27Archambault "Bourbon-l'Archambault") * [Braize](/wiki/Braize "Braize") * [Bransat](/wiki/Bransat "Bransat") * [Bresnay](/wiki/Bresnay "Bresnay") * [Bressolles](/wiki/Bressolles,_Allier "Bressolles, Allier") * [Le Brethon](/wiki/Le_Brethon "Le Brethon") * [Le Breuil](/wiki/Le_Breuil,_Allier "Le Breuil, Allier") * [Broût-Vernet](/wiki/Bro%C3%BBt-Vernet "Broût-Vernet") * [Brugheas](/wiki/Brugheas "Brugheas") * [Busset](/wiki/Busset "Busset") * [Buxières-les-Mines](/wiki/Buxi%C3%A8res-les-Mines "Buxières-les-Mines") * [La Celle](/wiki/La_Celle,_Allier "La Celle, Allier") * [Cérilly](/wiki/C%C3%A9rilly,_Allier "Cérilly, Allier") * [Cesset](/wiki/Cesset "Cesset") * [La Chabanne](/wiki/La_Chabanne "La Chabanne") * [Chambérat](/wiki/Chamb%C3%A9rat "Chambérat") * [Chamblet](/wiki/Chamblet "Chamblet") * [Chantelle](/wiki/Chantelle,_Allier "Chantelle, Allier") * [Chapeau](/wiki/Chapeau,_Allier "Chapeau, Allier") * [La Chapelaude](/wiki/La_Chapelaude "La Chapelaude") * [La Chapelle](/wiki/La_Chapelle,_Allier "La Chapelle, Allier") * [La Chapelle-aux-Chasses](/wiki/La_Chapelle-aux-Chasses "La Chapelle-aux-Chasses") * [Chappes](/wiki/Chappes,_Allier "Chappes, Allier") * [Chareil-Cintrat](/wiki/Chareil-Cintrat "Chareil-Cintrat") * [Charmeil](/wiki/Charmeil "Charmeil") * [Charmes](/wiki/Charmes,_Allier "Charmes, Allier") * [Charroux](/wiki/Charroux,_Allier "Charroux, Allier") * [Chassenard](/wiki/Chassenard "Chassenard") * [Château-sur-Allier](/wiki/Ch%C3%A2teau-sur-Allier "Château-sur-Allier") * [Châtel-de-Neuvre](/wiki/Ch%C3%A2tel-de-Neuvre "Châtel-de-Neuvre") * [Châtel-Montagne](/wiki/Ch%C3%A2tel-Montagne "Châtel-Montagne") * [Châtelperron](/wiki/Ch%C3%A2telperron "Châtelperron") * [Châtelus](/wiki/Ch%C3%A2telus,_Allier "Châtelus, Allier") * [Châtillon](/wiki/Ch%C3%A2tillon,_Allier "Châtillon, Allier") * [Chavenon](/wiki/Chavenon "Chavenon") * [Chavroches](/wiki/Chavroches "Chavroches") * [Chazemais](/wiki/Chazemais "Chazemais") * [Chemilly](/wiki/Chemilly,_Allier "Chemilly, Allier") * [Chevagnes](/wiki/Chevagnes "Chevagnes") * [Chezelle](/wiki/Chezelle "Chezelle") * [Chézy](/wiki/Ch%C3%A9zy,_Allier "Chézy, Allier") * [Chirat-l'Église](/wiki/Chirat-l%27%C3%89glise "Chirat-l'Église") * [Chouvigny](/wiki/Chouvigny "Chouvigny") * [Cindré](/wiki/Cindr%C3%A9 "Cindré") * [Cognat-Lyonne](/wiki/Cognat-Lyonne "Cognat-Lyonne") * [Colombier](/wiki/Colombier,_Allier "Colombier, Allier") * [Commentry](/wiki/Commentry "Commentry") * [Contigny](/wiki/Contigny "Contigny") * [Cosne-d'Allier](/wiki/Cosne-d%27Allier "Cosne-d'Allier") * [Coulandon](/wiki/Coulandon "Coulandon") * [Coulanges](/wiki/Coulanges,_Allier "Coulanges, Allier") * [Couleuvre](/wiki/Couleuvre "Couleuvre") * [Courçais](/wiki/Cour%C3%A7ais "Courçais") * [Coutansouze](/wiki/Coutansouze "Coutansouze") * [Couzon](/wiki/Couzon "Couzon") * [Créchy](/wiki/Cr%C3%A9chy "Créchy") * [Cressanges](/wiki/Cressanges "Cressanges") * [Creuzier-le-Neuf](/wiki/Creuzier-le-Neuf "Creuzier-le-Neuf") * [Creuzier-le-Vieux](/wiki/Creuzier-le-Vieux "Creuzier-le-Vieux") * [Cusset](/wiki/Cusset "Cusset") * [Deneuille-lès-Chantelle](/wiki/Deneuille-l%C3%A8s-Chantelle "Deneuille-lès-Chantelle") * [Deneuille-les-Mines](/wiki/Deneuille-les-Mines "Deneuille-les-Mines") * [Désertines](/wiki/D%C3%A9sertines,_Allier "Désertines, Allier") * [Deux-Chaises](/wiki/Deux-Chaises "Deux-Chaises") * [Diou](/wiki/Diou,_Allier "Diou, Allier") * [Domérat](/wiki/Dom%C3%A9rat "Domérat") * [Dompierre-sur-Besbre](/wiki/Dompierre-sur-Besbre "Dompierre-sur-Besbre") * [Le Donjon](/wiki/Le_Donjon "Le Donjon") * [Doyet](/wiki/Doyet "Doyet") * [Droiturier](/wiki/Droiturier "Droiturier") * [Durdat-Larequille](/wiki/Durdat-Larequille "Durdat-Larequille") * [Ébreuil](/wiki/%C3%89breuil "Ébreuil") * [Échassières](/wiki/%C3%89chassi%C3%A8res "Échassières") * [Escurolles](/wiki/Escurolles "Escurolles") * [Espinasse-Vozelle](/wiki/Espinasse-Vozelle "Espinasse-Vozelle") * [Estivareilles](/wiki/Estivareilles,_Allier "Estivareilles, Allier") * [Étroussat](/wiki/%C3%89troussat "Étroussat") * [Ferrières-sur-Sichon](/wiki/Ferri%C3%A8res-sur-Sichon "Ferrières-sur-Sichon") * [La Ferté-Hauterive](/wiki/La_Fert%C3%A9-Hauterive "La Ferté-Hauterive") * [Fleuriel](/wiki/Fleuriel "Fleuriel") * [Fourilles](/wiki/Fourilles "Fourilles") * [Franchesse](/wiki/Franchesse "Franchesse") * [Gannat](/wiki/Gannat "Gannat") * [Gannay-sur-Loire](/wiki/Gannay-sur-Loire "Gannay-sur-Loire") * [Garnat-sur-Engièvre](/wiki/Garnat-sur-Engi%C3%A8vre "Garnat-sur-Engièvre") * [Gennetines](/wiki/Gennetines "Gennetines") * [Gipcy](/wiki/Gipcy "Gipcy") * [Gouise](/wiki/Gouise "Gouise") * [La Guillermie](/wiki/La_Guillermie "La Guillermie") * [Haut-Bocage](/wiki/Haut-Bocage "Haut-Bocage") * [Hauterive](/wiki/Hauterive,_Allier "Hauterive, Allier") * [Hérisson](/wiki/H%C3%A9risson "Hérisson") * [Huriel](/wiki/Huriel "Huriel") * [Hyds](/wiki/Hyds "Hyds") * [Isle-et-Bardais](/wiki/Isle-et-Bardais "Isle-et-Bardais") * [Isserpent](/wiki/Isserpent "Isserpent") * [Jaligny-sur-Besbre](/wiki/Jaligny-sur-Besbre "Jaligny-sur-Besbre") * [Jenzat](/wiki/Jenzat "Jenzat") * [Laféline](/wiki/Laf%C3%A9line "Laféline") * [Lalizolle](/wiki/Lalizolle "Lalizolle") * [Lamaids](/wiki/Lamaids "Lamaids") * [Langy](/wiki/Langy "Langy") * [Lapalisse](/wiki/Lapalisse "Lapalisse") * [Laprugne](/wiki/Laprugne "Laprugne") * [Lavault-Sainte-Anne](/wiki/Lavault-Sainte-Anne "Lavault-Sainte-Anne") * [Lavoine](/wiki/Lavoine "Lavoine") * [Lenax](/wiki/Lenax "Lenax") * [Lételon](/wiki/L%C3%A9telon "Lételon") * [Liernolles](/wiki/Liernolles "Liernolles") * [Lignerolles](/wiki/Lignerolles,_Allier "Lignerolles, Allier") * [Limoise](/wiki/Limoise "Limoise") * [Loddes](/wiki/Loddes "Loddes") * [Loriges](/wiki/Loriges "Loriges") * [Louchy-Montfand](/wiki/Louchy-Montfand "Louchy-Montfand") * [Louroux-Bourbonnais](/wiki/Louroux-Bourbonnais "Louroux-Bourbonnais") * [Louroux-de-Beaune](/wiki/Louroux-de-Beaune "Louroux-de-Beaune") * [Louroux-de-Bouble](/wiki/Louroux-de-Bouble "Louroux-de-Bouble") * [Luneau](/wiki/Luneau "Luneau") * [Lurcy-Lévis](/wiki/Lurcy-L%C3%A9vis "Lurcy-Lévis") * [Lusigny](/wiki/Lusigny "Lusigny") * [Magnet](/wiki/Magnet,_Allier "Magnet, Allier") * [Malicorne](/wiki/Malicorne,_Allier "Malicorne, Allier") * [Marcenat](/wiki/Marcenat,_Allier "Marcenat, Allier") * [Marcillat-en-Combraille](/wiki/Marcillat-en-Combraille "Marcillat-en-Combraille") * [Marigny](/wiki/Marigny,_Allier "Marigny, Allier") * [Mariol](/wiki/Mariol "Mariol") * [Le Mayet-d'École](/wiki/Le_Mayet-d%27%C3%89cole "Le Mayet-d'École") * [Le Mayet-de-Montagne](/wiki/Le_Mayet-de-Montagne "Le Mayet-de-Montagne") * [Mazerier](/wiki/Mazerier "Mazerier") * [Mazirat](/wiki/Mazirat "Mazirat") * [Meaulne](/wiki/Meaulne "Meaulne") * [Meillard](/wiki/Meillard "Meillard") * [Meillers](/wiki/Meillers "Meillers") * [Mercy](/wiki/Mercy,_Allier "Mercy, Allier") * [Mesples](/wiki/Mesples "Mesples") * [Molinet](/wiki/Molinet "Molinet") * [Molles](/wiki/Molles "Molles") * [Monestier](/wiki/Monestier,_Allier "Monestier, Allier") * [Monétay-sur-Allier](/wiki/Mon%C3%A9tay-sur-Allier "Monétay-sur-Allier") * [Monétay-sur-Loire](/wiki/Mon%C3%A9tay-sur-Loire "Monétay-sur-Loire") * [Montaiguët-en-Forez](/wiki/Montaigu%C3%ABt-en-Forez "Montaiguët-en-Forez") * [Montaigu-le-Blin](/wiki/Montaigu-le-Blin "Montaigu-le-Blin") * [Montbeugny](/wiki/Montbeugny "Montbeugny") * [Montcombroux-les-Mines](/wiki/Montcombroux-les-Mines "Montcombroux-les-Mines") * [Monteignet-sur-l'Andelot](/wiki/Monteignet-sur-l%27Andelot "Monteignet-sur-l'Andelot") * [Le Montet](/wiki/Le_Montet "Le Montet") * [Montilly](/wiki/Montilly "Montilly") * [Montluçon](/wiki/Montlu%C3%A7on "Montluçon") * [Montmarault](/wiki/Montmarault "Montmarault") * [Montoldre](/wiki/Montoldre "Montoldre") * [Montord](/wiki/Montord "Montord") * [Montvicq](/wiki/Montvicq "Montvicq") * [Moulins](/wiki/Moulins,_Allier "Moulins, Allier") * [Murat](/wiki/Murat,_Allier "Murat, Allier") * [Nades](/wiki/Nades "Nades") * [Nassigny](/wiki/Nassigny "Nassigny") * [Naves](/wiki/Naves,_Allier "Naves, Allier") * [Néris-les-Bains](/wiki/N%C3%A9ris-les-Bains "Néris-les-Bains") * [Neuilly-en-Donjon](/wiki/Neuilly-en-Donjon "Neuilly-en-Donjon") * [Neuilly-le-Réal](/wiki/Neuilly-le-R%C3%A9al "Neuilly-le-Réal") * [Neure](/wiki/Neure "Neure") * [Neuvy](/wiki/Neuvy,_Allier "Neuvy, Allier") * [Nizerolles](/wiki/Nizerolles "Nizerolles") * [Noyant-d'Allier](/wiki/Noyant-d%27Allier "Noyant-d'Allier") * [Paray-le-Frésil](/wiki/Paray-le-Fr%C3%A9sil "Paray-le-Frésil") * [Paray-sous-Briailles](/wiki/Paray-sous-Briailles "Paray-sous-Briailles") * [Périgny](/wiki/P%C3%A9rigny,_Allier "Périgny, Allier") * [La Petite-Marche](/wiki/La_Petite-Marche "La Petite-Marche") * [Pierrefitte-sur-Loire](/wiki/Pierrefitte-sur-Loire "Pierrefitte-sur-Loire") * [Le Pin](/wiki/Le_Pin,_Allier "Le Pin, Allier") * [Poëzat](/wiki/Po%C3%ABzat "Poëzat") * [Pouzy-Mésangy](/wiki/Pouzy-M%C3%A9sangy "Pouzy-Mésangy") * [Prémilhat](/wiki/Pr%C3%A9milhat "Prémilhat") * [Quinssaines](/wiki/Quinssaines "Quinssaines") * [Reugny](/wiki/Reugny,_Allier "Reugny, Allier") * [Rocles](/wiki/Rocles,_Allier "Rocles, Allier") * [Rongères](/wiki/Rong%C3%A8res "Rongères") * [Ronnet](/wiki/Ronnet "Ronnet") * [Saint-Angel](/wiki/Saint-Angel,_Allier "Saint-Angel, Allier") * [Saint-Aubin-le-Monial](/wiki/Saint-Aubin-le-Monial "Saint-Aubin-le-Monial") * [Saint-Bonnet-de-Four](/wiki/Saint-Bonnet-de-Four "Saint-Bonnet-de-Four") * [Saint-Bonnet-de-Rochefort](/wiki/Saint-Bonnet-de-Rochefort "Saint-Bonnet-de-Rochefort") * [Saint-Bonnet-Tronçais](/wiki/Saint-Bonnet-Tron%C3%A7ais "Saint-Bonnet-Tronçais") * [Saint-Caprais](/wiki/Saint-Caprais,_Allier "Saint-Caprais, Allier") * [Saint-Christophe](/wiki/Saint-Christophe,_Allier "Saint-Christophe, Allier") * [Saint-Clément](/wiki/Saint-Cl%C3%A9ment,_Allier "Saint-Clément, Allier") * [Saint-Désiré](/wiki/Saint-D%C3%A9sir%C3%A9 "Saint-Désiré") * [Saint-Didier-en-Donjon](/wiki/Saint-Didier-en-Donjon "Saint-Didier-en-Donjon") * [Saint-Didier-la-Forêt](/wiki/Saint-Didier-la-For%C3%AAt "Saint-Didier-la-Forêt") * [Saint-Éloy-d'Allier](/wiki/Saint-%C3%89loy-d%27Allier "Saint-Éloy-d'Allier") * [Saint-Ennemond](/wiki/Saint-Ennemond "Saint-Ennemond") * [Sainte-Thérence](/wiki/Sainte-Th%C3%A9rence "Sainte-Thérence") * [Saint-Étienne-de-Vicq](/wiki/Saint-%C3%89tienne-de-Vicq "Saint-Étienne-de-Vicq") * [Saint-Fargeol](/wiki/Saint-Fargeol "Saint-Fargeol") * [Saint-Félix](/wiki/Saint-F%C3%A9lix,_Allier "Saint-Félix, Allier") * [Saint-Genest](/wiki/Saint-Genest,_Allier "Saint-Genest, Allier") * [Saint-Gérand-de-Vaux](/wiki/Saint-G%C3%A9rand-de-Vaux "Saint-Gérand-de-Vaux") * [Saint-Gérand-le-Puy](/wiki/Saint-G%C3%A9rand-le-Puy "Saint-Gérand-le-Puy") * [Saint-Germain-de-Salles](/wiki/Saint-Germain-de-Salles "Saint-Germain-de-Salles") * [Saint-Germain-des-Fossés](/wiki/Saint-Germain-des-Foss%C3%A9s "Saint-Germain-des-Fossés") * [Saint-Hilaire](/wiki/Saint-Hilaire,_Allier "Saint-Hilaire, Allier") * [Saint-Léger-sur-Vouzance](/wiki/Saint-L%C3%A9ger-sur-Vouzance "Saint-Léger-sur-Vouzance") * [Saint-Léon](/wiki/Saint-L%C3%A9on,_Allier "Saint-Léon, Allier") * [Saint-Léopardin-d'Augy](/wiki/Saint-L%C3%A9opardin-d%27Augy "Saint-Léopardin-d'Augy") * [Saint-Loup](/wiki/Saint-Loup,_Allier "Saint-Loup, Allier") * [Saint-Marcel-en-Marcillat](/wiki/Saint-Marcel-en-Marcillat "Saint-Marcel-en-Marcillat") * [Saint-Marcel-en-Murat](/wiki/Saint-Marcel-en-Murat "Saint-Marcel-en-Murat") * [Saint-Martin-des-Lais](/wiki/Saint-Martin-des-Lais "Saint-Martin-des-Lais") * [Saint-Martinien](/wiki/Saint-Martinien "Saint-Martinien") * [Saint-Menoux](/wiki/Saint-Menoux "Saint-Menoux") * [Saint-Nicolas-des-Biefs](/wiki/Saint-Nicolas-des-Biefs "Saint-Nicolas-des-Biefs") * Saint-Palais * [Saint-Pierre-Laval](/wiki/Saint-Pierre-Laval "Saint-Pierre-Laval") * [Saint-Plaisir](/wiki/Saint-Plaisir "Saint-Plaisir") * [Saint-Pont](/wiki/Saint-Pont "Saint-Pont") * [Saint-Pourçain-sur-Besbre](/wiki/Saint-Pour%C3%A7ain-sur-Besbre "Saint-Pourçain-sur-Besbre") * [Saint-Pourçain-sur-Sioule](/wiki/Saint-Pour%C3%A7ain-sur-Sioule "Saint-Pourçain-sur-Sioule") * [Saint-Priest-d'Andelot](/wiki/Saint-Priest-d%27Andelot "Saint-Priest-d'Andelot") * [Saint-Priest-en-Murat](/wiki/Saint-Priest-en-Murat "Saint-Priest-en-Murat") * [Saint-Prix](/wiki/Saint-Prix,_Allier "Saint-Prix, Allier") * [Saint-Rémy-en-Rollat](/wiki/Saint-R%C3%A9my-en-Rollat "Saint-Rémy-en-Rollat") * [Saint-Sauvier](/wiki/Saint-Sauvier "Saint-Sauvier") * [Saint-Sornin](/wiki/Saint-Sornin,_Allier "Saint-Sornin, Allier") * [Saint-Victor](/wiki/Saint-Victor,_Allier "Saint-Victor, Allier") * [Saint-Voir](/wiki/Saint-Voir "Saint-Voir") * [Saint-Yorre](/wiki/Saint-Yorre "Saint-Yorre") * [Saligny-sur-Roudon](/wiki/Saligny-sur-Roudon "Saligny-sur-Roudon") * [Sanssat](/wiki/Sanssat "Sanssat") * [Saulcet](/wiki/Saulcet "Saulcet") * [Saulzet](/wiki/Saulzet "Saulzet") * [Sauvagny](/wiki/Sauvagny "Sauvagny") * [Sazeret](/wiki/Sazeret "Sazeret") * [Serbannes](/wiki/Serbannes "Serbannes") * [Servilly](/wiki/Servilly "Servilly") * [Seuillet](/wiki/Seuillet "Seuillet") * [Sorbier](/wiki/Sorbier "Sorbier") * [Souvigny](/wiki/Souvigny "Souvigny") * [Sussat](/wiki/Sussat "Sussat") * [Target](/wiki/Target,_Allier "Target, Allier") * [Taxat-Senat](/wiki/Taxat-Senat "Taxat-Senat") * [Teillet-Argenty](/wiki/Teillet-Argenty "Teillet-Argenty") * [Terjat](/wiki/Terjat "Terjat") * [Le Theil](/wiki/Le_Theil,_Allier "Le Theil, Allier") * [Theneuille](/wiki/Theneuille "Theneuille") * [Thiel-sur-Acolin](/wiki/Thiel-sur-Acolin "Thiel-sur-Acolin") * [Thionne](/wiki/Thionne "Thionne") * [Tortezais](/wiki/Tortezais "Tortezais") * [Toulon-sur-Allier](/wiki/Toulon-sur-Allier "Toulon-sur-Allier") * [Treban](/wiki/Treban "Treban") * [Treignat](/wiki/Treignat "Treignat") * [Treteau](/wiki/Treteau "Treteau") * [Trévol](/wiki/Tr%C3%A9vol "Trévol") * [Trézelles](/wiki/Tr%C3%A9zelles "Trézelles") * [Tronget](/wiki/Tronget "Tronget") * [Urçay](/wiki/Ur%C3%A7ay "Urçay") * [Ussel-d'Allier](/wiki/Ussel-d%27Allier "Ussel-d'Allier") * [Valignat](/wiki/Valignat "Valignat") * [Valigny](/wiki/Valigny "Valigny") * [Vallon-en-Sully](/wiki/Vallon-en-Sully "Vallon-en-Sully") * [Varennes-sur-Allier](/wiki/Varennes-sur-Allier "Varennes-sur-Allier") * [Varennes-sur-Tèche](/wiki/Varennes-sur-T%C3%A8che "Varennes-sur-Tèche") * [Vaumas](/wiki/Vaumas "Vaumas") * [Vaux](/wiki/Vaux,_Allier "Vaux, Allier") * [Veauce](/wiki/Veauce "Veauce") * [Venas](/wiki/Venas "Venas") * [Vendat](/wiki/Vendat "Vendat") * [Verneix](/wiki/Verneix "Verneix") * [Le Vernet](/wiki/Le_Vernet,_Allier "Le Vernet, Allier") * [Verneuil-en-Bourbonnais](/wiki/Verneuil-en-Bourbonnais "Verneuil-en-Bourbonnais") * [Vernusse](/wiki/Vernusse "Vernusse") * [Le Veurdre](/wiki/Le_Veurdre "Le Veurdre") * [Vichy](/wiki/Vichy "Vichy") * [Vicq](/wiki/Vicq,_Allier "Vicq, Allier") * [Vieure](/wiki/Vieure "Vieure") * [Le Vilhain](/wiki/Le_Vilhain "Le Vilhain") * [Villebret](/wiki/Villebret "Villebret") * [Villefranche-d'Allier](/wiki/Villefranche-d%27Allier "Villefranche-d'Allier") * [Villeneuve-sur-Allier](/wiki/Villeneuve-sur-Allier "Villeneuve-sur-Allier") * [Viplaix](/wiki/Viplaix "Viplaix") * [Vitray](/wiki/Vitray "Vitray") * [Voussac](/wiki/Voussac "Voussac") * [Ygrande](/wiki/Ygrande "Ygrande") * [Yzeure](/wiki/Yzeure "Yzeure") | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature in France](/wiki/Category:France_geography_stubs "Category:France geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Saint-Palais,_Allier&action=edit)*.
| Saint-Palais | | --- | | Location of Saint-Palais | | Saint-PalaisShow map of FranceSaint-PalaisShow map of Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes | | Coordinates: 46°26′25″N 2°18′03″E / 46.4403°N 2.3008°E / 46.4403; 2.3008Coordinates: 46°26′25″N 2°18′03″E / 46.4403°N 2.3008°E / 46.4403; 2.3008 | | Country | France | | Region | Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes | | Department | Allier | | Arrondissement | Montluçon | | Canton | Huriel | | Intercommunality | Pays d'Huriel | | Government | |  • Mayor (2008–2014) | Arlette Philippon | | Area1 | 20.3 km2 (7.8 sq mi) | | Population (2008) | 191 | |  • Density | 9.4/km2 (24/sq mi) | | Time zone | UTC+01:00 (CET) | |  • Summer (DST) | UTC+02:00 (CEST) | | INSEE/Postal code | 03249 /03370 | | Elevation | 304–448 m (997–1,470 ft) (avg. 380 m or 1,250 ft) | | 1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries. | Saint-Palais is a commune. It is found in the Allier department in the center of France. References INSEE | * v * t * e Communes of the Allier department | | --- | | * Abrest * Agonges * Ainay-le-Château * Andelaroche * Archignat * Arfeuilles * Arpheuilles-Saint-Priest * Arronnes * Aubigny * Audes * Aurouër * Autry-Issards * Avermes * Avrilly * Bagneux * Barberier * Barrais-Bussolles * Bayet * Beaulon * Beaune-d'Allier * Bègues * Bellenaves * Bellerive-sur-Allier * Bert * Bessay-sur-Allier * Besson * Bézenet * Billezois * Billy * Biozat * Bizeneuille * Blomard * Bost * Boucé * Le Bouchaud * Bourbon-l'Archambault * Braize * Bransat * Bresnay * Bressolles * Le Brethon * Le Breuil * Broût-Vernet * Brugheas * Busset * Buxières-les-Mines * La Celle * Cérilly * Cesset * La Chabanne * Chambérat * Chamblet * Chantelle * Chapeau * La Chapelaude * La Chapelle * La Chapelle-aux-Chasses * Chappes * Chareil-Cintrat * Charmeil * Charmes * Charroux * Chassenard * Château-sur-Allier * Châtel-de-Neuvre * Châtel-Montagne * Châtelperron * Châtelus * Châtillon * Chavenon * Chavroches * Chazemais * Chemilly * Chevagnes * Chezelle * Chézy * Chirat-l'Église * Chouvigny * Cindré * Cognat-Lyonne * Colombier * Commentry * Contigny * Cosne-d'Allier * Coulandon * Coulanges * Couleuvre * Courçais * Coutansouze * Couzon * Créchy * Cressanges * Creuzier-le-Neuf * Creuzier-le-Vieux * Cusset * Deneuille-lès-Chantelle * Deneuille-les-Mines * Désertines * Deux-Chaises * Diou * Domérat * Dompierre-sur-Besbre * Le Donjon * Doyet * Droiturier * Durdat-Larequille * Ébreuil * Échassières * Escurolles * Espinasse-Vozelle * Estivareilles * Étroussat * Ferrières-sur-Sichon * La Ferté-Hauterive * Fleuriel * Fourilles * Franchesse * Gannat * Gannay-sur-Loire * Garnat-sur-Engièvre * Gennetines * Gipcy * Gouise * La Guillermie * Haut-Bocage * Hauterive * Hérisson * Huriel * Hyds * Isle-et-Bardais * Isserpent * Jaligny-sur-Besbre * Jenzat * Laféline * Lalizolle * Lamaids * Langy * Lapalisse * Laprugne * Lavault-Sainte-Anne * Lavoine * Lenax * Lételon * Liernolles * Lignerolles * Limoise * Loddes * Loriges * Louchy-Montfand * Louroux-Bourbonnais * Louroux-de-Beaune * Louroux-de-Bouble * Luneau * Lurcy-Lévis * Lusigny * Magnet * Malicorne * Marcenat * Marcillat-en-Combraille * Marigny * Mariol * Le Mayet-d'École * Le Mayet-de-Montagne * Mazerier * Mazirat * Meaulne * Meillard * Meillers * Mercy * Mesples * Molinet * Molles * Monestier * Monétay-sur-Allier * Monétay-sur-Loire * Montaiguët-en-Forez * Montaigu-le-Blin * Montbeugny * Montcombroux-les-Mines * Monteignet-sur-l'Andelot * Le Montet * Montilly * Montluçon * Montmarault * Montoldre * Montord * Montvicq * Moulins * Murat * Nades * Nassigny * Naves * Néris-les-Bains * Neuilly-en-Donjon * Neuilly-le-Réal * Neure * Neuvy * Nizerolles * Noyant-d'Allier * Paray-le-Frésil * Paray-sous-Briailles * Périgny * La Petite-Marche * Pierrefitte-sur-Loire * Le Pin * Poëzat * Pouzy-Mésangy * Prémilhat * Quinssaines * Reugny * Rocles * Rongères * Ronnet * Saint-Angel * Saint-Aubin-le-Monial * Saint-Bonnet-de-Four * Saint-Bonnet-de-Rochefort * Saint-Bonnet-Tronçais * Saint-Caprais * Saint-Christophe * Saint-Clément * Saint-Désiré * Saint-Didier-en-Donjon * Saint-Didier-la-Forêt * Saint-Éloy-d'Allier * Saint-Ennemond * Sainte-Thérence * Saint-Étienne-de-Vicq * Saint-Fargeol * Saint-Félix * Saint-Genest * Saint-Gérand-de-Vaux * Saint-Gérand-le-Puy * Saint-Germain-de-Salles * Saint-Germain-des-Fossés * Saint-Hilaire * Saint-Léger-sur-Vouzance * Saint-Léon * Saint-Léopardin-d'Augy * Saint-Loup * Saint-Marcel-en-Marcillat * Saint-Marcel-en-Murat * Saint-Martin-des-Lais * Saint-Martinien * Saint-Menoux * Saint-Nicolas-des-Biefs * Saint-Palais * Saint-Pierre-Laval * Saint-Plaisir * Saint-Pont * Saint-Pourçain-sur-Besbre * Saint-Pourçain-sur-Sioule * Saint-Priest-d'Andelot * Saint-Priest-en-Murat * Saint-Prix * Saint-Rémy-en-Rollat * Saint-Sauvier * Saint-Sornin * Saint-Victor * Saint-Voir * Saint-Yorre * Saligny-sur-Roudon * Sanssat * Saulcet * Saulzet * Sauvagny * Sazeret * Serbannes * Servilly * Seuillet * Sorbier * Souvigny * Sussat * Target * Taxat-Senat * Teillet-Argenty * Terjat * Le Theil * Theneuille * Thiel-sur-Acolin * Thionne * Tortezais * Toulon-sur-Allier * Treban * Treignat * Treteau * Trévol * Trézelles * Tronget * Urçay * Ussel-d'Allier * Valignat * Valigny * Vallon-en-Sully * Varennes-sur-Allier * Varennes-sur-Tèche * Vaumas * Vaux * Veauce * Venas * Vendat * Verneix * Le Vernet * Verneuil-en-Bourbonnais * Vernusse * Le Veurdre * Vichy * Vicq * Vieure * Le Vilhain * Villebret * Villefranche-d'Allier * Villeneuve-sur-Allier * Viplaix * Vitray * Voussac * Ygrande * Yzeure | This short article about a place or feature in France can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
1,025,389
Kalajoki
Kalajoki
9,023,937
Location Coat of arms **Kalajoki** is a town in [Northern Ostrobothnia](/wiki/Northern_Ostrobothnia "Northern Ostrobothnia"), [Finland](/wiki/Finland "Finland"). As of 28 February 2023, 12,328 people lived there. Neighbouring municipalities are Alavieska, [Kokkola](/wiki/Kokkola "Kokkola"), Kannus, Merijärvi, Pyhäjoki, [Sievi](/wiki/Sievi "Sievi") and Ylivieska. ## Other websites Wikimedia Commons has media related to ***[Kalajoki](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Kalajoki "commons:Category:Kalajoki")***. * [Town of Kalajoki](http://www.kalajoki.fi) – Official website (in Finnish) * [Kalajoki Tourism Information](http://www.kalajokimatkailu.fi/en/home.html) *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature](/wiki/Category:Geography_stubs "Category:Geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kalajoki&action=edit)*. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [Europe](/wiki/Category:Europe_stubs "Category:Europe stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kalajoki&action=edit)*.
Location Coat of arms Kalajoki is a town in Northern Ostrobothnia, Finland. As of 28 February 2023, 12,328 people lived there. Neighbouring municipalities are Alavieska, Kokkola, Kannus, Merijärvi, Pyhäjoki, Sievi and Ylivieska. Other websites Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kalajoki. Town of Kalajoki – Official website (in Finnish) Kalajoki Tourism Information This short article about a place or feature can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it. This short article about Europe can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
203,798
Hyderabad_city
Hyderabad city
1,769,753
Redirect to: * [Hyderabad, India](/wiki/Hyderabad,_India "Hyderabad, India")
Redirect to: Hyderabad, India
127,768
Onager
Onager
8,604,691
Three Onagers in the [desert](/wiki/Desert "Desert") in [Iran](/wiki/Iran "Iran") The **Onager** (*Equus hemionus*) is a large [mammal](/wiki/Mammal "Mammal") belonging to the [Equidae](/wiki/Equidae "Equidae") family. It is native to the deserts of [Syria](/wiki/Syria "Syria"), [Iran](/wiki/Iran "Iran"), [Pakistan](/wiki/Pakistan "Pakistan"), [Kashmir](/wiki/Kashmir "Kashmir"), [Israel](/wiki/Israel "Israel") and [Palestine](/wiki/Palestine "Palestine"), and [western China](/wiki/Tibet "Tibet"). It is sometimes known as the **Asian Wild Ass**. Wikimedia Commons has media related to ***[Equus hemionus](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Equus_hemionus "commons:Equus hemionus")***. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [biology](/wiki/Category:Biology_stubs "Category:Biology stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Onager&action=edit)*.
Three Onagers in the desert in Iran The Onager (Equus hemionus) is a large mammal belonging to the Equidae family. It is native to the deserts of Syria, Iran, Pakistan, Kashmir, Israel and Palestine, and western China. It is sometimes known as the Asian Wild Ass. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Equus hemionus. This short article about biology can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
171,108
State_of_the_World
State of the World
1,414,452
Redirect to: * [The State of the World](/wiki/The_State_of_the_World "The State of the World")
Redirect to: The State of the World
28,861
Sporting_Kansas_City
Sporting Kansas City
6,872,150
Sporting Kansas City| Full name | Sporting Kansas City[[1]](#cite_note-1)[[2]](#cite_note-2010Rebrand-2) | | Nickname(s) | Wizards | | Founded | June 6, 1995; 28 years ago (1995-06-06) as *Kansas City Wiz* | | Stadium | Children's Mercy Park[Kansas City, Kansas](/wiki/Kansas_City,_Kansas "Kansas City, Kansas") | | Capacity | 18,467[[3]](#cite_note-3) | | Owner | Sporting Club | | Manager | Peter Vermes | | League | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | | 2018 | Western Conference: 1stOverall: 3rdPlayoffs: Conference Finals | | Website | [Club website](http://www.sportingkc.com/) | | | | | | | | --- | --- | | **[Home colors](/wiki/Kit_(association_football) "Kit (association football)")** | **[Away colors](/wiki/Away_colours "Away colours")** | | | | | *Current season* | Former Sporting Kansas City player Jimmy Conrad. **Sporting Kansas City** are an [American](/wiki/United_States "United States") [football (soccer)](/wiki/Association_football "Association football") team that plays in [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") in [Kansas City, Kansas](/wiki/Kansas_City,_Kansas "Kansas City, Kansas"). They started out as the Kansas City Wiz, before changing their name to the Kansas City Wizards in 1997. Later, in November 2010, they changed their name again to Sporting Kansas City, as the team was moving into a new stadium in the 2011 season. The stadium has been known by several names, first Livestrong Sporting Park, then Sporting Park, and now Children's Mercy Park. ## Honors * [MLS Cup](/wiki/MLS_Cup "MLS Cup") (league champions): 2 (2000, 2013) * [Supporters' Shield](/wiki/Supporters%27_Shield "Supporters' Shield") (best regular-season record): 1 (2000) * Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup: 2 (2004, 2012) ## League position | | | | | --- | --- | --- | | Season | League | Position | | 1996 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | Semifinals | | 1997 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | Quarterfinals | | 1998 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | 6th / West | | 1999 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | 6th / West | | 2000 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | Champions | | 2001 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | Quarterfinals | | 2002 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | Quarterfinals | | 2003 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | Semifinals | | 2004 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | Final | | 2005 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | 5th / East | | 2006 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | 5th / East | | 2007 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | Semifinals | | 2008 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | Quarterfinals | | 2009 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | 6th / East | | 2010 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | 3rd / East | | 2012 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | Semifinals | | 2012 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | Quarterfinals | | 2013 | [Major League Soccer](/wiki/Major_League_Soccer "Major League Soccer") | Champions | ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["Explore The New Brand at Sporting Kansas City Website"](https://web.archive.org/web/20101119082339/http://www.insightkc.com/sportingbrand/index.html). Sporting Kansas City. November 17, 2010. Archived from [the original](http://www.insightkc.com/sportingbrand/index.html) on November 19, 2010. 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2010Rebrand_2-0) ["Kansas City rebrands as Sporting KC"](http://www.mlssoccer.com/news/article/kansas-city-rebrands-sporting-kc). Major League Soccer. November 17, 2010. [Archived](https://web.archive.org/web/20150804164325/http://www.mlssoccer.com/news/article/kansas-city-rebrands-sporting-kc) from the original on August 4, 2015. Retrieved July 9, 2015. 3. [↑](#cite_ref-3) ["Children's Mercy Park Fact Sheet"](https://www.sportingkc.com/childrens-mercy-park/fact-sheet). *SportingKC.com*. MLS Digital. Retrieved November 8, 2018. ## Other websites * [Official Homepage](http://www.kcwizards.com/) * [Official Website of Supporters Section: The Cauldron](http://www.kccauldron.com/) * [Official Wizards board, courtesy of BigSoccer](http://www.bigsoccer.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=22)
Sporting Kansas City| Full name | Sporting Kansas City[1][2] | | Nickname(s) | Wizards | | Founded | June 6, 1995; 28 years ago (1995-06-06) as Kansas City Wiz | | Stadium | Children's Mercy ParkKansas City, Kansas | | Capacity | 18,467[3] | | Owner | Sporting Club | | Manager | Peter Vermes | | League | Major League Soccer | | 2018 | Western Conference: 1stOverall: 3rdPlayoffs: Conference Finals | | Website | Club website | | | | | | | | --- | --- | | Home colors | Away colors | | | | | Current season | Former Sporting Kansas City player Jimmy Conrad. Sporting Kansas City are an American football (soccer) team that plays in Major League Soccer in Kansas City, Kansas. They started out as the Kansas City Wiz, before changing their name to the Kansas City Wizards in 1997. Later, in November 2010, they changed their name again to Sporting Kansas City, as the team was moving into a new stadium in the 2011 season. The stadium has been known by several names, first Livestrong Sporting Park, then Sporting Park, and now Children's Mercy Park. Honors MLS Cup (league champions): 2 (2000, 2013) Supporters' Shield (best regular-season record): 1 (2000) Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup: 2 (2004, 2012) League position | | | | | --- | --- | --- | | Season | League | Position | | 1996 | Major League Soccer | Semifinals | | 1997 | Major League Soccer | Quarterfinals | | 1998 | Major League Soccer | 6th / West | | 1999 | Major League Soccer | 6th / West | | 2000 | Major League Soccer | Champions | | 2001 | Major League Soccer | Quarterfinals | | 2002 | Major League Soccer | Quarterfinals | | 2003 | Major League Soccer | Semifinals | | 2004 | Major League Soccer | Final | | 2005 | Major League Soccer | 5th / East | | 2006 | Major League Soccer | 5th / East | | 2007 | Major League Soccer | Semifinals | | 2008 | Major League Soccer | Quarterfinals | | 2009 | Major League Soccer | 6th / East | | 2010 | Major League Soccer | 3rd / East | | 2012 | Major League Soccer | Semifinals | | 2012 | Major League Soccer | Quarterfinals | | 2013 | Major League Soccer | Champions | References ↑ "Explore The New Brand at Sporting Kansas City Website". Sporting Kansas City. November 17, 2010. Archived from the original on November 19, 2010. ↑ "Kansas City rebrands as Sporting KC". Major League Soccer. November 17, 2010. Archived from the original on August 4, 2015. Retrieved July 9, 2015. ↑ "Children's Mercy Park Fact Sheet". SportingKC.com. MLS Digital. Retrieved November 8, 2018. Other websites Official Homepage Official Website of Supporters Section: The Cauldron Official Wizards board, courtesy of BigSoccer
412,080
Avro_Shackleton
Avro Shackleton
4,520,495
[Royal Air Force](/wiki/Royal_Air_Force "Royal Air Force")'s **Avro Shackleton**. The **Avro Shackleton** is a four-[engine](/wiki/Engine "Engine") [British](/wiki/UK "UK") [military](/wiki/Military "Military") [aircraft](/wiki/Aircraft "Aircraft"). Its first [flight](/wiki/Flight "Flight") was in March [1949](/wiki/1949 "1949"). The [Royal Air Force](/wiki/Royal_Air_Force "Royal Air Force") started using it in [1951](/wiki/1951 "1951"). It was out of service from [1991](/wiki/1991 "1991"). It was also used by the [South African](/wiki/South_Africa "South Africa") [Air Force](/wiki/Air_Force "Air Force"). It was originally designed and built as an [ocean](/wiki/Ocean "Ocean") and [sea](/wiki/Sea "Sea") [reconnaissance](/wiki/Reconnaissance "Reconnaissance") aircraft. It was also used as an electronic warfare plane. There were 185 of these built. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about the [military](/wiki/Category:Military_stubs "Category:Military stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Avro_Shackleton&action=edit)*. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [transport](/wiki/Category:Transport_stubs "Category:Transport stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Avro_Shackleton&action=edit)*.
Royal Air Force's Avro Shackleton. The Avro Shackleton is a four-engine British military aircraft. Its first flight was in March 1949. The Royal Air Force started using it in 1951. It was out of service from 1991. It was also used by the South African Air Force. It was originally designed and built as an ocean and sea reconnaissance aircraft. It was also used as an electronic warfare plane. There were 185 of these built. This short article about the military can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it. This short article about transport can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
348,851
Wester_Ross
Wester Ross
8,996,557
Slioch above Loch Maree **Wester Ross** is part of the [Scottish](/wiki/Scotland "Scotland") [county](/wiki/County "County") of [Ross and Cromarty](/wiki/Ross_and_Cromarty "Ross and Cromarty"). It is in the northwest [highlands](/wiki/Highlands_and_Islands "Highlands and Islands"). It has some of the most spectacular [scenery](https://simple.wiktionary.org/wiki/scenery "wikt:scenery") in [Great Britain](/wiki/Great_Britain "Great Britain"), and is a [tourist](/wiki/Tourist "Tourist") attraction. Wester Ross is geographically the western [watershed](/wiki/Watershed "Watershed") of Ross-shire. Administrative and political boundaries have been changed a number of times. The [mountains](/wiki/Mountain "Mountain") are made of a very old [Precambrian](/wiki/Precambrian "Precambrian") [rock](/wiki/Rock_(geology) "Rock (geology)") known as the [Torridonian](/wiki/Torridonian "Torridonian") [sandstone](/wiki/Sandstone "Sandstone") [formation](/wiki/Formation_(geology) "Formation (geology)"). It was laid down in the [Mesoproterozoic](/wiki/Mesoproterozoic "Mesoproterozoic") and [Neoproterozoic](/wiki/Neoproterozoic "Neoproterozoic") [eras](/wiki/Era "Era").[[1]](#cite_note-1)[[2]](#cite_note-Park-2) It is just a small part of what was once a huge [supercontinent](/wiki/Supercontinent "Supercontinent"). The remains of this are in parts of [Scandinavia](/wiki/Scandinavia "Scandinavia") and [North America](/wiki/North_America "North America"). These rocks are of [Archaean](/wiki/Archaean "Archaean") and [Paleoproterozoic](/wiki/Palaeoproterozoic "Palaeoproterozoic") age, ranging from 3.0–1.7 billion years (Ga) ago. ## Gallery * Shieldaig, viewed from the road to Applecross * Sgurr Fiona and the Corrag Bhuidhe pinnacles on An Teallach * View east from Sgurr Mhòr over the "Horns" * Liathach seen from Beinn Eighe. The two Munro summits are in the background. ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) The Neoproterozoic runs from 1000 million years ago to 550 mya. 2. [↑](#cite_ref-Park_2-0) Park R.G; Stewart A.D; Wright D.T. (2003). ["3. The Hebridean terrane"](https://books.google.com/books?id=ObdepEp9r7kC&dq=%22hebridean+terrane%22+park+lewisian+torridon&pg=PA45). In Trewin N.H. (ed.). *The geology of Scotland*. London: Geological Society. pp. 45–61. [ISBN](/wiki/ISBN_(identifier) "ISBN (identifier)") [978-1-86239-126-0](/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-1-86239-126-0 "Special:BookSources/978-1-86239-126-0"). Retrieved 23 June 2010. ## Other websites * [Tourism portal](http://www.visitwester-ross.com) *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature](/wiki/Category:Geography_stubs "Category:Geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wester_Ross&action=edit)*. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about the [United Kingdom](/wiki/Category:United_Kingdom_stubs "Category:United Kingdom stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wester_Ross&action=edit)*.
Slioch above Loch Maree Wester Ross is part of the Scottish county of Ross and Cromarty. It is in the northwest highlands. It has some of the most spectacular scenery in Great Britain, and is a tourist attraction. Wester Ross is geographically the western watershed of Ross-shire. Administrative and political boundaries have been changed a number of times. The mountains are made of a very old Precambrian rock known as the Torridonian sandstone formation. It was laid down in the Mesoproterozoic and Neoproterozoic eras.[1][2] It is just a small part of what was once a huge supercontinent. The remains of this are in parts of Scandinavia and North America. These rocks are of Archaean and Paleoproterozoic age, ranging from 3.0–1.7 billion years (Ga) ago. Gallery Shieldaig, viewed from the road to Applecross Sgurr Fiona and the Corrag Bhuidhe pinnacles on An Teallach View east from Sgurr Mhòr over the "Horns" Liathach seen from Beinn Eighe. The two Munro summits are in the background. References ↑ The Neoproterozoic runs from 1000 million years ago to 550 mya. ↑ Park R.G; Stewart A.D; Wright D.T. (2003). "3. The Hebridean terrane". In Trewin N.H. (ed.). The geology of Scotland. London: Geological Society. pp. 45–61. ISBN 978-1-86239-126-0. Retrieved 23 June 2010. Other websites Tourism portal This short article about a place or feature can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it. This short article about the United Kingdom can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
158,265
Osage,_Iowa
Osage, Iowa
9,180,248
| Osage, Iowa | | --- | | [City](/wiki/List_of_cities_in_Iowa "List of cities in Iowa") | | Downtown Osage, Iowa. | | Location of Osage, Iowa | | Coordinates: [43°17′5″N 92°48′44″W / 43.28472°N 92.81222°W / 43.28472; -92.81222](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Osage,_Iowa&params=43_17_5_N_92_48_44_W_region:US_type:city)[Coordinates](/wiki/Geographic_coordinate_system "Geographic coordinate system"): [43°17′5″N 92°48′44″W / 43.28472°N 92.81222°W / 43.28472; -92.81222](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Osage,_Iowa&params=43_17_5_N_92_48_44_W_region:US_type:city) | | Country | United States | | [State](/wiki/U.S._state "U.S. state") | [Iowa](/wiki/Iowa "Iowa") | | [County](/wiki/List_of_counties_in_Iowa "List of counties in Iowa") | [Mitchell](/wiki/Mitchell_County,_Iowa "Mitchell County, Iowa") | | Area[[1]](#cite_note-CenPopGazetteer2020-1) | |  • Total | 2.24 sq mi (5.81 km2) | |  • Land | 2.24 sq mi (5.81 km2) | |  • Water | 0.00 sq mi (0.00 km2) | | Elevation | 1,181 ft (360 m) | | Population ([2020](/wiki/2020_United_States_Census "2020 United States Census"))[[2]](#cite_note-2020_Census-2) | |  • Total | 3,627 | |  • Density | 1,617.75/sq mi (624.63/km2) | | [Time zone](/wiki/Time_zone "Time zone") | [UTC-6](/wiki/UTC-6 "UTC-6") ([Central (CST)](/wiki/North_American_Central_Time_Zone "North American Central Time Zone")) | |  • Summer ([DST](/wiki/Daylight_saving_time "Daylight saving time")) | [UTC-5](/wiki/UTC-5 "UTC-5") (CDT) | | [ZIP codes](/wiki/ZIP_code "ZIP code") | 50454, 50461 | | [Area code](/wiki/Telephone_numbering_plan "Telephone numbering plan") | 641 | | [FIPS code](/wiki/Federal_Information_Processing_Standard "Federal Information Processing Standard") | 19-59745 | | [GNIS](/wiki/Geographic_Names_Information_System "Geographic Names Information System") feature ID | 0459903 | | Website | [osageia.org](http://osageia.org/) | **Osage** is a [city](/wiki/City "City") in [Iowa](/wiki/Iowa "Iowa") in the [United States](/wiki/United_States "United States"). It is the [county seat](/wiki/County_seat "County seat") of [Mitchell County](/wiki/Mitchell_County,_Iowa "Mitchell County, Iowa"). ## Notable residents * James Vincent Casey, Roman Catholic bishop * Hamlin Garland, American writer * [Mike Johanns](/wiki/Mike_Johanns "Mike Johanns"), former Governor of [Nebraska](/wiki/Nebraska "Nebraska") and [United States Secretary of Agriculture](/wiki/United_States_Secretary_of_Agriculture "United States Secretary of Agriculture"); current US Senator from Nebraska * Gerald Leeman, 1948 [Olympic](/wiki/Summer_Olympic_Games "Summer Olympic Games") [silver medallist](/wiki/Silver_medal "Silver medal") in wrestling * Doug Schwab, 2008 Olympic Wrestler * Troy Merritt, PGA Tour golfer ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-CenPopGazetteer2020_1-0) ["2020 U.S. Gazetteer Files"](https://www2.census.gov/geo/docs/maps-data/data/gazetteer/2020_Gazetteer/2020_gaz_place_19.txt). United States Census Bureau. Retrieved March 16, 2022. 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2020_Census_2-0) ["Osage city, Iowa"](https://data.census.gov/profile/Osage_city,_Iowa?g=160XX00US1959745). [United States Census Bureau](/wiki/United_States_Census_Bureau "United States Census Bureau"). Retrieved November 8, 2023. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature in the United States](/wiki/Category:United_States_geography_stubs "Category:United States geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Osage,_Iowa&action=edit)*. | | | | --- | --- | | [Authority control](/wiki/Help:Authority_control "Help:Authority control") | * [NARA](https://catalog.archives.gov/id/10041040) |
| Osage, Iowa | | --- | | City | | Downtown Osage, Iowa. | | Location of Osage, Iowa | | Coordinates: 43°17′5″N 92°48′44″W / 43.28472°N 92.81222°W / 43.28472; -92.81222Coordinates: 43°17′5″N 92°48′44″W / 43.28472°N 92.81222°W / 43.28472; -92.81222 | | Country | United States | | State | Iowa | | County | Mitchell | | Area[1] | |  • Total | 2.24 sq mi (5.81 km2) | |  • Land | 2.24 sq mi (5.81 km2) | |  • Water | 0.00 sq mi (0.00 km2) | | Elevation | 1,181 ft (360 m) | | Population (2020)[2] | |  • Total | 3,627 | |  • Density | 1,617.75/sq mi (624.63/km2) | | Time zone | UTC-6 (Central (CST)) | |  • Summer (DST) | UTC-5 (CDT) | | ZIP codes | 50454, 50461 | | Area code | 641 | | FIPS code | 19-59745 | | GNIS feature ID | 0459903 | | Website | osageia.org | Osage is a city in Iowa in the United States. It is the county seat of Mitchell County. Notable residents James Vincent Casey, Roman Catholic bishop Hamlin Garland, American writer Mike Johanns, former Governor of Nebraska and United States Secretary of Agriculture; current US Senator from Nebraska Gerald Leeman, 1948 Olympic silver medallist in wrestling Doug Schwab, 2008 Olympic Wrestler Troy Merritt, PGA Tour golfer References ↑ "2020 U.S. Gazetteer Files". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved March 16, 2022. ↑ "Osage city, Iowa". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved November 8, 2023. This short article about a place or feature in the United States can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it. | | | | --- | --- | | Authority control | * NARA |
800,296
The_Cat_in_the_Hat_(movie)
The Cat in the Hat (movie)
9,101,710
***The Cat in the Hat*** is a 2003 American family comedy movie directed by [Bo Welch](/wiki/Bo_Welch "Bo Welch") and based on the [Dr. Seuss](/wiki/Dr._Seuss "Dr. Seuss") book of the [same name](/wiki/The_Cat_in_the_Hat "The Cat in the Hat"). ## Cast * [Mike Myers](/wiki/Mike_Myers "Mike Myers") as the Cat * [Alec Baldwin](/wiki/Alec_Baldwin "Alec Baldwin") as Lawrence Quinn * [Spencer Breslin](/wiki/Spencer_Breslin "Spencer Breslin") as Conrad Walden * [Dakota Fanning](/wiki/Dakota_Fanning "Dakota Fanning") as Sally Walden * Amy Hill as Mrs. Kwan * [Sean Hayes](/wiki/Sean_Hayes "Sean Hayes") as Hank Humberfloob and the voice of the Fish * [Kelly Preston](/wiki/Kelly_Preston "Kelly Preston") as Joan Walden * [Dan Castellaneta](/wiki/Dan_Castellaneta "Dan Castellaneta") as the voices of Thing 1 and Thing 2 * [Daran Norris](/wiki/Daran_Norris "Daran Norris") as Astounding Products announcer * [Clint Howard](/wiki/Clint_Howard "Clint Howard") as Kate the Caterer * [Frank Welker](/wiki/Frank_Welker "Frank Welker") as the voice of Nevins * Stephen Hibbert as Jim McFinnigan * Norman Fessler as Mailman ## Reception It is considered one of the worst movies based on a children's book due to Mike Myers' performance and the raunchy humor that isn't suitable for a kids movie. ## Cancelled sequel The movie was going to have a sequel based on The Cat in the Hat Comes Back with Myers and Welch returning but Audrey Geisel banned future live-action movies based on her husband's book made. ### Development [DreamWorks Pictures](/wiki/DreamWorks_Pictures "DreamWorks Pictures") acquired the film rights to the original [Dr. Seuss](/wiki/Dr._Seuss "Dr. Seuss") book in December 1998. However, production did not officially start until after the 2000 Christmas/[comedy movie](/wiki/Comedy_movie "Comedy movie") *[How the Grinch Stole Christmas](/wiki/How_the_Grinch_Stole_Christmas_(movie) "How the Grinch Stole Christmas (movie)")*, by [Universal Pictures](/wiki/Universal_Pictures "Universal Pictures") and [Imagine Entertainment](/wiki/Imagine_Entertainment "Imagine Entertainment"), both of whom also joined to finance, distribute and produce the film with DreamWorks, and based on [another Dr. Seuss book of the same name](/wiki/How_the_Grinch_Stole_Christmas! "How the Grinch Stole Christmas!"), became a commercial success. Brian Grazer, the producer of *The Grinch*, stated: "Because we grew up with these books, and because they have such universal themes and the illustrations ignite such fantasy in your mind as a child—the aggregation of all those feelings—it leaves an indelible, positive memory. And so when I realized I had a chance to convert first *The Grinch* and then, *The Cat in the Hat*, into movies, I was willing to do anything to bring them to the screen." Grazer then contacted [Bo Welch](/wiki/Bo_Welch "Bo Welch") over the phone with the offer to direct the film, and he accepted. When production began, songs written by [Randy Newman](/wiki/Randy_Newman "Randy Newman") were dropped because they were deemed inferior; Newman's cousin, David, instead composed the score for the film. Although Welch and a publicist for Myers denied it, several people said Myers had considerable input into the film's direction by telling some of the cast (namely co-stars Baldwin and Preston) how to perform their scenes. ## Casting [Tim Allen](/wiki/Tim_Allen "Tim Allen") was originally considered for the role of the Cat. The script was initially based on a version of the original book's story conceived by Allen, who admitted that as a child he was afraid of Seuss' "mischievous feline babysitter"; "My dream is to give it the edge that scared me," stated Allen. However, the studio did not commission a screenplay until late February 2001, when Alec Berg, David Mandel and Jeff Schaffer (best known for being writers on the television series *[Seinfeld](/wiki/Seinfeld "Seinfeld")*) were hired by the studio to script the film (replacing the original draft of the film that was written a few years prior by Eric Roth), so the film would not be ready to shoot before the deadline. By this point, Allen was also committed to shooting [Disney](/wiki/Walt_Disney_Pictures "Walt Disney Pictures")'s *[The Santa Clause 2](/wiki/The_Santa_Clause_2 "The Santa Clause 2")*, which was also delayed because Allen wanted a script rewrite. Due to scheduling conflicts with that film, he dropped out of the role. As a result, in March 2002 the role of the Cat was given to [Mike Myers](/wiki/Mike_Myers "Mike Myers"), whom Grazer had an argument with regarding a proposed film adaptation of Myers' *[Saturday Night Live](/wiki/Saturday_Night_Live "Saturday Night Live")* sketch *Sprockets*, which Myers cancelled in June 2000 after being dissatisfied with his own script for it. Myers stated in an interview that he was a long-time fan of the original Dr. Seuss book, and that it was the first book he ever read. In October 2002, [Mike Myers](/wiki/Mike_Myers "Mike Myers"), [Dave Foley](/wiki/Dave_Foley "Dave Foley"), Jay Kogen and Stephen Hibbert did an uncredited rewrites of the script. ## Filming Prior to filming, giant props for the film were stolen from the set; the local police found the props vandalized with [graffiti](/wiki/Graffiti "Graffiti") in a [shopping mall](/wiki/Shopping_mall "Shopping mall") car park in [Pomona, California](/wiki/Pomona,_California "Pomona, California"). Despite this, no arrests had been made and filming was to start the next week. [Principal photography](/wiki/Principal_photography "Principal photography") took place mostly in [California](/wiki/California "California") from October 7, 2002 to January 22, 2003. The neighborhood and the town center was filmed in a rural valley near [Simi Valley](/wiki/Simi_Valley,_California "Simi Valley, California"), where 24 houses (each 26 feet square and 52 feet tall) were constructed. The downtown area outdoor shots were filmed along a Pomona street where a number of antique and gift shops are located. The community decided not to redecorate after filming ended, so the surreal paint scheme and some of the signage could still be seen today as it appears in the film. Because of so much [smog](/wiki/Smog "Smog") in the area, the sky had to be digitally replaced with the cartoon-like sky and colors of the background had to be digitally fixed. According to co-star Amy Hill, Myers was very difficult to work with on set, refusing to talk to anyone on the production (other than director Welch) and completely isolating himself from the cast and crew during breaks in the filming. She also noted that the film ended up having long and pointless retakes of scenes because Myers overruled Welch on whether they were good enough or not. ## Music | The Cat in the Hat | | --- | | [Film score](/wiki/Film_score "Film score") / [Soundtrack album](/wiki/Soundtrack_album "Soundtrack album") by [Bruce Broughton](/wiki/Bruce_Broughton "Bruce Broughton") | | Released | November 18, 2003 | | Recorded | 2003 | | [Genre](/wiki/Music_genre "Music genre") | [Orchestra](/wiki/Orchestra "Orchestra") | | Length | 51:55 | | [Label](/wiki/Record_label "Record label") | BMG Soundtracks | The soundtrack was released on November 18, 2003. Originally, Marc Shaiman was going to compose the score for the film, but due to [Bruce Broughton](/wiki/Bruce_Broughton "Bruce Broughton") already being chosen for the film score, Instead he wrote the film's songs with Scott Wittman. The soundtrack also features a song by [Smash Mouth](/wiki/Smash_Mouth "Smash Mouth") ("[Getting Better](/wiki/Getting_Better "Getting Better")"), which makes it the second Mike Myers-starring film in a row to feature a song by Smash Mouth, which makes it the third Mike Myers-starring film in a row to feature a song by Smash Mouth after *[Shrek](/wiki/Shrek "Shrek")* and *[Austin Powers in Goldmember](/wiki/Austin_Powers_in_Goldmember "Austin Powers in Goldmember")*. The trailer for the film uses a version of "Hey! Pachuco!" by the Royal Crown Revue. The soundtrack also includes two songs performed by Myers, who plays the Cat. Newman's score won a [BMI Film Music Award](/wiki/Broadcast_Music,_Inc. "Broadcast Music, Inc."). ## Track listing All music composed by David Newman, except as noted. | No. | Title | Length | | --- | --- | --- | | 1. | "Main Title - the Kids"   | 8:07 | | 2. | "[Getting Better](/wiki/Getting_Better "Getting Better")" ([Smash Mouth](/wiki/Smash_Mouth "Smash Mouth")) | 2:24 | | 3. | "The Cat"   | 3:50 | | 4. | "Two Things - Couch Jumping - Leaky Crate"   | 5:16 | | 5. | "Military Academy Seduction"   | 3:02 | | 6. | "Mrs. Kwan - Mom Leaves"   | 2:12 | | 7. | "Surfer Cat - the Phunometer"   | 2:22 | | 8. | "Fun, Fun, Fun" ([Mike Myers](/wiki/Mike_Myers "Mike Myers")) | 2:38 | | 9. | "The Contract"   | 1:53 | | 10. | "Oven Explodes - "Clean Up This Mess!""   | 1:36 | | 11. | "Things Wreck the House"   | 2:52 | | 12. | "Larry the Slob"   | 3:10 | | 13. | "Birthday Party"   | 2:11 | | 14. | "S.L.O.W. Drive"   | 2:32 | | 15. | "Rescuing Nevens"   | 4:27 | | 16. | "Clean Up" (Mike Myers) | 0:24 | | 17. | "Hang On"   | 2:53 | | **Total length:** | **48:55** | ## CGI reboot The movie is set to have an animated reboot by [Warner Bros.](/wiki/Warner_Bros. "Warner Bros.") ## Internet popularity Despite the reception, several internet memes based on the movie have become popular among fans who grew up with the movie. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [movies](/wiki/Category:Movie_stubs "Category:Movie stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Cat_in_the_Hat_(movie)&action=edit)*.
The Cat in the Hat is a 2003 American family comedy movie directed by Bo Welch and based on the Dr. Seuss book of the same name. Cast Mike Myers as the Cat Alec Baldwin as Lawrence Quinn Spencer Breslin as Conrad Walden Dakota Fanning as Sally Walden Amy Hill as Mrs. Kwan Sean Hayes as Hank Humberfloob and the voice of the Fish Kelly Preston as Joan Walden Dan Castellaneta as the voices of Thing 1 and Thing 2 Daran Norris as Astounding Products announcer Clint Howard as Kate the Caterer Frank Welker as the voice of Nevins Stephen Hibbert as Jim McFinnigan Norman Fessler as Mailman Reception It is considered one of the worst movies based on a children's book due to Mike Myers' performance and the raunchy humor that isn't suitable for a kids movie. Cancelled sequel The movie was going to have a sequel based on The Cat in the Hat Comes Back with Myers and Welch returning but Audrey Geisel banned future live-action movies based on her husband's book made. Development DreamWorks Pictures acquired the film rights to the original Dr. Seuss book in December 1998. However, production did not officially start until after the 2000 Christmas/comedy movie How the Grinch Stole Christmas, by Universal Pictures and Imagine Entertainment, both of whom also joined to finance, distribute and produce the film with DreamWorks, and based on another Dr. Seuss book of the same name, became a commercial success. Brian Grazer, the producer of The Grinch, stated: "Because we grew up with these books, and because they have such universal themes and the illustrations ignite such fantasy in your mind as a child—the aggregation of all those feelings—it leaves an indelible, positive memory. And so when I realized I had a chance to convert first The Grinch and then, The Cat in the Hat, into movies, I was willing to do anything to bring them to the screen." Grazer then contacted Bo Welch over the phone with the offer to direct the film, and he accepted. When production began, songs written by Randy Newman were dropped because they were deemed inferior; Newman's cousin, David, instead composed the score for the film. Although Welch and a publicist for Myers denied it, several people said Myers had considerable input into the film's direction by telling some of the cast (namely co-stars Baldwin and Preston) how to perform their scenes. Casting Tim Allen was originally considered for the role of the Cat. The script was initially based on a version of the original book's story conceived by Allen, who admitted that as a child he was afraid of Seuss' "mischievous feline babysitter"; "My dream is to give it the edge that scared me," stated Allen. However, the studio did not commission a screenplay until late February 2001, when Alec Berg, David Mandel and Jeff Schaffer (best known for being writers on the television series Seinfeld) were hired by the studio to script the film (replacing the original draft of the film that was written a few years prior by Eric Roth), so the film would not be ready to shoot before the deadline. By this point, Allen was also committed to shooting Disney's The Santa Clause 2, which was also delayed because Allen wanted a script rewrite. Due to scheduling conflicts with that film, he dropped out of the role. As a result, in March 2002 the role of the Cat was given to Mike Myers, whom Grazer had an argument with regarding a proposed film adaptation of Myers' Saturday Night Live sketch Sprockets, which Myers cancelled in June 2000 after being dissatisfied with his own script for it. Myers stated in an interview that he was a long-time fan of the original Dr. Seuss book, and that it was the first book he ever read. In October 2002, Mike Myers, Dave Foley, Jay Kogen and Stephen Hibbert did an uncredited rewrites of the script. Filming Prior to filming, giant props for the film were stolen from the set; the local police found the props vandalized with graffiti in a shopping mall car park in Pomona, California. Despite this, no arrests had been made and filming was to start the next week. Principal photography took place mostly in California from October 7, 2002 to January 22, 2003. The neighborhood and the town center was filmed in a rural valley near Simi Valley, where 24 houses (each 26 feet square and 52 feet tall) were constructed. The downtown area outdoor shots were filmed along a Pomona street where a number of antique and gift shops are located. The community decided not to redecorate after filming ended, so the surreal paint scheme and some of the signage could still be seen today as it appears in the film. Because of so much smog in the area, the sky had to be digitally replaced with the cartoon-like sky and colors of the background had to be digitally fixed. According to co-star Amy Hill, Myers was very difficult to work with on set, refusing to talk to anyone on the production (other than director Welch) and completely isolating himself from the cast and crew during breaks in the filming. She also noted that the film ended up having long and pointless retakes of scenes because Myers overruled Welch on whether they were good enough or not. Music | The Cat in the Hat | | --- | | Film score / Soundtrack album by Bruce Broughton | | Released | November 18, 2003 | | Recorded | 2003 | | Genre | Orchestra | | Length | 51:55 | | Label | BMG Soundtracks | The soundtrack was released on November 18, 2003. Originally, Marc Shaiman was going to compose the score for the film, but due to Bruce Broughton already being chosen for the film score, Instead he wrote the film's songs with Scott Wittman. The soundtrack also features a song by Smash Mouth ("Getting Better"), which makes it the second Mike Myers-starring film in a row to feature a song by Smash Mouth, which makes it the third Mike Myers-starring film in a row to feature a song by Smash Mouth after Shrek and Austin Powers in Goldmember. The trailer for the film uses a version of "Hey! Pachuco!" by the Royal Crown Revue. The soundtrack also includes two songs performed by Myers, who plays the Cat. Newman's score won a BMI Film Music Award. Track listing All music composed by David Newman, except as noted. | No. | Title | Length | | --- | --- | --- | | 1. | "Main Title - the Kids"   | 8:07 | | 2. | "Getting Better" (Smash Mouth) | 2:24 | | 3. | "The Cat"   | 3:50 | | 4. | "Two Things - Couch Jumping - Leaky Crate"   | 5:16 | | 5. | "Military Academy Seduction"   | 3:02 | | 6. | "Mrs. Kwan - Mom Leaves"   | 2:12 | | 7. | "Surfer Cat - the Phunometer"   | 2:22 | | 8. | "Fun, Fun, Fun" (Mike Myers) | 2:38 | | 9. | "The Contract"   | 1:53 | | 10. | "Oven Explodes - "Clean Up This Mess!""   | 1:36 | | 11. | "Things Wreck the House"   | 2:52 | | 12. | "Larry the Slob"   | 3:10 | | 13. | "Birthday Party"   | 2:11 | | 14. | "S.L.O.W. Drive"   | 2:32 | | 15. | "Rescuing Nevens"   | 4:27 | | 16. | "Clean Up" (Mike Myers) | 0:24 | | 17. | "Hang On"   | 2:53 | | Total length: | 48:55 | CGI reboot The movie is set to have an animated reboot by Warner Bros. Internet popularity Despite the reception, several internet memes based on the movie have become popular among fans who grew up with the movie. This short article about movies can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
618,240
Elizabeth_Hawley
Elizabeth Hawley
7,950,977
Elizabeth Hawley, 15 November 2011, Kathmandu, Nepal **Elizabeth Hawley** (November 9, 1923 – January 26, 2018) was an [American](/wiki/United_States "United States") [journalist](/wiki/Journalist "Journalist") and chronicler of [Himalayan](/wiki/Himalaya "Himalaya") expeditions. Hawley was born in [Chicago](/wiki/Chicago "Chicago"), [Illinois](/wiki/Illinois "Illinois"). She was studied at the [University of Michigan](/wiki/University_of_Michigan "University of Michigan"). She moved to Nepal after giving up her job as a researcher for *[Fortune](/wiki/Fortune_(magazine) "Fortune (magazine)")* magazine in New York and visiting [Kathmandu](/wiki/Kathmandu "Kathmandu") on a round-the-world trip. She found work with the [Reuters](/wiki/Reuters "Reuters") news agency covering mountaineering news, including the 1963 American expedition that was the first from the United States to traverse [Mount Everest](/wiki/Mount_Everest "Mount Everest").[[1]](#cite_note-1) Hawley died on 26 January 2018 at the age of 94.[[2]](#cite_note-2) ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) Jolly, Joanna (28 August 2010). ["Elizabeth Hawley, unrivalled Himalayan record keeper"](https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-10268549). BBC News. Retrieved 2014-03-21. 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2) ["'Sherlock Holmes' of Nepal's Himalayas dies at 94"](https://web.archive.org/web/20180127004402/https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/asiapacific/-sherlock-holmes--of-nepal-s-himalayas-dies-at-94-9899052). Archived from [the original](https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/asiapacific/-sherlock-holmes--of-nepal-s-himalayas-dies-at-94-9899052) on 2018-01-27. Retrieved 2018-01-26. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [person](/wiki/Category:People_stubs "Category:People stubs") or group of people can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Elizabeth_Hawley&action=edit)*.
Elizabeth Hawley, 15 November 2011, Kathmandu, Nepal Elizabeth Hawley (November 9, 1923 – January 26, 2018) was an American journalist and chronicler of Himalayan expeditions. Hawley was born in Chicago, Illinois. She was studied at the University of Michigan. She moved to Nepal after giving up her job as a researcher for Fortune magazine in New York and visiting Kathmandu on a round-the-world trip. She found work with the Reuters news agency covering mountaineering news, including the 1963 American expedition that was the first from the United States to traverse Mount Everest.[1] Hawley died on 26 January 2018 at the age of 94.[2] References ↑ Jolly, Joanna (28 August 2010). "Elizabeth Hawley, unrivalled Himalayan record keeper". BBC News. Retrieved 2014-03-21. ↑ "'Sherlock Holmes' of Nepal's Himalayas dies at 94". Archived from the original on 2018-01-27. Retrieved 2018-01-26. This short article about a person or group of people can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
953,596
Non-steroidal_anti-inflammatory_drug
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug
8,406,083
Redirect to: * [Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug](/wiki/Nonsteroidal_anti-inflammatory_drug "Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug")
Redirect to: Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug
1,045,988
Hakuna_Matata
Hakuna Matata
9,060,665
Redirect to: * [Hakuna matata](/wiki/Hakuna_matata "Hakuna matata")
Redirect to: Hakuna matata
595,988
Kaifeng
Kaifeng
9,004,939
**Kaifeng** ([Chinese](/wiki/Chinese_language "Chinese language"): 开封) is a [prefecture-level city](/wiki/Prefecture-level_city "Prefecture-level city") in eastern [Henan](/wiki/Henan "Henan") [province](/wiki/Provinces_of_China "Provinces of China"), [China](/wiki/People%27s_Republic_of_China "People's Republic of China"). It was once the capital of the [Song dynasty](/wiki/Song_dynasty "Song dynasty"), and is one of the Eight Ancient Capitals of China. About 5 million people lived there in 2010. ## Administration Kaifeng administers five districts and four counties: * Gulou District (鼓楼区) * Longting District (龙亭区) * Yuwangtai District (禹王台区) * Xiangfu District (祥符区) * Shunhe Hui District (顺河回族区) * Weishi County (尉氏县) * Qi County (杞县) * Tongxu County (通许县) * Lankao County (兰考县) ## Other websites Wikimedia Commons has media related to ***[Kaifeng](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Kaifeng "commons:Category:Kaifeng")***. Wikivoyage has a travel guide about: ***[Kaifeng](https://en.wikivoyage.org/wiki/Kaifeng "wikivoyage:Kaifeng")*** * [Government website of Kaifeng](http://www.kaifeng.gov.cn) (in Simplified Chinese) * [Kaifeng City Portal](http://www.kf.cn) (in Simplified Chinese) *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [Asia](/wiki/Category:Asia_stubs "Category:Asia stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kaifeng&action=edit)*.
Kaifeng (Chinese: 开封) is a prefecture-level city in eastern Henan province, China. It was once the capital of the Song dynasty, and is one of the Eight Ancient Capitals of China. About 5 million people lived there in 2010. Administration Kaifeng administers five districts and four counties: Gulou District (鼓楼区) Longting District (龙亭区) Yuwangtai District (禹王台区) Xiangfu District (祥符区) Shunhe Hui District (顺河回族区) Weishi County (尉氏县) Qi County (杞县) Tongxu County (通许县) Lankao County (兰考县) Other websites Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kaifeng. Wikivoyage has a travel guide about: Kaifeng Government website of Kaifeng (in Simplified Chinese) Kaifeng City Portal (in Simplified Chinese) This short article about Asia can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
196,499
VampireFreaks
VampireFreaks
1,699,066
Redirect to: * [Vampirefreaks.com](/wiki/Vampirefreaks.com "Vampirefreaks.com")
Redirect to: Vampirefreaks.com
660,088
Howard_County,_Texas
Howard County, Texas
8,980,294
**Howard County** is a [county](/wiki/County_(United_States) "County (United States)") in the [U.S. state](/wiki/U.S._state "U.S. state") of [Texas](/wiki/Texas "Texas"). In the [2020 census](/wiki/2020_United_States_Census "2020 United States Census"), 34,860 people lived there.[[1]](#cite_note-1) The [county seat](/wiki/County_seat "County seat") is [Big Spring](/wiki/Big_Spring,_Texas "Big Spring, Texas"). ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["Howard County, Texas"](https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/howardcountytexas). *[United States Census Bureau](/wiki/United_States_Census_Bureau "United States Census Bureau")*. Retrieved August 3, 2023. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature in the United States](/wiki/Category:United_States_geography_stubs "Category:United States geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Howard_County,_Texas&action=edit)*.
Howard County is a county in the U.S. state of Texas. In the 2020 census, 34,860 people lived there.[1] The county seat is Big Spring. References ↑ "Howard County, Texas". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved August 3, 2023. This short article about a place or feature in the United States can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
51,411
Saturn_Corporation
Saturn Corporation
8,754,334
Saturn Corporation GmbH| | | Defunct | 1985 | | Headquarters | [Munich](/wiki/Munich "Munich"), Germany | **Saturn** was an [automobile](/wiki/Car "Car") maker. It was owned by [General Motors](/wiki/General_Motors "General Motors"). It was established on January 7, 1985. Saturns are sold in the [United States](/wiki/United_States "United States") and [Canada](/wiki/Canada "Canada"), some even being sold in [Japan](/wiki/Japan "Japan"). They are currently known for [European](/wiki/Europe "Europe") styling, and no-haggle pricing. IN the past, their most notable feature was [plastic](/wiki/Plastic "Plastic") body panels. General Motors tried to sell the company. Penske Automtive was going to buy it, but decided not to. Saturn Corporation went defunct on October 31, 2010 as part of [General Motors](/wiki/General_Motors "General Motors") downsizing due to its bankruptcy.[[1]](#cite_note-1) The company was succeeded by [Buick](/wiki/Buick "Buick") as GM's captive import brand. GM also decided to reuse some components of the brand's crossover for [Chevrolet](/wiki/Chevrolet "Chevrolet") and [GMC](/wiki/GMC "GMC") models. ## Models ### Current * Aura * Astra * [Outlook](/wiki/Saturn_Outlook "Saturn Outlook") * [Vue](/wiki/Saturn_Vue "Saturn Vue") * Sky ### Discontinued * Ion * L-Series * [Relay](/wiki/Saturn_Relay "Saturn Relay") * S-Series ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["General Motors to eliminate Saturn brand, phase-out Pontiac"](https://web.archive.org/web/20201026212906/https://leftlanenews.com/2009/02/17/general-motors-saturn-pontiac-viability-plan/). *LeftLaneNews*. Archived from [the original](https://leftlanenews.com/2009/02/17/general-motors-saturn-pontiac-viability-plan/) on 2020-10-26. Retrieved 2019-02-11. ## Other websites * [Saturn official website](http://www.saturn.com/) * [Saturn Owner's Fanclub](http://saturnfans.com/) [Archived](https://web.archive.org/web/20090115212103/http://www.saturnfans.com/) 2009-01-15 at the [Wayback Machine](/wiki/Wayback_Machine "Wayback Machine") *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [transport](/wiki/Category:Transport_stubs "Category:Transport stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Saturn_Corporation&action=edit)*.
Saturn Corporation GmbH| | | Defunct | 1985 | | Headquarters | Munich, Germany | Saturn was an automobile maker. It was owned by General Motors. It was established on January 7, 1985. Saturns are sold in the United States and Canada, some even being sold in Japan. They are currently known for European styling, and no-haggle pricing. IN the past, their most notable feature was plastic body panels. General Motors tried to sell the company. Penske Automtive was going to buy it, but decided not to. Saturn Corporation went defunct on October 31, 2010 as part of General Motors downsizing due to its bankruptcy.[1] The company was succeeded by Buick as GM's captive import brand. GM also decided to reuse some components of the brand's crossover for Chevrolet and GMC models. Models Current Aura Astra Outlook Vue Sky Discontinued Ion L-Series Relay S-Series References ↑ "General Motors to eliminate Saturn brand, phase-out Pontiac". LeftLaneNews. Archived from the original on 2020-10-26. Retrieved 2019-02-11. Other websites Saturn official website Saturn Owner's Fanclub Archived 2009-01-15 at the Wayback Machine This short article about transport can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
367,241
Sir_Sikandar_Hayat_Khan
Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan
3,921,503
Redirect to: * [Sikandar Hayat Khan](/wiki/Sikandar_Hayat_Khan "Sikandar Hayat Khan")
Redirect to: Sikandar Hayat Khan
930,112
Stay-at-home_mom
Stay-at-home mom
8,230,107
Redirect to: * [Homemaker](/wiki/Homemaker "Homemaker")
Redirect to: Homemaker
835,072
Go_(programming_language)
Go (programming language)
8,207,838
Go| | | [Paradigm](/wiki/Programming_paradigm "Programming paradigm") | Multi-paradigm: concurrent [imperative](/wiki/Imperative_programming "Imperative programming"), [object-oriented](/wiki/Object-oriented_programming "Object-oriented programming")[[1]](#cite_note-1)[[2]](#cite_note-2) | | Designed by | Robert GriesemerRob Pike[Ken Thompson](/wiki/Ken_Thompson "Ken Thompson") | | [Developer](/wiki/Software_developer "Software developer") | The Go Authors[[3]](#cite_note-license-3) | | First appeared | November 10, 2009; 14 years ago (2009-11-10) | | [Stable release](/wiki/Software_release_life_cycle "Software release life cycle") | 1.21.4[[4]](#cite_note-wikidata-a3ed7cef5a65cfa2ecdbeace175d35fcf0be23eb-v3-4)  / 7 November 2023; 3 days ago (7 November 2023) | | Typing discipline | Inferred, static, strong, structural,[[5]](#cite_note-structural_typing-5)[[6]](#cite_note-6) nominal | | Implementation language | Go, [Assembly language](/wiki/Assembly_language "Assembly language") (gc); [C++](/wiki/C%2B%2B "C++") (gofrontend) | | [OS](/wiki/Operating_system "Operating system") | many | | [License](/wiki/Software_license "Software license") | [3-clause BSD](/wiki/BSD_licence "BSD licence")[[3]](#cite_note-license-3) + patent grant[[7]](#cite_note-7) | | [Filename extensions](/wiki/Filename_extension "Filename extension") | .go | | Website | [go.dev](https://go.dev) | | Major implementations | | gc, gofrontend | | Influenced by | | [C](/wiki/C_(programming_language) "C (programming language)"), Oberon-2, Limbo, Active Oberon, communicating sequential processes, [Pascal](/wiki/Pascal "Pascal"), Oberon, Smalltalk, Newsqueak, Modula-2, Alef, APL, BCPL, Modula, occam, Erlang, | | Influenced | | Odin, Crystal, Zig | **Go**, also known as **Golang**, is a statically-typed concurrent programming language made by an engineer team at [Google](/wiki/Google "Google").[[8]](#cite_note-8)[[9]](#cite_note-9) ## Example Here is a [hello world](/wiki/Hello_world_program "Hello world program") program in Go. ``` package main // Import fmt library through the standard library. import "fmt" // Define entry point. func main() { // Write to output. fmt.println("Hello world!") } ``` ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["Is Go an object-oriented language?"](https://golang.org/doc/faq#Is_Go_an_object-oriented_language). Retrieved April 13, 2019. Although Go has types and methods and allows an object-oriented style of programming, there is no type hierarchy. 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2) ["Go: code that grows with grace"](https://talks.golang.org/2012/chat.slide#5). Retrieved June 24, 2018. Go is Object Oriented, but not in the usual way. 3. ↑ [3.0](#cite_ref-license_3-0) [3.1](#cite_ref-license_3-1) ["Text file LICENSE"](https://golang.org/LICENSE). *The Go Programming Language*. Retrieved October 5, 2012. 4. [↑](#cite_ref-wikidata-a3ed7cef5a65cfa2ecdbeace175d35fcf0be23eb-v3_4-0) ["Release History"](https://go.dev/doc/devel/release#go1.21.0). 5. [↑](#cite_ref-structural_typing_5-0) ["Why doesn't Go have "implements" declarations?"](https://golang.org/doc/faq#implements_interface). *golang.org*. Retrieved October 1, 2015. 6. [↑](#cite_ref-6) Pike, Rob (December 22, 2014). ["Rob Pike on Twitter"](https://twitter.com/rob_pike/status/546973312543227904). Retrieved March 13, 2016. Go has structural typing, not duck typing. Full interface satisfaction is checked and required. 7. [↑](#cite_ref-7) ["Additional IP Rights Grant"](https://golang.org/PATENTS). *The Go Programming Language*. Retrieved October 5, 2012. 8. [↑](#cite_ref-8) ["The Go Programming Language"](https://golang.org/). *golang.org*. Retrieved 2021-04-13. 9. [↑](#cite_ref-9) ["Golang: the simple programming language from Google"](https://www.ionos.com/digitalguide/server/know-how/golang/). *IONOS Digitalguide*. Retrieved 2021-04-13. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [technology](/wiki/Category:Technology_stubs "Category:Technology stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Go_(programming_language)&action=edit)*.
Go| | | Paradigm | Multi-paradigm: concurrent imperative, object-oriented[1][2] | | Designed by | Robert GriesemerRob PikeKen Thompson | | Developer | The Go Authors[3] | | First appeared | November 10, 2009; 14 years ago (2009-11-10) | | Stable release | 1.21.4[4]  / 7 November 2023; 3 days ago (7 November 2023) | | Typing discipline | Inferred, static, strong, structural,[5][6] nominal | | Implementation language | Go, Assembly language (gc); C++ (gofrontend) | | OS | many | | License | 3-clause BSD[3] + patent grant[7] | | Filename extensions | .go | | Website | go.dev | | Major implementations | | gc, gofrontend | | Influenced by | | C, Oberon-2, Limbo, Active Oberon, communicating sequential processes, Pascal, Oberon, Smalltalk, Newsqueak, Modula-2, Alef, APL, BCPL, Modula, occam, Erlang, | | Influenced | | Odin, Crystal, Zig | Go, also known as Golang, is a statically-typed concurrent programming language made by an engineer team at Google.[8][9] Example Here is a hello world program in Go. ``` package main // Import fmt library through the standard library. import "fmt" // Define entry point. func main() { // Write to output. fmt.println("Hello world!") } ``` References ↑ "Is Go an object-oriented language?". Retrieved April 13, 2019. Although Go has types and methods and allows an object-oriented style of programming, there is no type hierarchy. ↑ "Go: code that grows with grace". Retrieved June 24, 2018. Go is Object Oriented, but not in the usual way. ↑ 3.0 3.1 "Text file LICENSE". The Go Programming Language. Retrieved October 5, 2012. ↑ "Release History". ↑ "Why doesn't Go have "implements" declarations?". golang.org. Retrieved October 1, 2015. ↑ Pike, Rob (December 22, 2014). "Rob Pike on Twitter". Retrieved March 13, 2016. Go has structural typing, not duck typing. Full interface satisfaction is checked and required. ↑ "Additional IP Rights Grant". The Go Programming Language. Retrieved October 5, 2012. ↑ "The Go Programming Language". golang.org. Retrieved 2021-04-13. ↑ "Golang: the simple programming language from Google". IONOS Digitalguide. Retrieved 2021-04-13. This short article about technology can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
177,875
Wappinger,_New_York
Wappinger, New York
8,650,913
**Wappinger** is a [community](/wiki/Community "Community") in [Dutchess County, New York](/wiki/Dutchess_County,_New_York "Dutchess County, New York"), [United States](/wiki/United_States "United States"). | * [v](/wiki/Template:Dutchess_County,_New_York "Template:Dutchess County, New York") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Dutchess_County,_New_York&action=edit) Municipalities and communities of [Dutchess County, New York](/wiki/Dutchess_County,_New_York "Dutchess County, New York"), United States | | --- | | [County seat](/wiki/County_seat "County seat"): **[Poughkeepsie](/wiki/Poughkeepsie,_New_York "Poughkeepsie, New York")** | | [Cities](/wiki/City "City") | * [Beacon](/wiki/Beacon,_New_York "Beacon, New York") * [Poughkeepsie](/wiki/Poughkeepsie,_New_York "Poughkeepsie, New York") | | | [Towns](/wiki/Town "Town") | * [Amenia](/wiki/Amenia_(town),_New_York "Amenia (town), New York") * [Beekman](/wiki/Beekman,_New_York "Beekman, New York") * [Clinton](/wiki/Clinton,_Dutchess_County,_New_York "Clinton, Dutchess County, New York") * [Dover](/wiki/Dover,_New_York "Dover, New York") * [East Fishkill](/wiki/East_Fishkill,_New_York "East Fishkill, New York") * [Fishkill](/wiki/Fishkill_(town),_New_York "Fishkill (town), New York") * [Hyde Park](/wiki/Hyde_Park,_New_York "Hyde Park, New York") * [LaGrange](/wiki/LaGrange,_New_York "LaGrange, New York") * [Milan](/wiki/Milan,_New_York "Milan, New York") * [North East](/wiki/North_East,_New_York "North East, New York") * [Pawling](/wiki/Pawling_(town),_New_York "Pawling (town), New York") * [Pine Plains](/wiki/Pine_Plains_(town),_New_York "Pine Plains (town), New York") * [Pleasant Valley](/wiki/Pleasant_Valley_(town),_New_York "Pleasant Valley (town), New York") * [Poughkeepsie](/wiki/Poughkeepsie_(town),_New_York "Poughkeepsie (town), New York") * [Red Hook](/wiki/Red_Hook,_New_York "Red Hook, New York") * [Rhinebeck](/wiki/Rhinebeck_(town),_New_York "Rhinebeck (town), New York") * [Stanford](/wiki/Stanford,_New_York "Stanford, New York") * [Union Vale](/wiki/Union_Vale,_New_York "Union Vale, New York") * Wappinger * [Washington](/wiki/Washington,_New_York "Washington, New York") | | [Villages](/wiki/Village "Village") | * [Fishkill](/wiki/Fishkill,_New_York "Fishkill, New York") * [Millbrook](/wiki/Millbrook,_New_York "Millbrook, New York") * [Millerton](/wiki/Millerton,_New_York "Millerton, New York") * [Pawling](/wiki/Pawling_(village),_New_York "Pawling (village), New York") * [Red Hook](/wiki/Red_Hook_(village),_New_York "Red Hook (village), New York") * [Rhinebeck](/wiki/Rhinebeck_(village),_New_York "Rhinebeck (village), New York") * [Tivoli](/wiki/Tivoli,_New_York "Tivoli, New York") * [Wappingers Falls](/wiki/Wappingers_Falls,_New_York "Wappingers Falls, New York") | | [CDPs](/wiki/Census-designated_place "Census-designated place") | * [Amenia](/wiki/Amenia_(CDP),_New_York "Amenia (CDP), New York") * [Arlington](/wiki/Arlington,_New_York "Arlington, New York") * Bard College * Barrytown * [Brinckerhoff](/wiki/Brinckerhoff,_New_York "Brinckerhoff, New York") * [Chelsea Cove](/wiki/Beekman,_New_York "Beekman, New York") * [Crown Heights](/wiki/Crown_Heights,_New_York "Crown Heights, New York") * [Dover Plains](/wiki/Dover_Plains,_New_York "Dover Plains, New York") * [Fairview](/wiki/Fairview,_Dutchess_County,_New_York "Fairview, Dutchess County, New York") * [Freedom Plains](/wiki/Freedom_Plains,_New_York "Freedom Plains, New York") * [Haviland](/wiki/Haviland,_New_York "Haviland, New York") * [Hillside Lake](/wiki/Hillside_Lake,_New_York "Hillside Lake, New York") * [Hopewell Junction](/wiki/Hopewell_Junction,_New_York "Hopewell Junction, New York") * Hyde Park * [MacDonnell Heights](/wiki/Poughkeepsie_(town),_New_York "Poughkeepsie (town), New York") * Marist College * Merritt Park * Myers Corner * New Hackensack * New Hamburg * [Pine Plains](/wiki/Pine_Plains_(CDP),_New_York "Pine Plains (CDP), New York") * [Pleasant Valley](/wiki/Pleasant_Valley_(CDP),_New_York "Pleasant Valley (CDP), New York") * Red Oaks Mill * Rhinecliff * Salt Point * [Shorehaven](/wiki/Pawling_(town),_New_York "Pawling (town), New York") * [Spackenkill](/wiki/Spackenkill,_New_York "Spackenkill, New York") * Staatsburg * Titusville * [Upper Red Hook](/wiki/Red_Hook,_New_York "Red Hook, New York") * [Vassar College](/wiki/Vassar_College "Vassar College") * Wassaic * [Wingdale](/wiki/Dover,_New_York "Dover, New York") | | [Otherhamlets](/wiki/Hamlet "Hamlet") | * Annandale-on-Hudson * Bangall * Boston Corner‡ * Castle Point * Chelsea * Glenham * [LaGrangeville](/wiki/LaGrange,_New_York "LaGrange, New York") * Linden Acres * Lithgow * Mabbettsville * Oniontown * Pleasant Plains * Quaker Hill * Rock City * Shekomeko * Silvernails * Sylvan Lake * Van Keurens * Verbank | | Former communities | * Guinea Town | | Footnotes | ‡This populated place also has portions in an adjacent county or counties | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature in the United States](/wiki/Category:United_States_geography_stubs "Category:United States geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wappinger,_New_York&action=edit)*.
Wappinger is a community in Dutchess County, New York, United States. | * v * t * e Municipalities and communities of Dutchess County, New York, United States | | --- | | County seat: Poughkeepsie | | Cities | * Beacon * Poughkeepsie | | | Towns | * Amenia * Beekman * Clinton * Dover * East Fishkill * Fishkill * Hyde Park * LaGrange * Milan * North East * Pawling * Pine Plains * Pleasant Valley * Poughkeepsie * Red Hook * Rhinebeck * Stanford * Union Vale * Wappinger * Washington | | Villages | * Fishkill * Millbrook * Millerton * Pawling * Red Hook * Rhinebeck * Tivoli * Wappingers Falls | | CDPs | * Amenia * Arlington * Bard College * Barrytown * Brinckerhoff * Chelsea Cove * Crown Heights * Dover Plains * Fairview * Freedom Plains * Haviland * Hillside Lake * Hopewell Junction * Hyde Park * MacDonnell Heights * Marist College * Merritt Park * Myers Corner * New Hackensack * New Hamburg * Pine Plains * Pleasant Valley * Red Oaks Mill * Rhinecliff * Salt Point * Shorehaven * Spackenkill * Staatsburg * Titusville * Upper Red Hook * Vassar College * Wassaic * Wingdale | | Otherhamlets | * Annandale-on-Hudson * Bangall * Boston Corner‡ * Castle Point * Chelsea * Glenham * LaGrangeville * Linden Acres * Lithgow * Mabbettsville * Oniontown * Pleasant Plains * Quaker Hill * Rock City * Shekomeko * Silvernails * Sylvan Lake * Van Keurens * Verbank | | Former communities | * Guinea Town | | Footnotes | ‡This populated place also has portions in an adjacent county or counties | This short article about a place or feature in the United States can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
703,294
S36/37:_Wear_suitable_protective_clothing_and_gloves
S36/37: Wear suitable protective clothing and gloves
6,603,843
Redirect to: * [List of S-phrases](/wiki/List_of_S-phrases "List of S-phrases")
Redirect to: List of S-phrases
387,015
Stargate_(film)
Stargate (film)
4,183,556
Redirect to: * [Stargate (movie)](/wiki/Stargate_(movie) "Stargate (movie)")
Redirect to: Stargate (movie)
986,526
Tunja
Tunja
9,087,633
Flag Coat of arms **Tunja** is a city in [Colombia](/wiki/Colombia "Colombia"). It is the capital of [Boyacá Department](/wiki/Boyac%C3%A1_Department "Boyacá Department"). | [Authority control](/wiki/Help:Authority_control "Help:Authority control") | | --- | | International | * [VIAF](https://viaf.org/viaf/136059880) * [WorldCat Identities](https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n82028938/) | | National | * [Germany](https://d-nb.info/gnd/4320013-8) * [Israel](http://uli.nli.org.il/F/?func=find-b&local_base=NLX10&find_code=UID&request=987007557457105171) * [United States](https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n82028938) * [Czech Republic](https://aleph.nkp.cz/F/?func=find-c&local_base=aut&ccl_term=ica=ge775294&CON_LNG=ENG) | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature](/wiki/Category:Geography_stubs "Category:Geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tunja&action=edit)*.
Flag Coat of arms Tunja is a city in Colombia. It is the capital of Boyacá Department. | Authority control | | --- | | International | * VIAF * WorldCat Identities | | National | * Germany * Israel * United States * Czech Republic | This short article about a place or feature can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
471,404
Tapan_Raychaudhuri
Tapan Raychaudhuri
7,094,407
Tapan Raychudhuri in 2009 **Tapan Raychaudhuri** (8 May 1924[[1]](#cite_note-death-1) - 26 November 2014) was an [Indian](/wiki/India "India") [historian](/wiki/Historian "Historian"). He was an expert in [British Indian history](/wiki/British_Raj "British Raj"), Indian economic history and the History of Bengal. He was a Reader in Modern South Asian History at [University of Oxford](/wiki/University_of_Oxford "University of Oxford") from 1973 to 1992. He was also Fellow of St. Anthony College, Oxford from 1973-93 where he remained as an Emeritus Fellow until his death in 2014.[[2]](#cite_note-2) Raychaudhuri died after suffering a series of [strokes](/wiki/Strokes "Strokes") at his home in [Oxford](/wiki/Oxford "Oxford"), England on 26 November 2014, aged 90.[[1]](#cite_note-death-1) ## References 1. ↑ [1.0](#cite_ref-death_1-0) [1.1](#cite_ref-death_1-1) [Historian Raychaudhuri passes away](http://www.thehindu.com/news/international/world/historian-raychaudhuri-passes-away/article6640696.ece) 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2) ["Professor Tapan Kumar Raychaudhuri DPhil, DLitt, Bio"](https://web.archive.org/web/20131002121633/http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/page/861/raychaudhuri-bio.htm). Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities, Cambridge University. Archived from [the original](http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/page/861/raychaudhuri-bio.htm) on 2013-10-02. Retrieved 18 July 2013. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [person](/wiki/Category:People_stubs "Category:People stubs") or group of people can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tapan_Raychaudhuri&action=edit)*.
Tapan Raychudhuri in 2009 Tapan Raychaudhuri (8 May 1924[1] - 26 November 2014) was an Indian historian. He was an expert in British Indian history, Indian economic history and the History of Bengal. He was a Reader in Modern South Asian History at University of Oxford from 1973 to 1992. He was also Fellow of St. Anthony College, Oxford from 1973-93 where he remained as an Emeritus Fellow until his death in 2014.[2] Raychaudhuri died after suffering a series of strokes at his home in Oxford, England on 26 November 2014, aged 90.[1] References ↑ 1.0 1.1 Historian Raychaudhuri passes away ↑ "Professor Tapan Kumar Raychaudhuri DPhil, DLitt, Bio". Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities, Cambridge University. Archived from the original on 2013-10-02. Retrieved 18 July 2013. This short article about a person or group of people can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
650,594
Goliad,_Texas
Goliad, Texas
7,567,974
**Goliad** is a [city](/wiki/City "City") in the [U.S. state](/wiki/U.S._state "U.S. state") of [Texas](/wiki/Texas "Texas"). It is the [county seat](/wiki/County_seat "County seat") of [Goliad County](/wiki/Goliad_County,_Texas "Goliad County, Texas"). The population was 1,908 at the [2010 census](/wiki/2010_United_States_Census "2010 United States Census").[[1]](#cite_note-Census_2010-1) ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-Census_2010_1-0) ["Geographic Identifiers: 2010 Demographic Profile Data (G001): Goliad city, Texas"](http://factfinder2.census.gov/bkmk/table/1.0/en/DEC/10_DP/G001/1600000US4830080). *American Factfinder*. U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved March 14, 2017. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature in the United States](/wiki/Category:United_States_geography_stubs "Category:United States geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Goliad,_Texas&action=edit)*.
Goliad is a city in the U.S. state of Texas. It is the county seat of Goliad County. The population was 1,908 at the 2010 census.[1] References ↑ "Geographic Identifiers: 2010 Demographic Profile Data (G001): Goliad city, Texas". American Factfinder. U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved March 14, 2017. This short article about a place or feature in the United States can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
540,938
Dung_Gate
Dung Gate
7,286,771
[Coordinates](/wiki/Geographic_coordinate_system "Geographic coordinate system"): [31°46′29″N 35°14′2″E / 31.77472°N 35.23389°E / 31.77472; 35.23389](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Dung_Gate&params=31_46_29_N_35_14_2_E_region:IL_type:landmark) **Dung Gate** (also **Gate of Silwan** or the **Moroccan Gate**) is one of the [city gates](/wiki/City_gate "City gate") to the [Old City of Jerusalem](/wiki/Old_City_of_Jerusalem "Old City of Jerusalem"). It is the entrance to the [Western Wall Plaza](/wiki/Western_Wall_Plaza "Western Wall Plaza") from the old city walls. It is the central entrance to the old city from the south. ## Other websites Wikimedia Commons has media related to ***[Dung Gate](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Dung_Gate "commons:Category:Dung Gate")***. * [Pictures of the Dung Gate](http://www.jerusalemshots.com/img_ru8_906p1.html) * [Moors site](http://www.moorsgate.com) [Archived](https://web.archive.org/web/20070107150958/http://www.moorsgate.com/) 2007-01-07 at the [Wayback Machine](/wiki/Wayback_Machine "Wayback Machine") *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [Asia](/wiki/Category:Asia_stubs "Category:Asia stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dung_Gate&action=edit)*. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature](/wiki/Category:Geography_stubs "Category:Geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dung_Gate&action=edit)*.
Coordinates: 31°46′29″N 35°14′2″E / 31.77472°N 35.23389°E / 31.77472; 35.23389 Dung Gate (also Gate of Silwan or the Moroccan Gate) is one of the city gates to the Old City of Jerusalem. It is the entrance to the Western Wall Plaza from the old city walls. It is the central entrance to the old city from the south. Other websites Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dung Gate. Pictures of the Dung Gate Moors site Archived 2007-01-07 at the Wayback Machine This short article about Asia can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it. This short article about a place or feature can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
445,858
Wrotham
Wrotham
4,776,956
**Wrotham** is a village in [Tonbridge and Malling](/wiki/Tonbridge_and_Malling "Tonbridge and Malling"), [Kent](/wiki/Kent "Kent"), [England](/wiki/England "England"). Nearly 2,000 people live in Wrotham. Its [postcode](/wiki/Postcode "Postcode") is TN15. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about the [United Kingdom](/wiki/Category:United_Kingdom_stubs "Category:United Kingdom stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wrotham&action=edit)*.
Wrotham is a village in Tonbridge and Malling, Kent, England. Nearly 2,000 people live in Wrotham. Its postcode is TN15. This short article about the United Kingdom can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
143,429
Bakerhill,_Alabama
Bakerhill, Alabama
8,996,199
**Bakerhill** or **Baker Hill** is a town in [Barbour County](/wiki/Barbour_County,_Alabama "Barbour County, Alabama"), [Alabama](/wiki/Alabama "Alabama"), [United States](/wiki/United_States "United States"), near [Eufaula](/wiki/Eufaula,_Alabama "Eufaula, Alabama"). According to the [2020 census](/wiki/2020_United_States_Census "2020 United States Census"), the city had a population of 211.[[1]](#cite_note-Census_2020-1) Although it existed as an unincorporated village since before 1860, the city was officially incorporated in 1997. ## Geography Bakerhill is located at 31.88 degrees north, 85.15 degrees west (31.88495, -85.15390)[[2]](#cite_note-GR1-2). ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-Census_2020_1-0) ["Atmore city, Alabama"](https://data.census.gov/profile?g=160XX00US0103724). *[United States Census Bureau](/wiki/United_States_Census_Bureau "United States Census Bureau")*. Retrieved August 10, 2023. 2. [↑](#cite_ref-GR1_2-0) ["US Gazetteer files: 2000 and 1990"](https://www.census.gov/geo/www/gazetteer/gazette.html). [United States Census Bureau](/wiki/United_States_Census_Bureau "United States Census Bureau"). 2005-05-03. Retrieved 2008-01-31. | * [v](/wiki/Template:Barbour_County,_Alabama "Template:Barbour County, Alabama") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Barbour_County,_Alabama&action=edit) Municipalities and communities of [Barbour County, Alabama](/wiki/Barbour_County,_Alabama "Barbour County, Alabama"), United States | | --- | | [County seat](/wiki/County_seat "County seat"): **[Clayton](/wiki/Clayton,_Alabama "Clayton, Alabama")** | | [Cities](/wiki/City "City") | * [Clio](/wiki/Clio,_Alabama "Clio, Alabama") * [Eufaula](/wiki/Eufaula,_Alabama "Eufaula, Alabama") | Map of Alabama highlighting Barbour County | | [Towns](/wiki/Town "Town") | * Bakerhill * [Blue Springs](/wiki/Blue_Springs,_Alabama "Blue Springs, Alabama") * [Clayton](/wiki/Clayton,_Alabama "Clayton, Alabama") * Louisville | | [Unincorporatedcommunities](/wiki/Unincorporated_area "Unincorporated area") | * Batesville * Elamville * Spring Hill * Teals Crossroads | | * [v](/wiki/Template:Alabama_towns "Template:Alabama towns") * [t](/wiki/Template_talk:Alabama_towns "Template talk:Alabama towns") * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Alabama_towns&action=edit) [Cities and towns](/wiki/List_of_cities_in_Alabama "List of cities in Alabama") in [Alabama](/wiki/Alabama "Alabama") | | --- | | | [Abbeville](/wiki/Abbeville,_Alabama "Abbeville, Alabama") | [Adamsville](/wiki/Adamsville,_Alabama "Adamsville, Alabama") | [Alabaster](/wiki/Alabaster,_Alabama "Alabaster, Alabama") | [Albertville](/wiki/Albertville,_Alabama "Albertville, Alabama") | [Alexander City](/wiki/Alexander_City,_Alabama "Alexander City, Alabama") | [Aliceville](/wiki/Aliceville,_Alabama "Aliceville, Alabama") | [Andalusia](/wiki/Andalusia,_Alabama "Andalusia, Alabama") | [Anniston](/wiki/Anniston,_Alabama "Anniston, Alabama") | [Arab](/wiki/Arab,_Alabama "Arab, Alabama") | [Ashland](/wiki/Ashland,_Alabama "Ashland, Alabama") | [Ashville](/wiki/Ashville,_Alabama "Ashville, Alabama") | [Athens](/wiki/Athens,_Alabama "Athens, Alabama") | [Atmore](/wiki/Atmore,_Alabama "Atmore, Alabama") | [Attalla](/wiki/Attalla,_Alabama "Attalla, Alabama") | [Auburn](/wiki/Auburn,_Alabama "Auburn, Alabama") | Bakerhill | [Bay Minette](/wiki/Bay_Minette,_Alabama "Bay Minette, Alabama") | [Bayou La Batre](/wiki/Bayou_La_Batre,_Alabama "Bayou La Batre, Alabama") | [Bessemer](/wiki/Bessemer,_Alabama "Bessemer, Alabama") | [Birmingham](/wiki/Birmingham,_Alabama "Birmingham, Alabama") | [Boaz](/wiki/Boaz,_Alabama "Boaz, Alabama") | [Brent](/wiki/Brent,_Alabama "Brent, Alabama") | [Brewton](/wiki/Brewton,_Alabama "Brewton, Alabama") | [Bridgeport](/wiki/Bridgeport,_Alabama "Bridgeport, Alabama") | [Brighton](/wiki/Brighton,_Alabama "Brighton, Alabama") | [Brundidge](/wiki/Brundidge,_Alabama "Brundidge, Alabama") | [Butler](/wiki/Butler,_Alabama "Butler, Alabama") | [Dadeville](/wiki/Dadeville,_Alabama "Dadeville, Alabama") | [Daleville](/wiki/Daleville,_Alabama "Daleville, Alabama") | [Daphne](/wiki/Daphne,_Alabama "Daphne, Alabama") | [Decatur](/wiki/Decatur,_Alabama "Decatur, Alabama") | [Delmar](/wiki/Delmar,_Alabama "Delmar, Alabama") | [Demopolis](/wiki/Demopolis,_Alabama "Demopolis, Alabama") | [Dora](/wiki/Dora,_Alabama "Dora, Alabama") | [Dothan](/wiki/Dothan,_Alabama "Dothan, Alabama") | [East Brewton](/wiki/East_Brewton,_Alabama "East Brewton, Alabama") | [Elba](/wiki/Elba,_Alabama "Elba, Alabama") | [Enterprise](/wiki/Enterprise,_Alabama "Enterprise, Alabama") | [Eufaula](/wiki/Eufaula,_Alabama "Eufaula, Alabama") | [Eutaw](/wiki/Eutaw,_Alabama "Eutaw, Alabama") | [Evergreen](/wiki/Evergreen,_Alabama "Evergreen, Alabama") | [Fairfield](/wiki/Fairfield,_Alabama "Fairfield, Alabama") | [Fairhope](/wiki/Fairhope,_Alabama "Fairhope, Alabama") | [Florala](/wiki/Florala,_Alabama "Florala, Alabama") | [Foley](/wiki/Foley,_Alabama "Foley, Alabama") | [Fort Mitchell](/wiki/Fort_Mitchell,_Alabama "Fort Mitchell, Alabama") | [Fruithurst](/wiki/Fruithurst,_Alabama "Fruithurst, Alabama") | [Fultondale](/wiki/Fultondale,_Alabama "Fultondale, Alabama") | [Gadsden](/wiki/Gadsden,_Alabama "Gadsden, Alabama") | [Gardendale](/wiki/Gardendale,_Alabama "Gardendale, Alabama") | [Geneva](/wiki/Geneva,_Alabama "Geneva, Alabama") | [Glencoe](/wiki/Glencoe,_Alabama "Glencoe, Alabama") | [Goodwater](/wiki/Goodwater,_Alabama "Goodwater, Alabama") | [Graysville](/wiki/Graysville,_Alabama "Graysville, Alabama") | [Greensboro](/wiki/Greensboro,_Alabama "Greensboro, Alabama") | [Greenville](/wiki/Greenville,_Alabama "Greenville, Alabama") | [Guin](/wiki/Guin,_Alabama "Guin, Alabama") | [Gulf Shores](/wiki/Gulf_Shores,_Alabama "Gulf Shores, Alabama") | [Guntersville](/wiki/Guntersville,_Alabama "Guntersville, Alabama") | [Haleyville](/wiki/Haleyville,_Alabama "Haleyville, Alabama") | [Hamilton](/wiki/Hamilton,_Alabama "Hamilton, Alabama") | [Hanceville](/wiki/Hanceville,_Alabama "Hanceville, Alabama") | [Hartford](/wiki/Hartford,_Alabama "Hartford, Alabama") | [Hartselle](/wiki/Hartselle,_Alabama "Hartselle, Alabama") | [Headland](/wiki/Headland,_Alabama "Headland, Alabama") | [Heflin](/wiki/Heflin,_Alabama "Heflin, Alabama") | [Helena](/wiki/Helena,_Alabama "Helena, Alabama") | [Hokes Bluff](/wiki/Hokes_Bluff,_Alabama "Hokes Bluff, Alabama") | [Homewood](/wiki/Homewood,_Alabama "Homewood, Alabama") | [Hoover](/wiki/Hoover,_Alabama "Hoover, Alabama") | [Hueytown](/wiki/Hueytown,_Alabama "Hueytown, Alabama") | [Huntsville](/wiki/Huntsville,_Alabama "Huntsville, Alabama") | [Irondale](/wiki/Irondale,_Alabama "Irondale, Alabama") | [Jackson](/wiki/Jackson,_Alabama "Jackson, Alabama") | [Jacksonville](/wiki/Jacksonville,_Alabama "Jacksonville, Alabama") | [La Fayette](/wiki/La_Fayette,_Alabama "La Fayette, Alabama") | [Lanett](/wiki/Lanett,_Alabama "Lanett, Alabama") | [Leeds](/wiki/Leeds,_Alabama "Leeds, Alabama") | [Lincoln](/wiki/Lincoln,_Alabama "Lincoln, Alabama") | [Linden](/wiki/Linden,_Alabama "Linden, Alabama") | [Lineville](/wiki/Lineville,_Alabama "Lineville, Alabama") | [Lipscomb](/wiki/Lipscomb,_Alabama "Lipscomb, Alabama") | [Livingston](/wiki/Livingston,_Alabama "Livingston, Alabama") | [Luverne](/wiki/Luverne,_Alabama "Luverne, Alabama") | [Madison](/wiki/Madison,_Alabama "Madison, Alabama") | [Midfield](/wiki/Midfield,_Alabama "Midfield, Alabama") | [Millbrook](/wiki/Millbrook,_Alabama "Millbrook, Alabama") | [Mobile](/wiki/Mobile,_Alabama "Mobile, Alabama") | [Montevallo](/wiki/Montevallo,_Alabama "Montevallo, Alabama") | [Montgomery](/wiki/Montgomery,_Alabama "Montgomery, Alabama") | [Mountain Brook](/wiki/Mountain_Brook,_Alabama "Mountain Brook, Alabama") | [Muscle Shoals](/wiki/Muscle_Shoals,_Alabama "Muscle Shoals, Alabama") | [New Hope](/wiki/New_Hope,_Alabama "New Hope, Alabama") | [Northport](/wiki/Northport,_Alabama "Northport, Alabama") | [Oneonta](/wiki/Oneonta,_Alabama "Oneonta, Alabama") | [Opelika](/wiki/Opelika,_Alabama "Opelika, Alabama") | [Opp](/wiki/Opp,_Alabama "Opp, Alabama") | [Orange Beach](/wiki/Orange_Beach,_Alabama "Orange Beach, Alabama") | [Oxford](/wiki/Oxford,_Alabama "Oxford, Alabama") | [Ozark](/wiki/Ozark,_Alabama "Ozark, Alabama") | [Pelham](/wiki/Pelham,_Alabama "Pelham, Alabama") | [Pell City](/wiki/Pell_City,_Alabama "Pell City, Alabama") | [Phenix City](/wiki/Phenix_City,_Alabama "Phenix City, Alabama") | [Piedmont](/wiki/Piedmont,_Alabama "Piedmont, Alabama") | [Pike Road](/wiki/Pike_Road,_Alabama "Pike Road, Alabama") | [Pinson](/wiki/Pinson,_Alabama "Pinson, Alabama") | [Pleasant Grove](/wiki/Pleasant_Grove,_Alabama "Pleasant Grove, Alabama") | [Prattville](/wiki/Prattville,_Alabama "Prattville, Alabama") | [Prichard](/wiki/Prichard,_Alabama "Prichard, Alabama") | [Rainbow City](/wiki/Rainbow_City,_Alabama "Rainbow City, Alabama") | [Rainsville](/wiki/Rainsville,_Alabama "Rainsville, Alabama") | [Red Bay](/wiki/Red_Bay,_Alabama "Red Bay, Alabama") | [Reform](/wiki/Reform,_Alabama "Reform, Alabama") | [Roanoke](/wiki/Roanoke,_Alabama "Roanoke, Alabama") | [Robertsdale](/wiki/Robertsdale,_Alabama "Robertsdale, Alabama") | [Samson](/wiki/Samson,_Alabama "Samson, Alabama") | [Saraland](/wiki/Saraland,_Alabama "Saraland, Alabama") | [Satsuma](/wiki/Satsuma,_Alabama "Satsuma, Alabama") | [Scottsboro](/wiki/Scottsboro,_Alabama "Scottsboro, Alabama") | [Selma](/wiki/Selma,_Alabama "Selma, Alabama") | [Sheffield](/wiki/Sheffield,_Alabama "Sheffield, Alabama") | [Slocomb](/wiki/Slocomb,_Alabama "Slocomb, Alabama") | [Smiths Station](/wiki/Smiths_Station,_Alabama "Smiths Station, Alabama") | [Southside](/wiki/Southside,_Alabama "Southside, Alabama") | [Spanish Fort](/wiki/Spanish_Fort,_Alabama "Spanish Fort, Alabama") | [Stevenson](/wiki/Stevenson,_Alabama "Stevenson, Alabama") | [Sulligent](/wiki/Sulligent,_Alabama "Sulligent, Alabama") | [Sumiton](/wiki/Sumiton,_Alabama "Sumiton, Alabama") | [Sylacauga](/wiki/Sylacauga,_Alabama "Sylacauga, Alabama") | [Talladega](/wiki/Talladega,_Alabama "Talladega, Alabama") | [Tallassee](/wiki/Tallassee,_Alabama "Tallassee, Alabama") | [Tarrant](/wiki/Tarrant,_Alabama "Tarrant, Alabama") | [Thomasville](/wiki/Thomasville,_Alabama "Thomasville, Alabama") | [Troy](/wiki/Troy,_Alabama "Troy, Alabama") | [Trussville](/wiki/Trussville,_Alabama "Trussville, Alabama") | [Tuscaloosa](/wiki/Tuscaloosa,_Alabama "Tuscaloosa, Alabama") | [Tuscumbia](/wiki/Tuscumbia,_Alabama "Tuscumbia, Alabama") | [Tuskegee](/wiki/Tuskegee,_Alabama "Tuskegee, Alabama") | [Union Springs](/wiki/Union_Springs,_Alabama "Union Springs, Alabama") | [Uniontown](/wiki/Uniontown,_Alabama "Uniontown, Alabama") | [Valley Grande](/wiki/Valley_Grande,_Alabama "Valley Grande, Alabama") | [Valley](/wiki/Valley,_Alabama "Valley, Alabama") | [Vernon](/wiki/Vernon,_Alabama "Vernon, Alabama") | [Vestavia Hills](/wiki/Vestavia_Hills,_Alabama "Vestavia Hills, Alabama") | [Warrior](/wiki/Warrior,_Alabama "Warrior, Alabama") | [Weaver](/wiki/Weaver,_Alabama "Weaver, Alabama") | [Wetumpka](/wiki/Wetumpka,_Alabama "Wetumpka, Alabama") | [Winfield](/wiki/Winfield,_Alabama "Winfield, Alabama") | [York](/wiki/York,_Alabama "York, Alabama") | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature in the United States](/wiki/Category:United_States_geography_stubs "Category:United States geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bakerhill,_Alabama&action=edit)*.
Bakerhill or Baker Hill is a town in Barbour County, Alabama, United States, near Eufaula. According to the 2020 census, the city had a population of 211.[1] Although it existed as an unincorporated village since before 1860, the city was officially incorporated in 1997. Geography Bakerhill is located at 31.88 degrees north, 85.15 degrees west (31.88495, -85.15390)[2]. References ↑ "Atmore city, Alabama". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved August 10, 2023. ↑ "US Gazetteer files: 2000 and 1990". United States Census Bureau. 2005-05-03. Retrieved 2008-01-31. | * v * t * e Municipalities and communities of Barbour County, Alabama, United States | | --- | | County seat: Clayton | | Cities | * Clio * Eufaula | Map of Alabama highlighting Barbour County | | Towns | * Bakerhill * Blue Springs * Clayton * Louisville | | Unincorporatedcommunities | * Batesville * Elamville * Spring Hill * Teals Crossroads | | * v * t * e Cities and towns in Alabama | | --- | | | Abbeville | Adamsville | Alabaster | Albertville | Alexander City | Aliceville | Andalusia | Anniston | Arab | Ashland | Ashville | Athens | Atmore | Attalla | Auburn | Bakerhill | Bay Minette | Bayou La Batre | Bessemer | Birmingham | Boaz | Brent | Brewton | Bridgeport | Brighton | Brundidge | Butler | Dadeville | Daleville | Daphne | Decatur | Delmar | Demopolis | Dora | Dothan | East Brewton | Elba | Enterprise | Eufaula | Eutaw | Evergreen | Fairfield | Fairhope | Florala | Foley | Fort Mitchell | Fruithurst | Fultondale | Gadsden | Gardendale | Geneva | Glencoe | Goodwater | Graysville | Greensboro | Greenville | Guin | Gulf Shores | Guntersville | Haleyville | Hamilton | Hanceville | Hartford | Hartselle | Headland | Heflin | Helena | Hokes Bluff | Homewood | Hoover | Hueytown | Huntsville | Irondale | Jackson | Jacksonville | La Fayette | Lanett | Leeds | Lincoln | Linden | Lineville | Lipscomb | Livingston | Luverne | Madison | Midfield | Millbrook | Mobile | Montevallo | Montgomery | Mountain Brook | Muscle Shoals | New Hope | Northport | Oneonta | Opelika | Opp | Orange Beach | Oxford | Ozark | Pelham | Pell City | Phenix City | Piedmont | Pike Road | Pinson | Pleasant Grove | Prattville | Prichard | Rainbow City | Rainsville | Red Bay | Reform | Roanoke | Robertsdale | Samson | Saraland | Satsuma | Scottsboro | Selma | Sheffield | Slocomb | Smiths Station | Southside | Spanish Fort | Stevenson | Sulligent | Sumiton | Sylacauga | Talladega | Tallassee | Tarrant | Thomasville | Troy | Trussville | Tuscaloosa | Tuscumbia | Tuskegee | Union Springs | Uniontown | Valley Grande | Valley | Vernon | Vestavia Hills | Warrior | Weaver | Wetumpka | Winfield | York | This short article about a place or feature in the United States can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
589,801
Nenets_Autonomous_Okrug
Nenets Autonomous Okrug
8,914,443
Map of Nenets Autonomous Okrug within Russia. Upclose map of Nenets Autonomous Okrug. The capital of the okrug, Naryan-Mar (Нарьян-Мар), in 2014. Flag Coat of arms The **Nenets Autonomous Okrug** ([Russian](/wiki/Russian_language "Russian language"): Не́нецкий автоно́мный о́круг, *Nyenetskiy avtonomnyy okrug*, Nenets: Ненёцие автономной ӈокрук, *Nenjocije awtonomnoj ŋokruk*) is a [federal subjects of Russia](/wiki/Federal_subjects_of_Russia "Federal subjects of Russia"). It is located in northwestern [Russia](/wiki/Russia "Russia"). The capital is [Naryan-Mar](/wiki/Naryan-Mar "Naryan-Mar"). The okrug has a population of 44,110 (2020 census), making it the least populated federal subject in Russia. ## Economy The [oil](/wiki/Oil "Oil") and [gas](/wiki/Gas "Gas") industry make up 99% of the okrug's industrial activity.[[1]](#cite_note-bsafe-1) In 2015, the okrug had the highest [gross domestic product](/wiki/Gross_domestic_product "Gross domestic product") in Russia.[[2]](#cite_note-2)[[3]](#cite_note-3) ## Climate Much of the okrug has [Subarctic climate](/wiki/Subarctic_climate "Subarctic climate"). This means the okrug experiences mild and short summers, along with long and very cold winters. Most of the okrug is also above the [arctic circle](/wiki/Arctic_Circle "Arctic Circle"), meaning [polar nights](/wiki/Polar_night "Polar night") occur every year. ## Demographics In 2010, ethnic [Russians](/wiki/Russians "Russians") were 66.1% of the population. Nenets were 18.6% of the population, the [Komi](/wiki/Komi_peoples "Komi peoples") people were 9.0% of the population and other ethnicities were 6.3% of the population. | Ethnicity | 1939 Census | 1959 Census | 1970 Census | 1979 Census | 1989 Census | 2002 Census | 2010 Census | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | [Russians](/wiki/Russians "Russians") | 67.5% | 68.8% | 64.5% | 65.8% | 65.8% | 62.4% | 66.1% | | Nenets | 11.8% | 10.9% | 15.0% | 12.8% | 11.9% | 18.7% | 18.6% | | [Komi](/wiki/Komi_peoples "Komi peoples") | 12.6% | 11.0% | 13.7% | 10.9% | 9.5% | 10.9% | 9.0% | | Others | 8.1% | 9.3% | 6.9% | 10.5% | 12.8% | 8.0% | 6.3% | | Total | 100% | 100% | 100% | 100% | 100% | 100% | 100% | In 1989, the population was at 54,840 people, but a rapid decrease in population occurred shortly afterwards. The population has seen a slow increase since 2002. ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-bsafe_1-0) [M. Gardin *et al.* Barents Strategy for the Advancement of Finnish Enterprise in the Russian Barents Region, pp. 14 and 19](http://www.ouka.fi/elinkeino/barents/barents_eng.pdf) 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2) ["Федеральная служба государственной статистики"](https://web.archive.org/web/20130603204831/http://www.gks.ru/wps/wcm/connect/rosstat_main/rosstat/ru/statistics/accounts/). Archived from [the original](http://www.gks.ru/wps/wcm/connect/rosstat_main/rosstat/ru/statistics/accounts/) on 2013-06-03. Retrieved 2017-06-30. 3. [↑](#cite_ref-3) [Валовый региональный продукт на душу населения по субъектам Российской Федерации в 1998-2015гг.](http://www.gks.ru/free_doc/new_site/vvp/dusha98-15.xlsx) [Archived](https://web.archive.org/web/20170617183438/http://www.gks.ru/free_doc/new_site/vvp/dusha98-15.xlsx) 2017-06-17 at the [Wayback Machine](/wiki/Wayback_Machine "Wayback Machine") MS Excel документ ## Other websites * [Official website](http://www.adm-nao.ru) [Archived](https://web.archive.org/web/20091201003944/http://www.adm-nao.ru/) 2009-12-01 at the [Wayback Machine](/wiki/Wayback_Machine "Wayback Machine") | * [v](/wiki/Template:Subdivisions_of_Russia "Template:Subdivisions of Russia") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Subdivisions_of_Russia&action=edit) Subdivisions of Russia | | --- | | | | | --- | | **[Federal subjects](/wiki/Federal_subjects_of_Russia "Federal subjects of Russia")** | | [Oblasts](/wiki/Oblasts_of_Russia "Oblasts of Russia") (46) | * [Amur](/wiki/Amur_Oblast "Amur Oblast") * [Arkhangelsk](/wiki/Arkhangelsk_Oblast "Arkhangelsk Oblast") * [Astrakhan](/wiki/Astrakhan_Oblast "Astrakhan Oblast") * [Belgorod](/wiki/Belgorod_Oblast "Belgorod Oblast") * [Bryansk](/wiki/Bryansk_Oblast "Bryansk Oblast") * [Chelyabinsk](/wiki/Chelyabinsk_Oblast "Chelyabinsk Oblast") * [Irkutsk](/wiki/Irkutsk_Oblast "Irkutsk Oblast") * [Ivanovo](/wiki/Ivanovo_Oblast "Ivanovo Oblast") * [Kaliningrad](/wiki/Kaliningrad_Oblast "Kaliningrad Oblast") * [Kaluga](/wiki/Kaluga_Oblast "Kaluga Oblast") * [Kemerovo](/wiki/Kemerovo_Oblast "Kemerovo Oblast") * [Kirov](/wiki/Kirov_Oblast "Kirov Oblast") * [Kostroma](/wiki/Kostroma_Oblast "Kostroma Oblast") * [Kurgan](/wiki/Kurgan_Oblast "Kurgan Oblast") * [Kursk](/wiki/Kursk_Oblast "Kursk Oblast") * [Leningrad](/wiki/Leningrad_Oblast "Leningrad Oblast") * [Lipetsk](/wiki/Lipetsk_Oblast "Lipetsk Oblast") * [Magadan](/wiki/Magadan_Oblast "Magadan Oblast") * [Moscow](/wiki/Moscow_Oblast "Moscow Oblast") * [Murmansk](/wiki/Murmansk_Oblast "Murmansk Oblast") * [Nizhny Novgorod](/wiki/Nizhny_Novgorod_Oblast "Nizhny Novgorod Oblast") * [Novgorod](/wiki/Novgorod_Oblast "Novgorod Oblast") * [Novosibirsk](/wiki/Novosibirsk_Oblast "Novosibirsk Oblast") * [Omsk](/wiki/Omsk_Oblast "Omsk Oblast") * [Orenburg](/wiki/Orenburg_Oblast "Orenburg Oblast") * [Oryol](/wiki/Oryol_Oblast "Oryol Oblast") * [Penza](/wiki/Penza_Oblast "Penza Oblast") * [Pskov](/wiki/Pskov_Oblast "Pskov Oblast") * [Rostov](/wiki/Rostov_Oblast "Rostov Oblast") * [Ryazan](/wiki/Ryazan_Oblast "Ryazan Oblast") * [Sakhalin](/wiki/Sakhalin_Oblast "Sakhalin Oblast") * [Samara](/wiki/Samara_Oblast "Samara Oblast") * [Saratov](/wiki/Saratov_Oblast "Saratov Oblast") * [Smolensk](/wiki/Smolensk_Oblast "Smolensk Oblast") * [Sverdlovsk](/wiki/Sverdlovsk_Oblast "Sverdlovsk Oblast") * [Tambov](/wiki/Tambov_Oblast "Tambov Oblast") * [Tomsk](/wiki/Tomsk_Oblast "Tomsk Oblast") * [Tula](/wiki/Tula_Oblast "Tula Oblast") * [Tver](/wiki/Tver_Oblast "Tver Oblast") * [Tyumen](/wiki/Tyumen_Oblast "Tyumen Oblast") * [Ulyanovsk](/wiki/Ulyanovsk_Oblast "Ulyanovsk Oblast") * [Vladimir](/wiki/Vladimir_Oblast "Vladimir Oblast") * [Volgograd](/wiki/Volgograd_Oblast "Volgograd Oblast") * [Vologda](/wiki/Vologda_Oblast "Vologda Oblast") * [Voronezh](/wiki/Voronezh_Oblast "Voronezh Oblast") * [Yaroslavl](/wiki/Yaroslavl_Oblast "Yaroslavl Oblast") | | [Republics](/wiki/Republics_of_Russia "Republics of Russia") (22) | * [Adygea](/wiki/Adygea "Adygea") * [Altai](/wiki/Altai_Republic "Altai Republic") * [Bashkortostan](/wiki/Bashkortostan "Bashkortostan") * [Buryatia](/wiki/Buryatia "Buryatia") * [Chechnya](/wiki/Chechnya "Chechnya") * [Chuvashia](/wiki/Chuvashia "Chuvashia") * [Crimea](/wiki/Republic_of_Crimea "Republic of Crimea")1 * [Dagestan](/wiki/Dagestan "Dagestan") * [Ingushetia](/wiki/Ingushetia "Ingushetia") * [Kabardino-Balkaria](/wiki/Kabardino-Balkaria "Kabardino-Balkaria") * [Kalmykia](/wiki/Kalmykia "Kalmykia") * [Karachay-Cherkessia](/wiki/Karachay-Cherkessia "Karachay-Cherkessia") * [Karelia](/wiki/Republic_of_Karelia "Republic of Karelia") * [Khakassia](/wiki/Khakassia "Khakassia") * [Komi](/wiki/Komi_Republic "Komi Republic") * [Mari El](/wiki/Mari_El_Republic "Mari El Republic") * [Mordovia](/wiki/Mordovia "Mordovia") * [North Ossetia–Alania](/wiki/North_Ossetia%E2%80%93Alania "North Ossetia–Alania") * [Sakha](/wiki/Sakha "Sakha") * [Tatarstan](/wiki/Tatarstan "Tatarstan") * [Tuva](/wiki/Tuva "Tuva") * [Udmurtia](/wiki/Udmurtia "Udmurtia") | | [Krais](/wiki/Krais_of_Russia "Krais of Russia") (9) | * [Altai](/wiki/Altai_Krai "Altai Krai") * [Kamchatka](/wiki/Kamchatka_Krai "Kamchatka Krai") * [Khabarovsk](/wiki/Khabarovsk_Krai "Khabarovsk Krai") * [Krasnodar](/wiki/Krasnodar_Krai "Krasnodar Krai") * [Krasnoyarsk](/wiki/Krasnoyarsk_Krai "Krasnoyarsk Krai") * [Perm](/wiki/Perm_Krai "Perm Krai") * [Primorsky](/wiki/Primorsky_Krai "Primorsky Krai") * [Stavropol](/wiki/Stavropol_Krai "Stavropol Krai") * [Zabaykalsky](/wiki/Zabaykalsky_Krai "Zabaykalsky Krai") | | [Autonomous okrugs](/wiki/Autonomous_okrugs_of_Russia "Autonomous okrugs of Russia") (4) | * [Chukotka](/wiki/Chukotka_Autonomous_Okrug "Chukotka Autonomous Okrug") * [Khanty-Mansi](/wiki/Khanty-Mansi_Autonomous_Okrug "Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug")2 * Nenets3 * [Yamalo-Nenets](/wiki/Yamalo-Nenets_Autonomous_Okrug "Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug")2 | | [Federal cities](/wiki/Federal_cities_of_Russia "Federal cities of Russia") (3) | * [Moscow](/wiki/Moscow "Moscow") * [Saint Petersburg](/wiki/Saint_Petersburg "Saint Petersburg") * [Sevastopol](/wiki/Sevastopol "Sevastopol")1 | | [Autonomous oblast](/wiki/Federal_subjects_of_Russia#Types "Federal subjects of Russia") (1) | * [Jewish](/wiki/Jewish_Autonomous_Oblast "Jewish Autonomous Oblast") | | * 1Claimed by [Ukraine](/wiki/Ukraine "Ukraine") and said by most of the international community to be part of Ukraine. * 2Administratively part of [Tyumen Oblast](/wiki/Tyumen_Oblast "Tyumen Oblast"). * 3Administratively part of [Arkhangelsk Oblast](/wiki/Arkhangelsk_Oblast "Arkhangelsk Oblast"). | | | | | | --- | | **Other not official subdivisions** | | * [Federal districts](/wiki/Federal_districts_of_Russia "Federal districts of Russia") (by [President](/wiki/President_of_Russia "President of Russia")) * Economic regions (by Ministry of Economic Development) * Military districts (by Ministry of Defence) * Judicial districts | |
Map of Nenets Autonomous Okrug within Russia. Upclose map of Nenets Autonomous Okrug. The capital of the okrug, Naryan-Mar (Нарьян-Мар), in 2014. Flag Coat of arms The Nenets Autonomous Okrug (Russian: Не́нецкий автоно́мный о́круг, Nyenetskiy avtonomnyy okrug, Nenets: Ненёцие автономной ӈокрук, Nenjocije awtonomnoj ŋokruk) is a federal subjects of Russia. It is located in northwestern Russia. The capital is Naryan-Mar. The okrug has a population of 44,110 (2020 census), making it the least populated federal subject in Russia. Economy The oil and gas industry make up 99% of the okrug's industrial activity.[1] In 2015, the okrug had the highest gross domestic product in Russia.[2][3] Climate Much of the okrug has Subarctic climate. This means the okrug experiences mild and short summers, along with long and very cold winters. Most of the okrug is also above the arctic circle, meaning polar nights occur every year. Demographics In 2010, ethnic Russians were 66.1% of the population. Nenets were 18.6% of the population, the Komi people were 9.0% of the population and other ethnicities were 6.3% of the population. | Ethnicity | 1939 Census | 1959 Census | 1970 Census | 1979 Census | 1989 Census | 2002 Census | 2010 Census | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | Russians | 67.5% | 68.8% | 64.5% | 65.8% | 65.8% | 62.4% | 66.1% | | Nenets | 11.8% | 10.9% | 15.0% | 12.8% | 11.9% | 18.7% | 18.6% | | Komi | 12.6% | 11.0% | 13.7% | 10.9% | 9.5% | 10.9% | 9.0% | | Others | 8.1% | 9.3% | 6.9% | 10.5% | 12.8% | 8.0% | 6.3% | | Total | 100% | 100% | 100% | 100% | 100% | 100% | 100% | In 1989, the population was at 54,840 people, but a rapid decrease in population occurred shortly afterwards. The population has seen a slow increase since 2002. References ↑ M. Gardin et al. Barents Strategy for the Advancement of Finnish Enterprise in the Russian Barents Region, pp. 14 and 19 ↑ "Федеральная служба государственной статистики". Archived from the original on 2013-06-03. Retrieved 2017-06-30. ↑ Валовый региональный продукт на душу населения по субъектам Российской Федерации в 1998-2015гг. Archived 2017-06-17 at the Wayback Machine MS Excel документ Other websites Official website Archived 2009-12-01 at the Wayback Machine | * v * t * e Subdivisions of Russia | | --- | | | | | --- | | Federal subjects | | Oblasts (46) | * Amur * Arkhangelsk * Astrakhan * Belgorod * Bryansk * Chelyabinsk * Irkutsk * Ivanovo * Kaliningrad * Kaluga * Kemerovo * Kirov * Kostroma * Kurgan * Kursk * Leningrad * Lipetsk * Magadan * Moscow * Murmansk * Nizhny Novgorod * Novgorod * Novosibirsk * Omsk * Orenburg * Oryol * Penza * Pskov * Rostov * Ryazan * Sakhalin * Samara * Saratov * Smolensk * Sverdlovsk * Tambov * Tomsk * Tula * Tver * Tyumen * Ulyanovsk * Vladimir * Volgograd * Vologda * Voronezh * Yaroslavl | | Republics (22) | * Adygea * Altai * Bashkortostan * Buryatia * Chechnya * Chuvashia * Crimea1 * Dagestan * Ingushetia * Kabardino-Balkaria * Kalmykia * Karachay-Cherkessia * Karelia * Khakassia * Komi * Mari El * Mordovia * North Ossetia–Alania * Sakha * Tatarstan * Tuva * Udmurtia | | Krais (9) | * Altai * Kamchatka * Khabarovsk * Krasnodar * Krasnoyarsk * Perm * Primorsky * Stavropol * Zabaykalsky | | Autonomous okrugs (4) | * Chukotka * Khanty-Mansi2 * Nenets3 * Yamalo-Nenets2 | | Federal cities (3) | * Moscow * Saint Petersburg * Sevastopol1 | | Autonomous oblast (1) | * Jewish | | * 1Claimed by Ukraine and said by most of the international community to be part of Ukraine. 2Administratively part of Tyumen Oblast. 3Administratively part of Arkhangelsk Oblast. | | | | | | --- | | Other not official subdivisions | | * Federal districts (by President) * Economic regions (by Ministry of Economic Development) * Military districts (by Ministry of Defence) * Judicial districts | |
763,895
Allie_LaForce
Allie LaForce
9,202,093
| Allie LaForce | | --- | | LaForce in 2017 | | Born | Alexandra Leigh LaForce (1988-12-11) December 11, 1988 (age 34)[Vermilion, Ohio](/wiki/Vermilion,_Ohio "Vermilion, Ohio"), United States | | Education | [Ohio University](/wiki/Ohio_University "Ohio University") | | Height | 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m) | | Title | Miss Ohio Teen USA 2005[Miss Teen USA](/wiki/Miss_Teen_USA "Miss Teen USA") 2005 | | Spouse(s) | [Joe Smith](/wiki/Joe_Smith_(pitcher) "Joe Smith (pitcher)") (m. 2015) | | **[Beauty pageant](/wiki/Beauty_pageant "Beauty pageant") titleholder** | | Hair color | Blonde | | Eye color | Green | | Majorcompetition(s) | Miss Teen USA 2005 (winner) | | | **Alexandra L. LaForce** (born 1988) is a journalist and beauty pageant titleholder from [Vermilion, Ohio](/wiki/Vermilion,_Ohio "Vermilion, Ohio"). ## Career Allie LaForce, reporter, interviewing basketballer Brad Beal in 2017. She is a reporter for Turner Sports, covering the *NBA on TNT*. She was previously the lead reporter for SEC college football games, a courtside reporter for college basketball games, and the host of *We Need to Talk* on the CBS Sports Network. LaForce also worked as a broadcast sports anchor and reporter for the Cleveland, Ohio, FOX affiliate WJW. ### Beauty pageant #### 2005 She won Miss Ohio Teen USA 2005, and subsequently, Miss Teen USA 2005. The following year, she crowned [Katie Blair](/wiki/Katie_Blair "Katie Blair") as the next Miss Teen USA. ## Philanthropy ### COVID-19 donations She donated to [Cleveland](/wiki/Cleveland,_Ohio "Cleveland, Ohio")´s healthcare workers in April 2020 amidst the COVID-19 panic. [[1]](#cite_note-1) ## Personal life Joe Smith She is the wife of Joe Smith, an athlete, who she married in 2015.[[2]](#cite_note-2) ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["Smith and wife LaForce organize meal delivery"](https://www.mlb.com/news/joe-smith-allie-laforce-donate-meals-to-hospitals). *[MLB.com](/wiki/MLB "MLB")*. Retrieved 2021-05-16. 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2) ["Smith, LaForce balance career schedules"](https://www.mlb.com/news/joe-smith-allie-laforce-balance-schedules-c268862214). *[MLB.com](/wiki/MLB "MLB")*. Retrieved 2021-05-16. ## Other websites * [Allie LaForce](https://twitter.com/ALaForce) on [Twitter](/wiki/Twitter "Twitter") * [Official Instagram account](https://instagram.com/allie.laforce/)
| Allie LaForce | | --- | | LaForce in 2017 | | Born | Alexandra Leigh LaForce (1988-12-11) December 11, 1988 (age 34)Vermilion, Ohio, United States | | Education | Ohio University | | Height | 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m) | | Title | Miss Ohio Teen USA 2005Miss Teen USA 2005 | | Spouse(s) | Joe Smith (m. 2015) | | Beauty pageant titleholder | | Hair color | Blonde | | Eye color | Green | | Majorcompetition(s) | Miss Teen USA 2005 (winner) | | | Alexandra L. LaForce (born 1988) is a journalist and beauty pageant titleholder from Vermilion, Ohio. Career Allie LaForce, reporter, interviewing basketballer Brad Beal in 2017. She is a reporter for Turner Sports, covering the NBA on TNT. She was previously the lead reporter for SEC college football games, a courtside reporter for college basketball games, and the host of We Need to Talk on the CBS Sports Network. LaForce also worked as a broadcast sports anchor and reporter for the Cleveland, Ohio, FOX affiliate WJW. Beauty pageant 2005 She won Miss Ohio Teen USA 2005, and subsequently, Miss Teen USA 2005. The following year, she crowned Katie Blair as the next Miss Teen USA. Philanthropy COVID-19 donations She donated to Cleveland´s healthcare workers in April 2020 amidst the COVID-19 panic. [1] Personal life Joe Smith She is the wife of Joe Smith, an athlete, who she married in 2015.[2] References ↑ "Smith and wife LaForce organize meal delivery". MLB.com. Retrieved 2021-05-16. ↑ "Smith, LaForce balance career schedules". MLB.com. Retrieved 2021-05-16. Other websites Allie LaForce on Twitter Official Instagram account
704,551
Temperance_movement
Temperance movement
9,091,159
*The Drunkard's Progress* (1846) by Nathaniel Currier warns that moderate drinking leads to total disaster step-by-step The **temperance movement** is a [social movement](/wiki/Social_movement "Social movement") against the consumption of [alcoholic beverages](/wiki/Alcoholic_beverage "Alcoholic beverage"). During the 19th and early 20th centuries, the temperance movement became very big in many countries. It led to [Prohibition in the United States](/wiki/Prohibition_Era "Prohibition Era"), which lasted from 1920 to 1933. ## Role of Women The [Woman's Christian Temperance Union](/wiki/Woman%27s_Christian_Temperance_Union "Woman's Christian Temperance Union") (WCTU) started from a movement against saloons and liquor stores. It began in [Ohio](/wiki/Ohio "Ohio"). It spread throughout the [Midwestern United States](/wiki/Midwestern_United_States "Midwestern United States") during the winter of 1873-1874. The movement had over 32,000 women who went into saloons and liquor stores. They did this to disrupt business and stop the sales of alcohol.[[1]](#cite_note-militancy-1) The WCTU was officially started in late November 1874 in [Cleveland, Ohio](/wiki/Cleveland,_Ohio "Cleveland, Ohio").[[2]](#cite_note-2) ## Related pages * [Temperance hall](/wiki/Temperance_hall "Temperance hall") ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-militancy_1-0) Dannenbaum, Jed (1981). "The Origins of Temperance Activism and Militancy among American Women". *Journal of Social History*. **15** (2): 235–252. [doi](/wiki/Doi_(identifier) "Doi (identifier)"):[10.1353/jsh/15.2.235](https://doi.org/10.1353%2Fjsh%2F15.2.235). 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2) Gordon, Elizabeth Putnam (1924). [*Women Torch-Bearers: The Story of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union*](https://www.heinonline.org/HOL/Page?handle=hein.peggy/wotobear0001&id=1&collection=peggy&index=peggy). Buffalo, New York: National Woman's Christian Temperance Union Pub. House. p. 246.
The Drunkard's Progress (1846) by Nathaniel Currier warns that moderate drinking leads to total disaster step-by-step The temperance movement is a social movement against the consumption of alcoholic beverages. During the 19th and early 20th centuries, the temperance movement became very big in many countries. It led to Prohibition in the United States, which lasted from 1920 to 1933. Role of Women The Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) started from a movement against saloons and liquor stores. It began in Ohio. It spread throughout the Midwestern United States during the winter of 1873-1874. The movement had over 32,000 women who went into saloons and liquor stores. They did this to disrupt business and stop the sales of alcohol.[1] The WCTU was officially started in late November 1874 in Cleveland, Ohio.[2] Related pages Temperance hall References ↑ Dannenbaum, Jed (1981). "The Origins of Temperance Activism and Militancy among American Women". Journal of Social History. 15 (2): 235–252. doi:10.1353/jsh/15.2.235. ↑ Gordon, Elizabeth Putnam (1924). Women Torch-Bearers: The Story of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union. Buffalo, New York: National Woman's Christian Temperance Union Pub. House. p. 246.
752,331
Southern_Region_(Eritrea)
Southern Region (Eritrea)
7,977,068
| Southern Zone Zoba Debub ዞባ ደቡብالمنطقة الجنوبيةRegione del Sud | | --- | | Zoba | | Debub Region in Eritrea | | Coordinates: [14°48′N 39°00′E / 14.800°N 39.000°E / 14.800; 39.000](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Southern_Region_(Eritrea)&params=14_48_N_39_00_E_type:adm1st_region:ER)[Coordinates](/wiki/Geographic_coordinate_system "Geographic coordinate system"): [14°48′N 39°00′E / 14.800°N 39.000°E / 14.800; 39.000](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Southern_Region_(Eritrea)&params=14_48_N_39_00_E_type:adm1st_region:ER) | | Country | [Eritrea](/wiki/Eritrea "Eritrea") | | Capital | Mendefera | | Area | |  • Total | 8,000 km2 (3,000 sq mi) | | Population | |  • Total | 1,476,765 | |  • Density | 180/km2 (480/sq mi) | | [ISO 3166 code](/wiki/ISO_3166 "ISO 3166") | ER-DU | **Southern Region** is a region of [Eritrea](/wiki/Eritrea "Eritrea"). It is also known as **Debub Region**. The [capital city](/wiki/Capital_city "Capital city") is Mendefera. The region was formed on 15 April 1996, from the historical provinces of Serae and Akele Guzai. Mount Soira 3,018 m (9,902 ft), the highest point in Eritrea, is in the region. The region has the following subregions: * Adi Keyh Subregion * Adi Quala Subregion * Debarwa Subregion * Dekemhare Subregion * Hadidia Subregion * Kudo Be'ur Subregion * Mai-Mne Subregion * Mendefera Subregion * Segeneiti Subregion * Senafe Subregion * Tera-Emni Subregion * Tsorona Subregion * Shiketi Subregion
| Southern Zone Zoba Debub ዞባ ደቡብالمنطقة الجنوبيةRegione del Sud | | --- | | Zoba | | Debub Region in Eritrea | | Coordinates: 14°48′N 39°00′E / 14.800°N 39.000°E / 14.800; 39.000Coordinates: 14°48′N 39°00′E / 14.800°N 39.000°E / 14.800; 39.000 | | Country | Eritrea | | Capital | Mendefera | | Area | |  • Total | 8,000 km2 (3,000 sq mi) | | Population | |  • Total | 1,476,765 | |  • Density | 180/km2 (480/sq mi) | | ISO 3166 code | ER-DU | Southern Region is a region of Eritrea. It is also known as Debub Region. The capital city is Mendefera. The region was formed on 15 April 1996, from the historical provinces of Serae and Akele Guzai. Mount Soira 3,018 m (9,902 ft), the highest point in Eritrea, is in the region. The region has the following subregions: Adi Keyh Subregion Adi Quala Subregion Debarwa Subregion Dekemhare Subregion Hadidia Subregion Kudo Be'ur Subregion Mai-Mne Subregion Mendefera Subregion Segeneiti Subregion Senafe Subregion Tera-Emni Subregion Tsorona Subregion Shiketi Subregion
67,870
Florida_international
Florida international
498,078
Redirect to: * [Florida International University](/wiki/Florida_International_University "Florida International University")
Redirect to: Florida International University
307,840
La_Salle_University
La Salle University
8,464,903
**La Salle University** is a [private](/wiki/Private_university "Private university"), [co-educational](/wiki/Co-educational "Co-educational"), [Roman Catholic](/wiki/Roman_Catholic "Roman Catholic") [university](/wiki/University "University") in [Philadelphia](/wiki/Philadelphia,_Pennsylvania "Philadelphia, Pennsylvania"), [Pennsylvania](/wiki/Pennsylvania "Pennsylvania"). The university has about 7,554 students. It was founded in [1863](/wiki/1863 "1863"). The current president of the university is Bro. Michael McGinniss. ## Sports The athletics teams of the university are called the Explorers. They have 23 varsity teams and they compete in the [Atlantic 10 Conference](/wiki/Atlantic_10_Conference "Atlantic 10 Conference"). ## Other websites * [La Salle University's Official website](http://www.lasalle.edu/) * [La Salle Explorers' Official athletics website](http://www.goexplorers.com/) | * v * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Atlantic_10_Conference_navbox&action=edit) [Atlantic 10 Conference](/wiki/Atlantic_10_Conference "Atlantic 10 Conference") | | --- | | * Davidson * [Dayton](/wiki/University_of_Dayton "University of Dayton") * Duquesne * [Fordham](/wiki/Fordham_University "Fordham University") * [George Mason](/wiki/George_Mason_University "George Mason University") * [George Washington](/wiki/George_Washington_University "George Washington University") * La Salle * [Loyola Chicago](/wiki/Loyola_University_Chicago "Loyola University Chicago") * [UMass](/wiki/University_of_Massachusetts_Amherst "University of Massachusetts Amherst") * [Rhode Island](/wiki/University_of_Rhode_Island "University of Rhode Island") * Richmond * [St. Bonaventure](/wiki/St._Bonaventure_University "St. Bonaventure University") * [Saint Joseph's](/wiki/Saint_Joseph%27s_University "Saint Joseph's University") * Saint Louis * [VCU](/wiki/Virginia_Commonwealth_University "Virginia Commonwealth University") | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature in the United States](/wiki/Category:United_States_geography_stubs "Category:United States geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=La_Salle_University&action=edit)*.
La Salle University is a private, co-educational, Roman Catholic university in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The university has about 7,554 students. It was founded in 1863. The current president of the university is Bro. Michael McGinniss. Sports The athletics teams of the university are called the Explorers. They have 23 varsity teams and they compete in the Atlantic 10 Conference. Other websites La Salle University's Official website La Salle Explorers' Official athletics website | * v * t * e Atlantic 10 Conference | | --- | | * Davidson * Dayton * Duquesne * Fordham * George Mason * George Washington * La Salle * Loyola Chicago * UMass * Rhode Island * Richmond * St. Bonaventure * Saint Joseph's * Saint Louis * VCU | This short article about a place or feature in the United States can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
779,061
Sembaruthi
Sembaruthi
9,089,003
| Sembaruthi | | --- | | | | [Tamil](/wiki/Tamil_language "Tamil language") | *செம்பருத்தி* | | | | Genre | Soap opera[Drama](/wiki/Drama "Drama")[Romance](/wiki/Romance "Romance")[Family](/wiki/Family "Family")[Love](/wiki/Love "Love") | | Developed by | Zee Tamil | | Directed by | * Ram Kumaradhas (Episode 1-100) * Sulaiman. K. Babu (Episode 101-455) * P. Neeravi Pandian (Episodes 456-852) * M. Shankar (Episode 853-present) | | Starring | * Priya Raman * Shabana Shajahan * VJ Agni | | Theme music composer | Vishal Chandrasekhar | | Opening theme | "Un Peyaril" (Wedding Song) | | Ending theme | "Sondhangal Serndhade" | | Country of origin | India | | Original language(s) | [Tamil](/wiki/Tamil_language "Tamil language") | | Production | | Producer(s) | Bala Sundaram | | Production location(s) | [Tamil Nadu](/wiki/Tamil_Nadu "Tamil Nadu") | | Camera setup | [Multi-camera](/wiki/Multi-camera "Multi-camera") | | Running time | approx. 22–24 minutes per episode | | Release | | Original network | [Zee Tamil](/wiki/Zee_Tamil "Zee Tamil") | | Picture format | 1080i HDTV 576i SDTV | | Original release | October 16, 2017 (2017-10-16) –present | | Chronology | | Related shows | Mudda Mandaram | **Sembaruthi** ([Tamil](/wiki/Tamil_language "Tamil language"): செம்பருத்தி) (transl. Hibiscus) is a popular Indian [Tamil](/wiki/Tamil_language "Tamil language")-language romance and family [drama](/wiki/Drama_(film_and_television) "Drama (film and television)") on [Zee Tamil](/wiki/Zee_Tamil "Zee Tamil") starring Karthik Raj and Shabana Shajahan, both of them became a popular pair on television with Priya Raman in the lead roles. Later VJ Agni replaced Karthik Raj as the male lead.[[1]](#cite_note-1) While VJ Kathir, Sanjay Kumar Asrani, Lakshmi, Dheepthi Kapil and VJ Mounika playing in supporting roles.[[2]](#cite_note-2) It is currently airing every day. This series started from 16 October 2017 on Everyday at 9.00PM (IST) time slot. The story is about a maid Parvathi marries a rich man Aadhitya against his mother Akhilandeshwari. ## Synopsis The story about a rich, strong-willed and stubborn woman, Akhilandeshwari and her elder son Aadhitya's intense love story with Parvathi, a servant working as a cook and how issues spiral out of control to affect their relationship. And also his brother Arun and his wife Aishwarya supports them. Their marriage would be the plot of the story and how the pair faces various turmoils occurring in the form of Vanaja and her cronies forms the rest of the story. ## Cast ### Main cast * Priya Raman as Aadhikadavur Akhilandeshwari Purshothaman; Aadhitya's mother[[3]](#cite_note-3) * Shabana Shajahan as Parvathi Aadhitya; Aadhitya's wife[[4]](#cite_note-4) * Karthik Raj → VJ Agni as Aadhitya (Aadhi); Parvathi's husband and Akhilandeshwari's first son ### Supporting cast * *Oorvambu* Lakshmi as Vanaja; Co-Sister of the Akilandeshwari and Main Antagonist * Janani Ashok Kumar → Dheepthi Kapil as Aishwarya Arun; Arun's wife[[5]](#cite_note-5) * VJ Kathir as Arun; Aishwarya's husband and Akhilandeshwari's second son * Sanjay Kumar Asrani as Purshothaman; Akhilandeshwari's husband * VJ Mounika as Nandhini; Aadhitya's ex-fiancée and secondary Antagonist * Narasimha Raju as Sundaram; Parvathi's father * Jayanthi as Pattamma; A faithfull of Akilandeshwari's family * Singapore Deepan as Vadivelu @ Vadivu; Relative of Vanaja * Sanjay as Ganesh; Parvathi's younger brother * Manobala as Perumal; a rent house owner * Raaghav as JK; An Entrepreneur and Antagonist ### Formar cast * Bharatha Naidu as Mithra; Nandini's sister and also other ex-fiancée of Aadhitya (Died in the serial by self shot) * Shyam (2018 - 2019) → Saif Ali Khan (2020) as Shyam; Aadhitya's loyal and best friend * Jenifer as Uma; Vanaja's simpleton niece * VJ Lekha as Sindhu; Akhilandeshwari's Personal Assistant * Sridevi Ashok as Nandhini (Replaced by VJ Mounika) * Sumathi Sree as Pattamma (Replaced by Jayanthi) * Janani Ashok Kumar as Aishwarya Arun (Replaced by Dheepthi) * Karthik Raj as Aadhitya (Aadhi) (Replaced by VJ Agni)[[6]](#cite_note-6) ## Special episode On August 2019, [Zee Tamil](/wiki/Zee_Tamil "Zee Tamil") held a grand event to celebrate the success of Sembaruthi. ## Lingustic Versions The show is remade into [Malayalam](/wiki/Malayalam "Malayalam") under the title *Chembarathi (TV series)* which is being aired on [Zee Keralam](/wiki/Zee_Tamil "Zee Tamil") and also as *Paaru* on [Zee Kannada](/wiki/Zee_Tv "Zee Tv"). [[7]](#cite_note-7)[[8]](#cite_note-8) | Sl.no | Language | Title | Original release | Network(s) | Episodes (23 June 2020) | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | 1 | [Telugu](/wiki/Telugu_language "Telugu language") | *Muddha Mandaram*ముద్ద మందిరం | 17th November 2014 – 26 December 2019 | [Zee Telugu](/wiki/Zee_Telugu "Zee Telugu") | 1580 | | 2 | [Tamil](/wiki/Tamil_language "Tamil language") | *Sembaruthi* செம்பாருதி | 9 October 2017-present | [Zee Tamil](/wiki/Zee_Tamil "Zee Tamil") | Ongoing | | 3 | [Malayalam](/wiki/Malayalam_language "Malayalam language") | Chembaruthi *ചെമ്പരതി* | 26th November 2018-present | [Zee Keralam](/wiki/Zee_Tv "Zee Tv") | Ongoing | | 4 | [Kannada](/wiki/Kannada "Kannada") | Paru *ಪಾರು* | 21st December 2018-present | [Zee Kannada](/wiki/Zee_TV "Zee TV") | Ongoing | ## Broadcast The Series was released on 16 October 2017 on [Zee Tamil](/wiki/Zee_Tamil "Zee Tamil") and from 16 October 2017 on [Zee Tamil HD](/wiki/Zee_Tamil "Zee Tamil"). The Show was also broadcast internationally on Channel's international distribution. * It airs [Sri Lanka](/wiki/Sri_Lanka "Sri Lanka"), [Singapore](/wiki/Singapore "Singapore"), United States, [Europe](/wiki/Europe "Europe"), [Malaysia](/wiki/Malaysia "Malaysia"), [Mauritius](/wiki/Mauritius "Mauritius"), the Middle East, Africa, East Asia, [South Africa](/wiki/South_Africa "South Africa"), [Australia](/wiki/Australia "Australia") and [North America](/wiki/North_America "North America") on [Zee Tamil](/wiki/Zee_Tamil "Zee Tamil") and [Zee Tamil HD](/wiki/Zee_Tamil "Zee Tamil"). * The drama is episodes on their app [ZEE5](/wiki/ZEE5 "ZEE5"). * It is also available via the internet protocol television service, Lebara, Lycamobil and YuppTV ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["Sembaruthi: Karthik Raj to be replaced in the role of Adithya"](https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tv/news/tamil/sembaruthi-karthik-raj-to-be-replaced-in-the-role-of-adithya/articleshow/79718294.cms). *The Times of India*. 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2) ["TV Serial Sembaruthi completes 150 episodes"](https://m.timesofindia.com/tv/news/tamil/tv-serial-sembaruthi-completes-sembaruthi-150-episodes/articleshow/64178753.cms). *Times of India*. 3. [↑](#cite_ref-3) ["10-12 years ago, acting in a soap was the death knell for a movie star: Priya Raman"](https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tv/news/tamil/10-12-years-ago-acting-in-a-soap-was-the-death-knell-for-a-movie-star-priya-raman/articleshow/62769012.cms). timesofindia.indiatimes.com. Retrieved 2018-02-04. 4. [↑](#cite_ref-4) ["செம்பருத்தி தொடரில் நடிக்கும் ஷபானா"](https://cinema.vikatan.com/tamil-cinema/television/106563--do-you-think-im-a-tamil-girl-asks-sembaruthi-serial-shabana.html) (in Tamil). Cinema.Vikatan.com. 5. [↑](#cite_ref-5) ["Dheepthi Kapil joins 'Sembaruthi'; shares her excitement with fans"](https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tv/news/tamil/dheepthi-kapil-joins-sembaruthi-shares-her-excitement-with-fans/articleshow/79130976.cms). *The Times of India*. 6. [↑](#cite_ref-6) ["'Sembaruthi' Actor Karthik Raj Replaced In The Zee Tamil Show Due To 'unforeseen Reasons'"](https://www.republicworld.com/entertainment-news/television-news/sembaruthi-actor-karthik-raj-replaced-in-the-zee-tamil-show-due-to-unforeseen-reasons.html). *Republicworld.com*. 7. [↑](#cite_ref-7) ["Chembarathi, a new serial"](https://m.timesofindia.com/tv/news/malayalam/chembarathi-a-new-serial/articleshow/66867615.cms). *Times of India*. 8. [↑](#cite_ref-8) ["Watch new serial Paaru from Monday"](https://m.timesofindia.com/tv/news/kannada/watch-new-serial-paaru-from-monday/articleshow/66821894.cms). *Times of India*. ## Other websites * [Zee Tamizh Official website](https://www.zee5.com/channels/details/zee-tamil/0-9-zeetamil)
| Sembaruthi | | --- | | | | Tamil | செம்பருத்தி | | | | Genre | Soap operaDramaRomanceFamilyLove | | Developed by | Zee Tamil | | Directed by | * Ram Kumaradhas (Episode 1-100) * Sulaiman. K. Babu (Episode 101-455) * P. Neeravi Pandian (Episodes 456-852) * M. Shankar (Episode 853-present) | | Starring | * Priya Raman * Shabana Shajahan * VJ Agni | | Theme music composer | Vishal Chandrasekhar | | Opening theme | "Un Peyaril" (Wedding Song) | | Ending theme | "Sondhangal Serndhade" | | Country of origin | India | | Original language(s) | Tamil | | Production | | Producer(s) | Bala Sundaram | | Production location(s) | Tamil Nadu | | Camera setup | Multi-camera | | Running time | approx. 22–24 minutes per episode | | Release | | Original network | Zee Tamil | | Picture format | 1080i HDTV 576i SDTV | | Original release | October 16, 2017 (2017-10-16) –present | | Chronology | | Related shows | Mudda Mandaram | Sembaruthi (Tamil: செம்பருத்தி) (transl. Hibiscus) is a popular Indian Tamil-language romance and family drama on Zee Tamil starring Karthik Raj and Shabana Shajahan, both of them became a popular pair on television with Priya Raman in the lead roles. Later VJ Agni replaced Karthik Raj as the male lead.[1] While VJ Kathir, Sanjay Kumar Asrani, Lakshmi, Dheepthi Kapil and VJ Mounika playing in supporting roles.[2] It is currently airing every day. This series started from 16 October 2017 on Everyday at 9.00PM (IST) time slot. The story is about a maid Parvathi marries a rich man Aadhitya against his mother Akhilandeshwari. Synopsis The story about a rich, strong-willed and stubborn woman, Akhilandeshwari and her elder son Aadhitya's intense love story with Parvathi, a servant working as a cook and how issues spiral out of control to affect their relationship. And also his brother Arun and his wife Aishwarya supports them. Their marriage would be the plot of the story and how the pair faces various turmoils occurring in the form of Vanaja and her cronies forms the rest of the story. Cast Main cast Priya Raman as Aadhikadavur Akhilandeshwari Purshothaman; Aadhitya's mother[3] Shabana Shajahan as Parvathi Aadhitya; Aadhitya's wife[4] Karthik Raj → VJ Agni as Aadhitya (Aadhi); Parvathi's husband and Akhilandeshwari's first son Supporting cast Oorvambu Lakshmi as Vanaja; Co-Sister of the Akilandeshwari and Main Antagonist Janani Ashok Kumar → Dheepthi Kapil as Aishwarya Arun; Arun's wife[5] VJ Kathir as Arun; Aishwarya's husband and Akhilandeshwari's second son Sanjay Kumar Asrani as Purshothaman; Akhilandeshwari's husband VJ Mounika as Nandhini; Aadhitya's ex-fiancée and secondary Antagonist Narasimha Raju as Sundaram; Parvathi's father Jayanthi as Pattamma; A faithfull of Akilandeshwari's family Singapore Deepan as Vadivelu @ Vadivu; Relative of Vanaja Sanjay as Ganesh; Parvathi's younger brother Manobala as Perumal; a rent house owner Raaghav as JK; An Entrepreneur and Antagonist Formar cast Bharatha Naidu as Mithra; Nandini's sister and also other ex-fiancée of Aadhitya (Died in the serial by self shot) Shyam (2018 - 2019) → Saif Ali Khan (2020) as Shyam; Aadhitya's loyal and best friend Jenifer as Uma; Vanaja's simpleton niece VJ Lekha as Sindhu; Akhilandeshwari's Personal Assistant Sridevi Ashok as Nandhini (Replaced by VJ Mounika) Sumathi Sree as Pattamma (Replaced by Jayanthi) Janani Ashok Kumar as Aishwarya Arun (Replaced by Dheepthi) Karthik Raj as Aadhitya (Aadhi) (Replaced by VJ Agni)[6] Special episode On August 2019, Zee Tamil held a grand event to celebrate the success of Sembaruthi. Lingustic Versions The show is remade into Malayalam under the title Chembarathi (TV series) which is being aired on Zee Keralam and also as Paaru on Zee Kannada. [7][8] | Sl.no | Language | Title | Original release | Network(s) | Episodes (23 June 2020) | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | 1 | Telugu | Muddha Mandaramముద్ద మందిరం | 17th November 2014 – 26 December 2019 | Zee Telugu | 1580 | | 2 | Tamil | Sembaruthi செம்பாருதி | 9 October 2017-present | Zee Tamil | Ongoing | | 3 | Malayalam | Chembaruthi ചെമ്പരതി | 26th November 2018-present | Zee Keralam | Ongoing | | 4 | Kannada | Paru ಪಾರು | 21st December 2018-present | Zee Kannada | Ongoing | Broadcast The Series was released on 16 October 2017 on Zee Tamil and from 16 October 2017 on Zee Tamil HD. The Show was also broadcast internationally on Channel's international distribution. It airs Sri Lanka, Singapore, United States, Europe, Malaysia, Mauritius, the Middle East, Africa, East Asia, South Africa, Australia and North America on Zee Tamil and Zee Tamil HD. The drama is episodes on their app ZEE5. It is also available via the internet protocol television service, Lebara, Lycamobil and YuppTV References ↑ "Sembaruthi: Karthik Raj to be replaced in the role of Adithya". The Times of India. ↑ "TV Serial Sembaruthi completes 150 episodes". Times of India. ↑ "10-12 years ago, acting in a soap was the death knell for a movie star: Priya Raman". timesofindia.indiatimes.com. Retrieved 2018-02-04. ↑ "செம்பருத்தி தொடரில் நடிக்கும் ஷபானா" (in Tamil). Cinema.Vikatan.com. ↑ "Dheepthi Kapil joins 'Sembaruthi'; shares her excitement with fans". The Times of India. ↑ "'Sembaruthi' Actor Karthik Raj Replaced In The Zee Tamil Show Due To 'unforeseen Reasons'". Republicworld.com. ↑ "Chembarathi, a new serial". Times of India. ↑ "Watch new serial Paaru from Monday". Times of India. Other websites Zee Tamizh Official website
202,920
Process
Process
8,753,263
| | | | --- | --- | | | This article **does not have any [sources](/wiki/Wikipedia:Citing_sources "Wikipedia:Citing sources")**. You can help Wikipedia by finding [good](/wiki/Wikipedia:RELIABLE "Wikipedia:RELIABLE") sources, and adding them. *(February 2013)* | A **process** is a series of stages in [time](/wiki/Time "Time") where the last stage is the product, [result](https://simple.wiktionary.org/wiki/result "wikt:result") or [goal](https://simple.wiktionary.org/wiki/goal "wikt:goal"). Processes may be *[planned](/wiki/Planning "Planning")* or *unplanned*. A process planned by humans has a purpose. It is a course of [action](https://simple.wiktionary.org/wiki/action "wikt:action"), or a procedure, to achieve a result, or an end-product. The sequence from start to finish is the plan. A plan may be [written](/wiki/Writing "Writing"), or [programmed](/wiki/Program "Program"), or just held in the [mind](/wiki/Mind "Mind"). Examples include building a house, fighting a [battle](/wiki/Battle "Battle"). sowing crops; organising a [wedding](/wiki/Wedding "Wedding"). Natural processes are not planned by humans. They are investigated and described. Examples: [volcanic eruption](/wiki/Volcanic_eruption "Volcanic eruption"), the evolution of the [solar system](/wiki/Solar_system "Solar system"); biological [evolution](/wiki/Evolution "Evolution"); the [melting](/wiki/Melting "Melting") of [ice](/wiki/Ice "Ice") and other [phase changes](/wiki/Phase_change "Phase change"); the process of [development](/wiki/Development "Development") from [egg](/wiki/Egg_(biology) "Egg (biology)") to [adult](/wiki/Adult "Adult"). Processes often repeat whenever certain conditions hold. Example: car low on petrol/gas, visit garage and refill. Most computer programs are of this type. Processes may be circular: planets revolve around sun; eggs produce chickens, and chickens produce eggs. [Rain](/wiki/Rain "Rain") water flows into [rivers](/wiki/River "River"), [evaporates](/wiki/Evaporate "Evaporate"), and returns as rain. Processes, especially those which are cyclical, may be subject to [feedback](/wiki/Feedback "Feedback"). A simple case is a central [heating](/wiki/Heating "Heating") system. ## References
| | | | --- | --- | | | This article does not have any sources. You can help Wikipedia by finding good sources, and adding them. (February 2013) | A process is a series of stages in time where the last stage is the product, result or goal. Processes may be planned or unplanned. A process planned by humans has a purpose. It is a course of action, or a procedure, to achieve a result, or an end-product. The sequence from start to finish is the plan. A plan may be written, or programmed, or just held in the mind. Examples include building a house, fighting a battle. sowing crops; organising a wedding. Natural processes are not planned by humans. They are investigated and described. Examples: volcanic eruption, the evolution of the solar system; biological evolution; the melting of ice and other phase changes; the process of development from egg to adult. Processes often repeat whenever certain conditions hold. Example: car low on petrol/gas, visit garage and refill. Most computer programs are of this type. Processes may be circular: planets revolve around sun; eggs produce chickens, and chickens produce eggs. Rain water flows into rivers, evaporates, and returns as rain. Processes, especially those which are cyclical, may be subject to feedback. A simple case is a central heating system. References
141,414
Aina_(movie)
Aina (movie)
8,052,045
| **Aina** | | --- | | Directed by | Nazr-ul-Islam | | Written by | Bashir Niaz | | Produced by | M. Ahmed Shamsi | | Starring | ShabnamNadeemRehanBaharShahzeb (child actor)Qavi (guest actor) | | Cinematography | Afzal Chaudhry | | Edited by | Irshad Durrani | | Music by | Robin Ghosh | | Release date | 18 March 1977 | | Running time | approx. 3 hours | | Country | [Pakistan](/wiki/Pakistan "Pakistan") | | Language | Urdu | ***Aina***, ([Urdu](/wiki/Urdu_language "Urdu language"): آئینہ) also known as ***The Mirror***, is a 1974 [Pakistani](/wiki/Pakistan "Pakistan") [movie](/wiki/Movie "Movie"). It was directed by Nazr-ul-Islam. Singers are Nayyara Noor, Mehnaz and Alamgir. The movie starred Shabnam and Nadeem in the lead roles. It is the longest running Pakistani movie on record. The movie influenced many [Indian directors](/wiki/Indian_cinema "Indian cinema") such as Dharmesh Darshan's Raja Hindustani, Aziz Mirza's Chalte Chalte and Deepak Sareen's Aaina. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [movies](/wiki/Category:Movie_stubs "Category:Movie stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Aina_(movie)&action=edit)*.
| Aina | | --- | | Directed by | Nazr-ul-Islam | | Written by | Bashir Niaz | | Produced by | M. Ahmed Shamsi | | Starring | ShabnamNadeemRehanBaharShahzeb (child actor)Qavi (guest actor) | | Cinematography | Afzal Chaudhry | | Edited by | Irshad Durrani | | Music by | Robin Ghosh | | Release date | 18 March 1977 | | Running time | approx. 3 hours | | Country | Pakistan | | Language | Urdu | Aina, (Urdu: آئینہ) also known as The Mirror, is a 1974 Pakistani movie. It was directed by Nazr-ul-Islam. Singers are Nayyara Noor, Mehnaz and Alamgir. The movie starred Shabnam and Nadeem in the lead roles. It is the longest running Pakistani movie on record. The movie influenced many Indian directors such as Dharmesh Darshan's Raja Hindustani, Aziz Mirza's Chalte Chalte and Deepak Sareen's Aaina. This short article about movies can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
98,528
List_of_rivers_of_Africa
List of rivers of Africa
6,555,205
The following is a **list of [rivers](/wiki/River "River") of [Africa](/wiki/Africa "Africa")**, by [region](/wiki/Region "Region"). ## Southern Africa * Berg - [South Africa](/wiki/South_Africa "South Africa") * Anzac - [Angola](/wiki/Angola "Angola") * Fish - [Namibia](/wiki/Namibia "Namibia") * Groot - [South Africa](/wiki/South_Africa "South Africa") * Ihosy River - [Madagascar](/wiki/Madagascar "Madagascar") * Kuiseb - [Namibia](/wiki/Namibia "Namibia") * Kunene - [Angola](/wiki/Angola "Angola") *(as Cunene)*, [Namibia](/wiki/Namibia "Namibia"), [Botswana](/wiki/Botswana "Botswana") * Kwando - [Namibia](/wiki/Namibia "Namibia"), also known as *Linyanti* and *Chobe* in places * [Limpopo](/wiki/Limpopo_River "Limpopo River") - [Mozambique](/wiki/Mozambique "Mozambique"), [South Africa](/wiki/South_Africa "South Africa"), [Zimbabwe](/wiki/Zimbabwe "Zimbabwe"), [Botswana](/wiki/Botswana "Botswana") * Mangoky River - [Madagascar](/wiki/Madagascar "Madagascar") * Mania River - [Madagascar](/wiki/Madagascar "Madagascar") * Molopo - [Botswana](/wiki/Botswana "Botswana"), [South Africa](/wiki/South_Africa "South Africa") * Okavango - [Botswana](/wiki/Botswana "Botswana"), [Namibia](/wiki/Namibia "Namibia"), [Angola](/wiki/Angola "Angola") *(as "Cubango")* * Onilahy River - [Madagascar](/wiki/Madagascar "Madagascar") * [Orange](/wiki/Orange_River "Orange River") - [South Africa](/wiki/South_Africa "South Africa"), [Lesotho](/wiki/Lesotho "Lesotho"), [Namibia](/wiki/Namibia "Namibia") * Tugela - [South Africa](/wiki/South_Africa "South Africa") * Vaal - [South Africa](/wiki/South_Africa "South Africa") * [Zambezi](/wiki/Zambezi "Zambezi") - [Angola](/wiki/Angola "Angola"), [Zambia](/wiki/Zambia "Zambia"), [Namibia](/wiki/Namibia "Namibia"), [Zimbabwe](/wiki/Zimbabwe "Zimbabwe"), [Mozambique](/wiki/Mozambique "Mozambique") ## Central Africa * Chari - Central African Republic, Chad, Cameroon + Logone * [Congo](/wiki/Congo_River "Congo River") + [Kwango](/wiki/Kwango_River "Kwango River") + [Kasai](/wiki/Kasai_River "Kasai River") + Lualaba + Lomami + [Ubangi](/wiki/Ubangi_River "Ubangi River") - Democratic Republic of the Congo, Republic of the Congo, Central African Republic *(as "Oubangui")* - Uele - Mbomou * Gabon * Kouilou-Niari - Congo * Mbini * Ntem * Nyanga - Gabon * Ogooué - Gabon ## East Africa * Awash - Ethiopia * [Jubba](/wiki/Jubba_River "Jubba River") - Somalia + Dawa - Ethiopia + Gebele - Ethiopia * Kerio - [Kenya](/wiki/Kenya "Kenya") * Maputo - Mozambique * Mara - Kenya, Tanzania * Omo - Ethiopia * Rufiji - Tanzania * Ruvuma (Rovuma) - Tanzania, Mozambique * [Shebelle](/wiki/Shebelle_River "Shebelle River") - Ethiopia, Somalia * Tana - Kenya * Victoria Nile - Uganda * Albert Nile - Uganda * Kazinga Channel - Uganda * Kagera River (Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda) ## West Africa * [Bandama](/wiki/Bandama_River "Bandama River") - [Côte d'Ivoire](/wiki/C%C3%B4te_d%27Ivoire "Côte d'Ivoire") * Cavally - [Liberia](/wiki/Liberia "Liberia"), [Côte d'Ivoire](/wiki/C%C3%B4te_d%27Ivoire "Côte d'Ivoire") * [Gambia](/wiki/Gambia_River "Gambia River") - [Gambia](/wiki/Gambia "Gambia"), [Senegal](/wiki/Senegal "Senegal") * [Niger](/wiki/Niger_River "Niger River") - [Nigeria](/wiki/Nigeria "Nigeria"), [Benin](/wiki/Benin "Benin"), [Niger](/wiki/Niger "Niger"), [Mali](/wiki/Mali "Mali"), [Guinea](/wiki/Guinea "Guinea") * Oueme - [Benin](/wiki/Benin "Benin") * Saint Paul - [Liberia](/wiki/Liberia "Liberia") * Sanaga - [Cameroon](/wiki/Cameroon "Cameroon") * Sankarani- [Mali](/wiki/Mali "Mali") * [Senegal](/wiki/Senegal_River "Senegal River") - [Senegal](/wiki/Senegal "Senegal"), [Mauritania](/wiki/Mauritania "Mauritania"), [Mali](/wiki/Mali "Mali") * [Volta](/wiki/Volta_River "Volta River") - [Ghana](/wiki/Ghana "Ghana"), [Burkina Faso](/wiki/Burkina_Faso "Burkina Faso") * [Benue](/wiki/Benue "Benue") - Nigeria ## North Africa * [Nile](/wiki/Nile "Nile") - [Egypt](/wiki/Egypt "Egypt"), [Sudan](/wiki/Sudan "Sudan"), [Ethiopia](/wiki/Ethiopia "Ethiopia") + Atbarah River - [Sudan](/wiki/Sudan "Sudan"), [Ethiopia](/wiki/Ethiopia "Ethiopia") + [Blue Nile](/wiki/Blue_Nile "Blue Nile") - [Sudan](/wiki/Sudan "Sudan"), [Ethiopia](/wiki/Ethiopia "Ethiopia") + Didessa River - [Ethiopia](/wiki/Ethiopia "Ethiopia") + Mountain Nile - [Sudan](/wiki/Sudan "Sudan") + Bahr el Zeraf - [Sudan](/wiki/Sudan "Sudan") + [White Nile](/wiki/White_Nile "White Nile") - [Sudan](/wiki/Sudan "Sudan") * [Bou Regreg](/wiki/Bou_Regreg "Bou Regreg") - [Morocco](/wiki/Morocco "Morocco") * Draa River - [Algeria](/wiki/Algeria "Algeria"), [Morocco](/wiki/Morocco "Morocco") * Moulouya River - [Morocco](/wiki/Morocco "Morocco") * Oum Er-Rbia River - [Morocco](/wiki/Morocco "Morocco") * Sebou River - [Morocco](/wiki/Morocco "Morocco")
The following is a list of rivers of Africa, by region. Southern Africa Berg - South Africa Anzac - Angola Fish - Namibia Groot - South Africa Ihosy River - Madagascar Kuiseb - Namibia Kunene - Angola (as Cunene), Namibia, Botswana Kwando - Namibia, also known as Linyanti and Chobe in places Limpopo - Mozambique, South Africa, Zimbabwe, Botswana Mangoky River - Madagascar Mania River - Madagascar Molopo - Botswana, South Africa Okavango - Botswana, Namibia, Angola (as "Cubango") Onilahy River - Madagascar Orange - South Africa, Lesotho, Namibia Tugela - South Africa Vaal - South Africa Zambezi - Angola, Zambia, Namibia, Zimbabwe, Mozambique Central Africa Chari - Central African Republic, Chad, Cameroon Logone Congo Kwango Kasai Lualaba Lomami Ubangi - Democratic Republic of the Congo, Republic of the Congo, Central African Republic (as "Oubangui") Uele Mbomou Gabon Kouilou-Niari - Congo Mbini Ntem Nyanga - Gabon Ogooué - Gabon East Africa Awash - Ethiopia Jubba - Somalia Dawa - Ethiopia Gebele - Ethiopia Kerio - Kenya Maputo - Mozambique Mara - Kenya, Tanzania Omo - Ethiopia Rufiji - Tanzania Ruvuma (Rovuma) - Tanzania, Mozambique Shebelle - Ethiopia, Somalia Tana - Kenya Victoria Nile - Uganda Albert Nile - Uganda Kazinga Channel - Uganda Kagera River (Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda) West Africa Bandama - Côte d'Ivoire Cavally - Liberia, Côte d'Ivoire Gambia - Gambia, Senegal Niger - Nigeria, Benin, Niger, Mali, Guinea Oueme - Benin Saint Paul - Liberia Sanaga - Cameroon Sankarani- Mali Senegal - Senegal, Mauritania, Mali Volta - Ghana, Burkina Faso Benue - Nigeria North Africa Nile - Egypt, Sudan, Ethiopia Atbarah River - Sudan, Ethiopia Blue Nile - Sudan, Ethiopia Didessa River - Ethiopia Mountain Nile - Sudan Bahr el Zeraf - Sudan White Nile - Sudan Bou Regreg - Morocco Draa River - Algeria, Morocco Moulouya River - Morocco Oum Er-Rbia River - Morocco Sebou River - Morocco
520,339
Azerbaijan_State_Academic_Opera_and_Ballet_Theater
Azerbaijan State Academic Opera and Ballet Theater
5,248,391
Redirect to: * [Azerbaijan State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre](/wiki/Azerbaijan_State_Academic_Opera_and_Ballet_Theatre "Azerbaijan State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre")
Redirect to: Azerbaijan State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre
203,632
St._Bernard's_F.C.
St. Bernard's F.C.
8,419,297
St. Bernard's F.C.| Full name | Saint Bernard's Football Club | | Founded | 1874 | | Dissolved | 1943 | **St. Bernard's F.C.** was a [football](/wiki/Association_football "Association football") club which has played in [Scotland](/wiki/Scotland "Scotland"). *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [sports](/wiki/Category:Sports_stubs "Category:Sports stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St._Bernard%27s_F.C.&action=edit)*. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about the [United Kingdom](/wiki/Category:United_Kingdom_stubs "Category:United Kingdom stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St._Bernard%27s_F.C.&action=edit)*.
St. Bernard's F.C.| Full name | Saint Bernard's Football Club | | Founded | 1874 | | Dissolved | 1943 | St. Bernard's F.C. was a football club which has played in Scotland. This short article about sports can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it. This short article about the United Kingdom can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
1,025,223
Carl_Schuhmann
Carl Schuhmann
9,140,052
| | | | | | | | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | | | | --- | | | | **Personal information** | | **Country Represented:** | [Germany](/wiki/German_Empire "German Empire") | | **Discipline:** | MAG | | | | Medal record | | --- | | Representing  [Germany](/wiki/German_Empire "German Empire") | | Men's [artistic gymnastics](/wiki/Gymnastics_at_the_Summer_Olympics "Gymnastics at the Summer Olympics") | | | [1896 Athens](/wiki/1896_Summer_Olympics "1896 Summer Olympics") | Team parallel bars | | | [1896 Athens](/wiki/1896_Summer_Olympics "1896 Summer Olympics") | Team horizontal bar | | | [1896 Athens](/wiki/1896_Summer_Olympics "1896 Summer Olympics") | Vault | | Men's wrestling | | | [1896 Athens](/wiki/1896_Summer_Olympics "1896 Summer Olympics") | Greco-Roman | | **Carl August Berthold Schuhmann** was an athlete from [Germany](/wiki/Germany "Germany"). Carl won four Olympic titles at the [1896 Summer Olympics](/wiki/1896_Summer_Olympics "1896 Summer Olympics"). He was born on May 12, 1869 and died on March 24, 1946.[[1]](#cite_note-1) ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) [Carl Schuhmann](https://www.olympedia.org/athletes/70502) *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [sports person](/wiki/Category:Sportspeople_stubs "Category:Sportspeople stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Carl_Schuhmann&action=edit)*.
| | | | | | | | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | | | | --- | | | | Personal information | | Country Represented: | Germany | | Discipline: | MAG | | | | Medal record | | --- | | Representing  Germany | | Men's artistic gymnastics | | | 1896 Athens | Team parallel bars | | | 1896 Athens | Team horizontal bar | | | 1896 Athens | Vault | | Men's wrestling | | | 1896 Athens | Greco-Roman | | Carl August Berthold Schuhmann was an athlete from Germany. Carl won four Olympic titles at the 1896 Summer Olympics. He was born on May 12, 1869 and died on March 24, 1946.[1] References ↑ Carl Schuhmann This short article about a sports person can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
854,561
Gauting
Gauting
8,379,568
| Gauting | | --- | | [Municipality](/wiki/Municipalities_of_Germany "Municipalities of Germany") | | Fußberg Castle | | Coat of arms | | Location of Gauting within Starnberg district | | Gauting Show map of GermanyGauting Show map of Bavaria | | Coordinates: [48°04′04″N 11°22′26″E / 48.06778°N 11.37389°E / 48.06778; 11.37389](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Gauting&params=48_04_04_N_11_22_26_E_type:city(21276)_region:DE-BY)[Coordinates](/wiki/Geographic_coordinate_system "Geographic coordinate system"): [48°04′04″N 11°22′26″E / 48.06778°N 11.37389°E / 48.06778; 11.37389](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Gauting&params=48_04_04_N_11_22_26_E_type:city(21276)_region:DE-BY) | | Country | [Germany](/wiki/Germany "Germany") | | [State](/wiki/States_of_Germany "States of Germany") | [Bavaria](/wiki/Bavaria "Bavaria") | | [Admin. region](/wiki/Regierungsbezirk "Regierungsbezirk") | [Upper Bavaria](/wiki/Upper_Bavaria_(region) "Upper Bavaria (region)") | | [District](/wiki/Districts_of_Germany "Districts of Germany") | [Starnberg](/wiki/Starnberg_(district) "Starnberg (district)") | | Subdivisions | 11 districts | | Government | |  • [Mayor](/wiki/Burgomaster "Burgomaster") | Brigitte Kössinger ([CSU](/wiki/Christian_Social_Union_in_Bavaria "Christian Social Union in Bavaria")) | | Area | |  • Total | 50.38 km2 (19.45 sq mi) | | Elevation | 564 m (1,850 ft) | | Population (2022-12-31)[[1]](#cite_note-1) | |  • Total | 21,276 | |  • Density | 420/km2 (1,100/sq mi) | | [Time zone](/wiki/Time_in_Germany "Time in Germany") | [UTC+01:00](/wiki/UTC%2B01:00 "UTC+01:00") ([CET](/wiki/Central_European_Time "Central European Time")) | |  • Summer ([DST](/wiki/Daylight_saving_time "Daylight saving time")) | [UTC+02:00](/wiki/UTC%2B02:00 "UTC+02:00") ([CEST](/wiki/Central_European_Summer_Time "Central European Summer Time")) | | [Postal codes](/wiki/List_of_postal_codes_in_Germany "List of postal codes in Germany") | 82131 | | [Dialling codes](/wiki/List_of_dialling_codes_in_Germany "List of dialling codes in Germany") | 089 | | [Vehicle registration](/wiki/Vehicle_registration_plate "Vehicle registration plate") | STA | | Website | [www.gauting.de](https://www.gauting.de) | **Gauting** is a [municipality](/wiki/Municipality "Municipality") in the district of [Starnberg](/wiki/Starnberg_(district) "Starnberg (district)") in [Upper Bavaria](/wiki/Upper_Bavaria "Upper Bavaria") in [Germany](/wiki/Germany "Germany"). It is on the river Würm and is 17 kilometres (11 miles) southwest of [Munich](/wiki/Munich "Munich"). ## Districts Gauting has 11 districts: * Buchendorf * Gauting * Grubmühl * Hausen * Königswiesen * Mitterwies * Oberbrunn * Oberwies * Reismühl * Stockdorf * Unterbrunn ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) [Genesis Online-Datenbank des Bayerischen Landesamtes für Statistik Tabelle 12411-003r Fortschreibung des Bevölkerungsstandes: Gemeinden, Stichtag](https://www.statistikdaten.bayern.de/genesis/online?operation=result&code=12411-003r&leerzeilen=false&language=de) (Einwohnerzahlen auf Grundlage des Zensus 2011) ## Other websites Media related to [Gauting](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Gauting "commons:Category:Gauting") at Wikimedia Commons * [Official website of the municipality of Gauting](https://www.gauting.de) (in German) | * [v](/wiki/Template:Cities_and_towns_in_Starnberg_(district) "Template:Cities and towns in Starnberg (district)") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Cities_and_towns_in_Starnberg_(district)&action=edit) Towns and municipalities in [Starnberg district](/wiki/Starnberg_(district) "Starnberg (district)") | | --- | | * [Andechs](/wiki/Andechs "Andechs") * [Berg](/wiki/Berg,_Upper_Bavaria "Berg, Upper Bavaria") * [Feldafing](/wiki/Feldafing "Feldafing") * Gauting * [Gilching](/wiki/Gilching "Gilching") * [Herrsching](/wiki/Herrsching "Herrsching") * [Inning am Ammersee](/wiki/Inning_am_Ammersee "Inning am Ammersee") * [Krailling](/wiki/Krailling "Krailling") * [Pöcking](/wiki/P%C3%B6cking "Pöcking") * [Seefeld](/wiki/Seefeld,_Bavaria "Seefeld, Bavaria") * [Starnberg](/wiki/Starnberg "Starnberg") * [Tutzing](/wiki/Tutzing "Tutzing") * [Weßling](/wiki/We%C3%9Fling "Weßling") * [Wörthsee](/wiki/W%C3%B6rthsee_(municipality) "Wörthsee (municipality)") | | | [Authority control](/wiki/Help:Authority_control "Help:Authority control") | | --- | | International | * [VIAF](https://viaf.org/viaf/127904222) * [WorldCat Identities](https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n85082699/) | | National | * [Germany](https://d-nb.info/gnd/4092713-1) * [Israel](http://uli.nli.org.il/F/?func=find-b&local_base=NLX10&find_code=UID&request=987007557637705171) * [United States](https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n85082699) | | Geographic | * [MusicBrainz area](https://musicbrainz.org/area/e211269b-e879-4d45-b334-9f7e37ecbbab) * [Pleiades](https://pleiades.stoa.org/places/118609) | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [Europe](/wiki/Category:Europe_stubs "Category:Europe stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Gauting&action=edit)*.
| Gauting | | --- | | Municipality | | Fußberg Castle | | Coat of arms | | Location of Gauting within Starnberg district | | Gauting Show map of GermanyGauting Show map of Bavaria | | Coordinates: 48°04′04″N 11°22′26″E / 48.06778°N 11.37389°E / 48.06778; 11.37389Coordinates: 48°04′04″N 11°22′26″E / 48.06778°N 11.37389°E / 48.06778; 11.37389 | | Country | Germany | | State | Bavaria | | Admin. region | Upper Bavaria | | District | Starnberg | | Subdivisions | 11 districts | | Government | |  • Mayor | Brigitte Kössinger (CSU) | | Area | |  • Total | 50.38 km2 (19.45 sq mi) | | Elevation | 564 m (1,850 ft) | | Population (2022-12-31)[1] | |  • Total | 21,276 | |  • Density | 420/km2 (1,100/sq mi) | | Time zone | UTC+01:00 (CET) | |  • Summer (DST) | UTC+02:00 (CEST) | | Postal codes | 82131 | | Dialling codes | 089 | | Vehicle registration | STA | | Website | www.gauting.de | Gauting is a municipality in the district of Starnberg in Upper Bavaria in Germany. It is on the river Würm and is 17 kilometres (11 miles) southwest of Munich. Districts Gauting has 11 districts: Buchendorf Gauting Grubmühl Hausen Königswiesen Mitterwies Oberbrunn Oberwies Reismühl Stockdorf Unterbrunn References ↑ Genesis Online-Datenbank des Bayerischen Landesamtes für Statistik Tabelle 12411-003r Fortschreibung des Bevölkerungsstandes: Gemeinden, Stichtag (Einwohnerzahlen auf Grundlage des Zensus 2011) Other websites Media related to Gauting at Wikimedia Commons Official website of the municipality of Gauting (in German) | * v * t * e Towns and municipalities in Starnberg district | | --- | | * Andechs * Berg * Feldafing * Gauting * Gilching * Herrsching * Inning am Ammersee * Krailling * Pöcking * Seefeld * Starnberg * Tutzing * Weßling * Wörthsee | | | Authority control | | --- | | International | * VIAF * WorldCat Identities | | National | * Germany * Israel * United States | | Geographic | * MusicBrainz area * Pleiades | This short article about Europe can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
30,102
Cat_pox
Cat pox
154,921
Redirect to: * [Cowpox](/wiki/Cowpox "Cowpox")
Redirect to: Cowpox
907,261
Kinrick_o_Scotland
Kinrick o Scotland
8,038,380
Redirect to: * [Kingdom of Scotland](/wiki/Kingdom_of_Scotland "Kingdom of Scotland")
Redirect to: Kingdom of Scotland
228,562
Post-it
Post-it
2,018,074
Redirect to: * [Sticky note](/wiki/Sticky_note "Sticky note") s
Redirect to: Sticky note s
446,777
Economic_liberalism
Economic liberalism
9,180,675
**Economic liberalism** is a political ideology based on strong support for a market economy, private property in the means of production and opposition to government intervention in the economy, e.g. opposition to public ownership and opposing the regulation of industries. Economic liberals believe in the [free market](/wiki/Free_market "Free market") and [laisse faire](/wiki/Laissez_faire "Laissez faire") economic policies. It is also known as complex interdependence. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [politics](/wiki/Category:Politics_stubs "Category:Politics stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Economic_liberalism&action=edit)*.
Economic liberalism is a political ideology based on strong support for a market economy, private property in the means of production and opposition to government intervention in the economy, e.g. opposition to public ownership and opposing the regulation of industries. Economic liberals believe in the free market and laisse faire economic policies. It is also known as complex interdependence. This short article about politics can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
631,087
Vanjiar_River
Vanjiar River
6,444,816
**Vanjiar River** is a branch river of [Cauvery River](/wiki/Cauvery "Cauvery"). It flows through the districts of [Thanjavur](/wiki/Thanjavur_district "Thanjavur district") and [Karaikal](/wiki/Karaikal_district "Karaikal district"). This river finally merges (joins) with [Arasalar River](/wiki/Arasalar_River "Arasalar River").[[1]](#cite_note-1) ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["Vanjiar in India"](https://www.india9.com/i9show/Vanjiar-83051.htm). *www.india9.com*. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [Asia](/wiki/Category:Asia_stubs "Category:Asia stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Vanjiar_River&action=edit)*.
Vanjiar River is a branch river of Cauvery River. It flows through the districts of Thanjavur and Karaikal. This river finally merges (joins) with Arasalar River.[1] References ↑ "Vanjiar in India". www.india9.com. This short article about Asia can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
762,787
Sonic_the_Hedgehog_(2006_video_game)
Sonic the Hedgehog (2006 video game)
8,378,574
| | | | --- | --- | | | This article **does not have any [sources](/wiki/Wikipedia:Citing_sources "Wikipedia:Citing sources")**. You can help Wikipedia by finding [good](/wiki/Wikipedia:RELIABLE "Wikipedia:RELIABLE") sources, and adding them. *(March 2022)* | | Sonic the Hedgehog | | --- | | Cover art used for all regions | | [Developer(s)](/wiki/Video_game_developer "Video game developer") | [Sonic Team](/wiki/Sonic_Team "Sonic Team") | | [Publisher(s)](/wiki/Video_game_publisher "Video game publisher") | [Sega](/wiki/Sega "Sega") | | Director(s) | Shun Nakamura | | [Producer(s)](/wiki/Video_game_producer "Video game producer") | Masahiro Kumono | | [Artist(s)](/wiki/Video_game_artist "Video game artist") | Akira Mikame | | [Writer(s)](/wiki/Video_game_writer "Video game writer") | * Kiyoko Yoshimura * Shiro Maekawa | | [Composer(s)](/wiki/Video_game_composer "Video game composer") | * Hideaki Kobayashi * Tomoya Ohtani * Mariko Nanba * Taihei Sato * Takahito Eguchi | | Series | *[Sonic the Hedgehog](/wiki/Sonic_the_Hedgehog "Sonic the Hedgehog")* | | [Platform(s)](/wiki/Computing_platform "Computing platform") | * [Xbox 360](/wiki/Xbox_360 "Xbox 360") * [PlayStation 3](/wiki/PlayStation_3 "PlayStation 3") | | Release | **Xbox 360*** [NA](/wiki/North_America "North America"): November 14, 2006 * [PAL](/wiki/PAL_region "PAL region"): November 24, 2006 * [JP](/wiki/Japan "Japan"): December 21, 2006 **PlayStation 3*** [JP](/wiki/Japan "Japan"): December 21, 2006 * [NA](/wiki/North_America "North America"): January 30, 2007 * [PAL](/wiki/PAL_region "PAL region"): March 23, 2007 | | [Genre(s)](/wiki/Video_game_genre "Video game genre") | [Platform](/wiki/Platform_game "Platform game"), [action-adventure](/wiki/Action-adventure_game "Action-adventure game") | | Mode(s) | [Single-player](/wiki/Single-player "Single-player"), [multiplayer](/wiki/Multiplayer "Multiplayer") | *This is about the 2006 game. For the original game, check [Sonic the Hedgehog (video game)](/wiki/Sonic_the_Hedgehog_(video_game) "Sonic the Hedgehog (video game)"). For the movie, check [Sonic the Hedgehog (movie)](/wiki/Sonic_the_Hedgehog_(movie) "Sonic the Hedgehog (movie)"). For the character, check [Sonic the Hedgehog (character)](/wiki/Sonic_the_Hedgehog_(character) "Sonic the Hedgehog (character)").* **Sonic the Hedgehog** is a 3D platform [video game](/wiki/Video_game "Video game"). It was released in 2006 for [PlayStation 3](/wiki/PlayStation_3 "PlayStation 3") and [Xbox 360](/wiki/Xbox_360 "Xbox 360"). Since it is similarly name to the original 16-bit game, it is commonly said as **Sonic '06**. ## Reception The game is considered one of the worst Sonic the Hedgehog games of all time. It is notorious for glitches and long loading times. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [video games](/wiki/Category:Video_game_stubs "Category:Video game stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sonic_the_Hedgehog_(2006_video_game)&action=edit)*.
| | | | --- | --- | | | This article does not have any sources. You can help Wikipedia by finding good sources, and adding them. (March 2022) | | Sonic the Hedgehog | | --- | | Cover art used for all regions | | Developer(s) | Sonic Team | | Publisher(s) | Sega | | Director(s) | Shun Nakamura | | Producer(s) | Masahiro Kumono | | Artist(s) | Akira Mikame | | Writer(s) | * Kiyoko Yoshimura * Shiro Maekawa | | Composer(s) | * Hideaki Kobayashi * Tomoya Ohtani * Mariko Nanba * Taihei Sato * Takahito Eguchi | | Series | Sonic the Hedgehog | | Platform(s) | * Xbox 360 * PlayStation 3 | | Release | Xbox 360 NA: November 14, 2006 * PAL: November 24, 2006 * JP: December 21, 2006 PlayStation 3** JP: December 21, 2006 * NA: January 30, 2007 * PAL: March 23, 2007 | | Genre(s) | Platform, action-adventure | | Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer | This is about the 2006 game. For the original game, check Sonic the Hedgehog (video game). For the movie, check Sonic the Hedgehog (movie). For the character, check Sonic the Hedgehog (character). Sonic the Hedgehog is a 3D platform video game. It was released in 2006 for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. Since it is similarly name to the original 16-bit game, it is commonly said as Sonic '06. Reception The game is considered one of the worst Sonic the Hedgehog games of all time. It is notorious for glitches and long loading times. This short article about video games can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
543,617
Scion_FRS
Scion FRS
5,408,222
Redirect to: * [Scion FR-S](/wiki/Scion_FR-S "Scion FR-S")
Redirect to: Scion FR-S
851,299
Carpi,_Emilia-Romagna
Carpi, Emilia-Romagna
7,631,085
Redirect to: * [Carpi](/wiki/Carpi "Carpi")
Redirect to: Carpi
733,622
Halawa,_Hawaii
Halawa, Hawaii
7,647,257
Interstate H-3 in Halawa Valley **Halawa** is a [census-designated place](/wiki/Census-designated_place "Census-designated place") (CDP) in [Honolulu County](/wiki/Honolulu_County,_Hawaii "Honolulu County, Hawaii"), [Hawaii](/wiki/Hawaii "Hawaii"), United States. As of the [2010 census](/wiki/2010_United_States_Census "2010 United States Census"), the CDP had a population of 14,014.[[1]](#cite_note-1) [Aloha Stadium](/wiki/Aloha_Stadium "Aloha Stadium") is located in Halawa.[[2]](#cite_note-2) Halawa is also the site of [Aloha Stadium](/wiki/Aloha_Stadium "Aloha Stadium") which is home to the [University of Hawaii](/wiki/University_of_Hawaii "University of Hawaii") Warriors football team and many other sporting events. On the ocean side of Halawa is [Pearl Harbor](/wiki/Pearl_Harbor "Pearl Harbor"). Halawa Valley becomes wider near Pearl Harbor and this is where most of the residential neighborhoods are located.[[3]](#cite_note-3) Halawa Valley has many important cultural sites dating to ancient times. This led to many protests during the building of the H-3 Freeway which opened in 1997 running right through the valley.[[4]](#cite_note-4) ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["American FactFinder"](http://factfinder2.census.gov/faces/nav/jsf/pages/index.xhtml). [United States Census Bureau](/wiki/United_States_Census_Bureau "United States Census Bureau"). Retrieved January 23, 2020. 2. [↑](#cite_ref-2) ["Aloha Stadium"](https://hawaiiathletics.com/sports/2008/5/14/aloha_stadium.aspx?path=football). Hawaii Athletics. Retrieved January 23, 2020. 3. [↑](#cite_ref-3) ["Halawa real estate"](https://nalula.com/s/545_g5). Retrieved 2021-04-24. 4. [↑](#cite_ref-4) ["Halawa | Hawaii"](https://vacations.hawaiilife.com/oahu-area-info/halawa). Retrieved 2021-04-24. | * [v](/wiki/Template:Honolulu_County,_Hawaii "Template:Honolulu County, Hawaii") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Honolulu_County,_Hawaii&action=edit) Islands, municipalities, and communities of [Honolulu County, Hawaii](/wiki/Honolulu_County,_Hawaii "Honolulu County, Hawaii"), United States | | --- | | [County seat](/wiki/County_seat "County seat"): **[Honolulu](/wiki/Honolulu "Honolulu")** | | [CDPs](/wiki/Census-designated_place "Census-designated place") | * Ahuimanu * [Aiea](/wiki/Aiea,_Hawaii "Aiea, Hawaii") * [East Honolulu](/wiki/East_Honolulu,_Hawaii "East Honolulu, Hawaii") * East Kapolei * ʻEwa Beach * ʻEwa Gentry * ʻEwa Villages * Halawa * Haleʻiwa * Hauʻula * Heʻeia * Helemano * Hickam Housing * [Honolulu](/wiki/Honolulu "Honolulu") * Iroquois Point * Kaʻaʻawa * [Kahaluu](/wiki/Kahaluu,_Hawaii "Kahaluu, Hawaii") * Kahuku * [Kailua](/wiki/Kailua,_Hawaii "Kailua, Hawaii") * Kalaeloa * Kaneohe * Kaneohe Base * Kapolei * Kawela Bay * Ko Olina * Laie * Māili * Mākaha * Mākaha Valley * Makakilo * Maunawili * Mililani Mauka * [Mililani Town](/wiki/Mililani,_Hawaii "Mililani, Hawaii") * Mokulēia * Nānākuli * Ocean Pointe * Pearl City * Punaluʻu * Pūpūkea * Royal Kunia * Schofield Barracks * Wahiawā * Waiahole-Waikane * Waialua * Waiʻanae * Waikele * Waimalu * Waimānalo * Waimānalo Beach * Waipahu * Waipiʻo * Waipiʻo Acres * West Loch Estate * Wheeler AFB * Whitmore Village | Map of Hawaii highlighting Honolulu County | | Othercommunities | * Aina Haina * Akupu * Hawaiʻi Kai * Kunia Camp | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature in the United States](/wiki/Category:United_States_geography_stubs "Category:United States geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Halawa,_Hawaii&action=edit)*.
Interstate H-3 in Halawa Valley Halawa is a census-designated place (CDP) in Honolulu County, Hawaii, United States. As of the 2010 census, the CDP had a population of 14,014.[1] Aloha Stadium is located in Halawa.[2] Halawa is also the site of Aloha Stadium which is home to the University of Hawaii Warriors football team and many other sporting events. On the ocean side of Halawa is Pearl Harbor. Halawa Valley becomes wider near Pearl Harbor and this is where most of the residential neighborhoods are located.[3] Halawa Valley has many important cultural sites dating to ancient times. This led to many protests during the building of the H-3 Freeway which opened in 1997 running right through the valley.[4] References ↑ "American FactFinder". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved January 23, 2020. ↑ "Aloha Stadium". Hawaii Athletics. Retrieved January 23, 2020. ↑ "Halawa real estate". Retrieved 2021-04-24. ↑ "Halawa | Hawaii". Retrieved 2021-04-24. | * v * t * e Islands, municipalities, and communities of Honolulu County, Hawaii, United States | | --- | | County seat: Honolulu | | CDPs | * Ahuimanu * Aiea * East Honolulu * East Kapolei * ʻEwa Beach * ʻEwa Gentry * ʻEwa Villages * Halawa * Haleʻiwa * Hauʻula * Heʻeia * Helemano * Hickam Housing * Honolulu * Iroquois Point * Kaʻaʻawa * Kahaluu * Kahuku * Kailua * Kalaeloa * Kaneohe * Kaneohe Base * Kapolei * Kawela Bay * Ko Olina * Laie * Māili * Mākaha * Mākaha Valley * Makakilo * Maunawili * Mililani Mauka * Mililani Town * Mokulēia * Nānākuli * Ocean Pointe * Pearl City * Punaluʻu * Pūpūkea * Royal Kunia * Schofield Barracks * Wahiawā * Waiahole-Waikane * Waialua * Waiʻanae * Waikele * Waimalu * Waimānalo * Waimānalo Beach * Waipahu * Waipiʻo * Waipiʻo Acres * West Loch Estate * Wheeler AFB * Whitmore Village | Map of Hawaii highlighting Honolulu County | | Othercommunities | * Aina Haina * Akupu * Hawaiʻi Kai * Kunia Camp | This short article about a place or feature in the United States can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
718,572
Tayberry
Tayberry
8,826,915
A tayberry Carving of a Tayberry, on the banks of the [River Tay](/wiki/River_Tay "River Tay") in Perth A **tayberry** is a cross between a [blackberry](/wiki/Blackberry "Blackberry") and a red [raspberry](/wiki/Raspberry "Raspberry"). The genetic cross was [patented](/wiki/Patent "Patent") in 1979. It is a cultivated [shrub](/wiki/Shrub "Shrub") in the genus *Rubus* of the family Rosaceae. It was named after the [River Tay](/wiki/River_Tay "River Tay") in [Scotland](/wiki/Scotland "Scotland"). The fruit is sweeter, much larger, and more [aromatic](/wiki/Scent "Scent") than that of the [loganberry](/wiki/Loganberry "Loganberry"). The loganberry is itself a blackberry and red raspberry cross. The fruit do not pick easily by hand and cannot be machine harvested. They have not become a commercially grown berry crop. This plant has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.[[1]](#cite_note-1) ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["Rubus Tayberry Group (F)"](http://apps.rhs.org.uk/plantselector/plant?plantid=4923). *rhs.org.uk*.[*[permanent dead link](/wiki/Wikipedia:Link_rot "Wikipedia:Link rot")*]
A tayberry Carving of a Tayberry, on the banks of the River Tay in Perth A tayberry is a cross between a blackberry and a red raspberry. The genetic cross was patented in 1979. It is a cultivated shrub in the genus Rubus of the family Rosaceae. It was named after the River Tay in Scotland. The fruit is sweeter, much larger, and more aromatic than that of the loganberry. The loganberry is itself a blackberry and red raspberry cross. The fruit do not pick easily by hand and cannot be machine harvested. They have not become a commercially grown berry crop. This plant has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.[1] References ↑ "Rubus Tayberry Group (F)". rhs.org.uk.[permanent dead link]
862,900
Chucky_Thompson
Chucky Thompson
7,713,207
Redirect to: * [Bad Boy Records](/wiki/Bad_Boy_Records "Bad Boy Records")
Redirect to: Bad Boy Records
785,216
John_H._Hager
John H. Hager
8,670,336
| John H. Hager | | --- | | | | | | 37th [Lieutenant Governor of Virginia](/wiki/Lieutenant_Governor_of_Virginia "Lieutenant Governor of Virginia") | | **In office**January 17, 1998 – January 12, 2002 | | Governor | [Jim Gilmore](/wiki/Jim_Gilmore "Jim Gilmore") | | Preceded by | [Don Beyer](/wiki/Don_Beyer "Don Beyer") | | Succeeded by | [Tim Kaine](/wiki/Tim_Kaine "Tim Kaine") | | Chair of the Virginia Republican Party | | **In office**August 1, 2007 – May 31, 2008 | | Preceded by | [Ed Gillespie](/wiki/Ed_Gillespie "Ed Gillespie") | | Succeeded by | Jeff Frederick | | Assistant Secretary for Special Education and Rehabilitative Services | | **In office**November 21, 2004 – August 1, 2007 | | President | [George W. Bush](/wiki/George_W._Bush "George W. Bush") | | Secretary | [Rod Paige](/wiki/Rod_Paige "Rod Paige")[Margaret Spellings](/wiki/Margaret_Spellings "Margaret Spellings") | | Preceded by | Robert Pasternack | | Succeeded by | Tracy Ralph Justesen | | | | Personal details | | Born | John Henry Hager(1936-08-28)August 28, 1936[Durham, North Carolina](/wiki/Durham,_North_Carolina "Durham, North Carolina") | | Died | August 23, 2020(2020-08-23) (aged 83) | | Political party | [Republican](/wiki/Republican_Party_(United_States) "Republican Party (United States)") | | Spouse(s) | Margaret Chase Hager (1971–2020) | | Children | John Vigil Hager (b. 1973) Henry Chase Hager (b. 1978) | | Profession | Businessman | | Military service | | Allegiance |  [United States](/wiki/United_States "United States") | | Branch/service |  [United States Army](/wiki/United_States_Army "United States Army") | | Rank | [Captain](/wiki/Captain_(United_States_O-3) "Captain (United States O-3)") | **John Henry Hager** (August 28, 1936 – August 23, 2020) was an American politician. He was the 37th [Lieutenant Governor of Virginia](/wiki/Lieutenant_Governor_of_Virginia "Lieutenant Governor of Virginia") from 1998 to 2002. He was the first person with a disability to be elected to that office. He was an assistant secretary within the [United States Department of Education](/wiki/United_States_Department_of_Education "United States Department of Education") from 2004 to 2007.[[1]](#cite_note-WhoIsWho-1) He also was the chairman of the Republican Party of Virginia from August 2007 until May 2008. Hager died on August 23, 2020 at the age of 83.[[2]](#cite_note-RTD_obit-2) ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-WhoIsWho_1-0) Marquis Who's Who TM. Marquis Who's Who Reproduced in Biography Resource Center (2008). [*John Henry Hager*](http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/BioRC) (Fee). Farmington Hills, Michigan: Gale. Retrieved 2008-04-17. Document Number: K2014485169 2. [↑](#cite_ref-RTD_obit_2-0) Schapiro, Jeff E.; Cain, Andrew (August 23, 2020). ["Former Lt. Gov. John H. Hager dies at 83"](https://richmond.com/news/state-and-regional/govt-and-politics/former-lt-gov-john-h-hager-dies/article_a726ca32-e845-5e83-91c7-670b917d3413.html). *Richmond Times-Dispatch*. Retrieved August 23, 2020. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [person](/wiki/Category:American_people_stubs "Category:American people stubs") from the United States can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=John_H._Hager&action=edit)*.
| John H. Hager | | --- | | | | | | 37th Lieutenant Governor of Virginia | | In officeJanuary 17, 1998 – January 12, 2002 | | Governor | Jim Gilmore | | Preceded by | Don Beyer | | Succeeded by | Tim Kaine | | Chair of the Virginia Republican Party | | In officeAugust 1, 2007 – May 31, 2008 | | Preceded by | Ed Gillespie | | Succeeded by | Jeff Frederick | | Assistant Secretary for Special Education and Rehabilitative Services | | In officeNovember 21, 2004 – August 1, 2007 | | President | George W. Bush | | Secretary | Rod PaigeMargaret Spellings | | Preceded by | Robert Pasternack | | Succeeded by | Tracy Ralph Justesen | | | | Personal details | | Born | John Henry Hager(1936-08-28)August 28, 1936Durham, North Carolina | | Died | August 23, 2020(2020-08-23) (aged 83) | | Political party | Republican | | Spouse(s) | Margaret Chase Hager (1971–2020) | | Children | John Vigil Hager (b. 1973) Henry Chase Hager (b. 1978) | | Profession | Businessman | | Military service | | Allegiance |  United States | | Branch/service |  United States Army | | Rank | Captain | John Henry Hager (August 28, 1936 – August 23, 2020) was an American politician. He was the 37th Lieutenant Governor of Virginia from 1998 to 2002. He was the first person with a disability to be elected to that office. He was an assistant secretary within the United States Department of Education from 2004 to 2007.[1] He also was the chairman of the Republican Party of Virginia from August 2007 until May 2008. Hager died on August 23, 2020 at the age of 83.[2] References ↑ Marquis Who's Who TM. Marquis Who's Who Reproduced in Biography Resource Center (2008). John Henry Hager (Fee). Farmington Hills, Michigan: Gale. Retrieved 2008-04-17. Document Number: K2014485169 ↑ Schapiro, Jeff E.; Cain, Andrew (August 23, 2020). "Former Lt. Gov. John H. Hager dies at 83". Richmond Times-Dispatch. Retrieved August 23, 2020. This short article about a person from the United States can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
120,107
Macropus_antilopinus
Macropus antilopinus
5,078,670
Redirect to: * [Antilopine kangaroo](/wiki/Antilopine_kangaroo "Antilopine kangaroo")
Redirect to: Antilopine kangaroo
1,045,822
List_of_women's_national_association_football_teams
List of women's national association football teams
9,172,383
| | | | --- | --- | | | This list may have **too many [red links](/wiki/Wikipedia:Red_link "Wikipedia:Red link").** You can help Wikipedia by writing articles to help lower the number of red links. *(February 2022)* | This is a full list of women's national [association football](/wiki/Association_football "Association football") teams. ## AFC (Asia) * [Australia](/wiki/Australia_women%27s_national_soccer_team "Australia women's national soccer team") * Bahrain * Bangladesh * Bhutan * Cambodia * [China PR](/wiki/China_women%27s_national_football_team "China women's national football team") * [Chinese Taipei](/wiki/Chinese_Taipei_women%27s_national_football_team "Chinese Taipei women's national football team") * [Guam](/wiki/Guam_women%27s_national_football_team "Guam women's national football team") * Hong Kong * India * Indonesia * Iran * Iraq * [Japan](/wiki/Japan_women%27s_national_football_team "Japan women's national football team") * Jordan * North Korea * [South Korea](/wiki/South_Korea_women%27s_national_football_team "South Korea women's national football team") * Kuwait * Kyrgyzstan * Laos * [Lebanon](/wiki/Lebanon_women%27s_national_football_team "Lebanon women's national football team") * Macau * Malaysia * Maldives * Mongolia * Myanmar * Nepal * [Northern Mariana Islands](/wiki/Northern_Mariana_Islands_women%27s_national_football_team "Northern Mariana Islands women's national football team")\* * Pakistan * Palestine * [Philippines](/wiki/Philippines_women%27s_national_football_team "Philippines women's national football team") * Qatar * Saudi Arabia * Singapore * Sri Lanka * Syria * Tajikistan * Thailand * Timor-Leste * Turkmenistan * United Arab Emirates * Uzbekistan * [Vietnam](/wiki/Vietnam_women%27s_national_football_team "Vietnam women's national football team") ***\* Not a FIFA member.*** * Brunei, Oman, and  Yemen have no national teams despite being AFC and FIFA members. * Afghanistan, also a AFC and FIFA member, formerly had a national team until 2021. ## CAF (Africa) * Algeria * Angola * Benin * Botswana * Burkina Faso * Burundi * Cameroon * Cape Verde * Central African Republic * Chad * Comoros * Congo * DR Congo * Djibouti * Egypt * Equatorial Guinea * Eritrea * Eswatini * Ethiopia * [Gabon](/wiki/Gabon_women%27s_national_football_team "Gabon women's national football team") * Gambia * Ghana * Guinea * Guinea-Bissau * Ivory Coast * Kenya * Lesotho * Liberia * Libya * Madagascar * Malawi * Mali * Mauritania * Mauritius * [Morocco](/wiki/Morocco_women%27s_national_football_team "Morocco women's national football team") * Mozambique * Namibia * Niger * [Nigeria](/wiki/Nigeria_women%27s_national_football_team "Nigeria women's national football team") * Réunion\* * Rwanda * São Tomé and Príncipe * Senegal * Seychelles * Sierra Leone * [South Africa](/wiki/South_Africa_women%27s_national_soccer_team "South Africa women's national soccer team") * South Sudan * Sudan * Tanzania * Togo * Tunisia * Uganda * [Zambia](/wiki/Zambia_women%27s_national_football_team "Zambia women's national football team") * Zanzibar\* * Zimbabwe ***\* Not a FIFA member.***  Somalia has no national team despite being CAF and FIFA member. ## CONCACAF (North America, Central America and the Caribbean) * Anguilla * Antigua and Barbuda * Aruba * Bahamas * Barbados * Belize * Bermuda * British Virgin Islands * [Canada](/wiki/Canada_women%27s_national_soccer_team "Canada women's national soccer team") * Cayman Islands * [Costa Rica](/wiki/Costa_Rica_women%27s_national_football_team "Costa Rica women's national football team") * Cuba * Curaçao * Dominica * Dominican Republic * French Guiana Match in 2014 * El Salvador * Grenada * Guadeloupe\* * Guatemala * Guyana * [Haiti](/wiki/Haiti_women%27s_national_football_team "Haiti women's national football team") * Honduras * [Jamaica](/wiki/Jamaica_women%27s_national_football_team "Jamaica women's national football team") * Martinique\* * Mexico * Nicaragua * [Panama](/wiki/Panama_women%27s_national_football_team "Panama women's national football team") * Puerto Rico * Saint Kitts and Nevis * Saint Lucia * Saint Vincent and the Grenadines * Sint Maarten Match in 2022 * Suriname * Trinidad and Tobago * Turks and Caicos Islands * [United States](/wiki/United_States_women%27s_national_soccer_team "United States women's national soccer team") * U.S. Virgin Islands ***\* Not a FIFA member.*** Bonaire, Montserrat and Saint Martin have no national teams despite being CONCACAF members. ## CONMEBOL (South America) * [Argentina](/wiki/Argentina_women%27s_national_football_team "Argentina women's national football team") * [Bolivia](/wiki/Bolivia_women%27s_national_football_team "Bolivia women's national football team") * [Brazil](/wiki/Brazil_women%27s_national_football_team "Brazil women's national football team") * [Chile](/wiki/Chile_women%27s_national_football_team "Chile women's national football team") * [Colombia](/wiki/Colombia_women%27s_national_football_team "Colombia women's national football team") * Ecuador * Paraguay * Peru * Uruguay * Venezuela  French Guiana,  Guyana and  Suriname are all members of CONCACAF, despite all being located in South America. ## OFC (Oceania) * [American Samoa](/wiki/American_Samoa_women%27s_national_football_team "American Samoa women's national football team") * [Cook Islands](/wiki/Cook_Islands_women%27s_national_football_team "Cook Islands women's national football team") * [Fiji](/wiki/Fiji_women%27s_national_football_team "Fiji women's national football team") * [Kiribati](/wiki/Kiribati_women%27s_national_football_team "Kiribati women's national football team")\* * [New Caledonia](/wiki/New_Caledonia_women%27s_national_football_team "New Caledonia women's national football team") * [New Zealand](/wiki/New_Zealand_women%27s_national_football_team "New Zealand women's national football team") * [Papua New Guinea](/wiki/Papua_New_Guinea_women%27s_national_football_team "Papua New Guinea women's national football team") * [Samoa](/wiki/Samoa_women%27s_national_football_team "Samoa women's national football team") * [Solomon Islands](/wiki/Solomon_Islands_women%27s_national_football_team "Solomon Islands women's national football team") * [Tahiti](/wiki/Tahiti_women%27s_national_football_team "Tahiti women's national football team") * [Tonga](/wiki/Tonga_women%27s_national_football_team "Tonga women's national football team") * [Vanuatu](/wiki/Vanuatu_women%27s_national_football_team "Vanuatu women's national football team") ***\* Not a FIFA member.***  [Australia](/wiki/Australia_women%27s_national_soccer_team "Australia women's national soccer team"),  [Guam](/wiki/Guam_women%27s_national_football_team "Guam women's national football team") and the  [Northern Mariana Islands](/wiki/Northern_Mariana_Islands_women%27s_national_football_team "Northern Mariana Islands women's national football team") are all members of the AFC, despite all being located in Oceania.  [Tuvalu](/wiki/Tuvalu "Tuvalu") has no national team despite being an OFC member. ## UEFA (Europe) * Albania * [Andorra](/wiki/Andorra_women%27s_national_football_team "Andorra women's national football team") * Armenia * [Austria](/wiki/Austria_women%27s_national_football_team "Austria women's national football team") * Azerbaijan * Belarus * Belgium * Bosnia and Herzegovina * Bulgaria * Croatia * Cyprus * Czech Republic * [Denmark](/wiki/Denmark_women%27s_national_football_team "Denmark women's national football team") * [England](/wiki/England_women%27s_national_football_team "England women's national football team") * Estonia * Faroe Islands * Finland * [France](/wiki/France_women%27s_national_football_team "France women's national football team") * Georgia * [Germany](/wiki/Germany_women%27s_national_football_team "Germany women's national football team") * **Gibraltar** * Greece * Hungary * [Iceland](/wiki/Iceland_women%27s_national_football_team "Iceland women's national football team") * [Republic of Ireland](/wiki/Republic_of_Ireland_women%27s_national_football_team "Republic of Ireland women's national football team") * Israel * [Italy](/wiki/Italy_women%27s_national_football_team "Italy women's national football team") * Kazakhstan * Kosovo * Latvia * **Liechtenstein** * Lithuania * Luxembourg * Malta * Moldova * Montenegro * [Netherlands](/wiki/Netherlands_women%27s_national_football_team "Netherlands women's national football team") * North Macedonia * Northern Ireland * [Norway](/wiki/Norway_women%27s_national_football_team "Norway women's national football team") * Poland * [Portugal](/wiki/Portugal_women%27s_national_football_team "Portugal women's national football team") * Romania * Russia * Scotland * Serbia * Slovakia * Slovenia * [Spain](/wiki/Spain_women%27s_national_football_team "Spain women's national football team") * [Sweden](/wiki/Sweden_women%27s_national_football_team "Sweden women's national football team") * [Switzerland](/wiki/Switzerland_women%27s_national_football_team "Switzerland women's national football team") * Turkey * Ukraine * Wales * San Marino has no women's national football team. * **Bold** teams did not enter for 2023–24 UEFA Women's Nations League. ## Related pages * [Women's association football](/wiki/Women%27s_association_football "Women's association football") * List of women's association football clubs * International competitions in women's association football * Geography of women's association football * List of association football competitions * [List of men's national association football teams](/wiki/List_of_men%27s_national_association_football_teams "List of men's national association football teams") | * [v](/wiki/Template:International_women%27s_football "Template:International women's football") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:International_women%27s_football&action=edit) International [women's association football](/wiki/Women%27s_association_football "Women's association football") | | --- | | * [FIFA](/wiki/FIFA "FIFA") * [Federations](/wiki/List_of_football_federations "List of football federations") * Teams * Competitions * [World Ranking](/wiki/FIFA_Women%27s_World_Ranking "FIFA Women's World Ranking") * Player of the Year * The Best FIFA Women's Player | | Worldwide | [FIFA](/wiki/FIFA "FIFA") [Women's World Cup](/wiki/FIFA_Women%27s_World_Cup "FIFA Women's World Cup") [U-20](/wiki/FIFA_U-20_Women%27s_World_Cup "FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup") [U-17](/wiki/FIFA_U-17_Women%27s_World_Cup "FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup") | | | Asia | [AFC](/wiki/Asian_Football_Confederation "Asian Football Confederation") [Women's Asian Cup](/wiki/AFC_Women%27s_Asian_Cup "AFC Women's Asian Cup") [U-20](/wiki/AFC_U-20_Women%27s_Asian_Cup "AFC U-20 Women's Asian Cup") [U-17](/wiki/AFC_U-17_Women%27s_Asian_Cup "AFC U-17 Women's Asian Cup") Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament Regional ASEAN EAFF SAFF WAFF, CAFA Intercontinental (Arab) | | Africa | [CAF](/wiki/Confederation_of_African_Football "Confederation of African Football") Women's Cup of Nations U-20 U-17 Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament Regional CECAFA COSAFA UNAF WAFU A WAFU B UNIFFAC Intercontinental (Arab) | | North America,Central Americaand the Caribbean | [CONCACAF](/wiki/CONCACAF "CONCACAF") W Championship U-20 U-17 W Gold Cup Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament | | South America | [CONMEBOL](/wiki/CONMEBOL "CONMEBOL") [Copa América Femenina](/wiki/Copa_Am%C3%A9rica_Femenina "Copa América Femenina") U-20 U-17 | | Oceania | [OFC](/wiki/Oceania_Football_Confederation "Oceania Football Confederation") Women's Nations Cup U-19 U-16 Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament | | Europe | [UEFA](/wiki/UEFA "UEFA") [Women's Championship](/wiki/UEFA_Women%27s_Championship "UEFA Women's Championship") U-19 U-17 Women's Nations League | | Non-FIFA | NF-Board Women's Viva World Cup | | [Games](/wiki/Multi-sport_event "Multi-sport event") | * [Olympics](/wiki/Football_at_the_Summer_Olympics "Football at the Summer Olympics") * Youth Olympics * Universiade * African Games * [Asian Games](/wiki/Football_at_the_Asian_Games "Football at the Asian Games") * Central America and Caribbean * Central American Games * Goodwill Games * Pan American Games * Pacific Games * Indian Ocean Island Games * South Asian Games * Southeast Asian Games * Island Games | | Invitationals | * Aisha Buhari Cup * Albena Cup * [Algarve Cup](/wiki/Algarve_Cup "Algarve Cup") * Aphrodite Women Cup * Arnold Clark Cup * Australia Cup * Balaton Cup * Baltic Cup * Brazil Cup * Chungua Cup * Cyprus Women's Cup * European Competition ('69,'79) * Cup of Nations * [Finalissima](/wiki/Women%27s_Finalissima "Women's Finalissima") * Four Nations Tournament * FIFA Invitation Tournament * Gold Cup * JENESYS U-17 Women's Football Memorial Cup * Istria Cup * Women's Kirin Challenge Cup * Malta International * Matchworld Cup * MS&AD Cup * Mundialito * Nordic Championship * Our Game Tournament * Peace Queen Cup * Pinatar Cup * Revelations Cup * SAFF Women's Friendly Tournament * SheBelieves Cup * Sud Ladies Cup * Tournament of Nations * Tournoi de France * Turkish Women's Cup * Valais Cup * Women's World Cup ('70,'71) * Yongchuan International Tournament | | * Geography * [Codes](/wiki/List_of_FIFA_country_codes "List of FIFA country codes") * Player of the Century * [Men's football](/wiki/Association_football "Association football") | | * [v](/wiki/Template:Association_football "Template:Association football") * [t](/wiki/Template_talk:Association_football "Template talk:Association football") * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Association_football&action=edit) [Association football](/wiki/Association_football "Association football") | | --- | | Chronology | | | | | --- | --- | | Modern code | * History * Timeline * [First league](/wiki/The_Football_Association "The Football Association") * First international * Oldest clubs * Oldest competitions * Attempts to ban the sport | | Ancestors | * [Caid](/wiki/Caid_(sport) "Caid (sport)") * Cuju * Calcio Fiorentino * English school games * Episkyros * Harpastum * La soule * Marn Grook * Medieval + Ba + Camping + Cnapan + Cornish hurling + Old Division + Royal Shrovetide + Uppies and Downies | | | | Rules | | | | | --- | --- | | Current | * [Away goals rule](/wiki/Away_goals_rule "Away goals rule") * Ball * Ball in/out * [Corner kick](/wiki/Corner_kick "Corner kick") * [Duration of the match](/wiki/Association_football#Duration_and_tie-breaking_methods "Association football") * [Equipment](/wiki/Kit_(association_football) "Kit (association football)") * Field * Fouls and misconduct * [Free kick](/wiki/Free_kick "Free kick") * [Goal kick](/wiki/Goal_kick "Goal kick") * Goal difference * Offside * [Penalty kick](/wiki/Penalty_kick_(association_football) "Penalty kick (association football)") * [Penalty shoot-out](/wiki/Penalty_shoot-out_(association_football) "Penalty shoot-out (association football)") * [Players](/wiki/Association_football#Players,_equipment,_and_officials "Association football") * [Referee](/wiki/Referee_(association_football) "Referee (association football)") + [Assistants](/wiki/Assistant_referee_(association_football) "Assistant referee (association football)") * Scoring * Start and restart * [Throw-in](/wiki/Throw-in "Throw-in") | | Former | * Sheffield rules * Cambridge rules | | Board | * IFAB | | | Equipment | * Ball * Boots * [Kit](/wiki/Kit_(association_football) "Kit (association football)") + [Away colours](/wiki/Away_colours "Away colours") + [Third jersey](/wiki/Third_jersey "Third jersey") + [Throwback uniform](/wiki/Throwback_uniform "Throwback uniform") | | Variants of the game | * Amputee * Beach * Crab * Five-a-side + [Futsal](/wiki/Futsal "Futsal") + Indoor * [Freestyle](/wiki/Freestyle_football "Freestyle football") * Keepie uppie + Footbag * Paralympic + Powerchair * Jorkyball * Roller * Rush goalie * Seven-a-side (Sevens) * Swamp * Street * Three-sided * 3v3 Soccer * Walking | | Positions | * [Goalkeeper](/wiki/Goalkeeper_(association_football) "Goalkeeper (association football)") * [Defender](/wiki/Defender_(association_football) "Defender (association football)") * [Midfielder](/wiki/Midfielder "Midfielder") * [Forward](/wiki/Forward_(association_football) "Forward (association football)") | | Strategy | * Formation * Tactics | | Skills | * [Bicycle kick](/wiki/Bicycle_kick "Bicycle kick") * Curl * Nutmeg * Rabona * Step over | | Terminology | * Anti-football * Catenaccio * Tiki-taka * Total football * Zona mista * Equaliser | | Memorabilia | * Trading cards | | Organised supporters | * Barra brava * Curva * Hooliganism * Torcida * Ultras * Chant | | Comparisons | * Futsal * Rugby union | | Main associations | * [FIFA](/wiki/FIFA "FIFA") * [Africa](/wiki/Confederation_of_African_Football "Confederation of African Football") * [Asia](/wiki/Asian_Football_Confederation "Asian Football Confederation") * [Europe](/wiki/UEFA "UEFA") * [North & Central America](/wiki/CONCACAF "CONCACAF") * [Oceania](/wiki/Oceania_Football_Confederation "Oceania Football Confederation") * [South America](/wiki/CONMEBOL "CONMEBOL") | | Olympic | * [Summer Olympics](/wiki/Football_at_the_Summer_Olympics "Football at the Summer Olympics") * Youth Olympics | | Lists | | | | | --- | --- | | Men's | * Competitions * Families * Players * Top scorers * Clubs * [National teams](/wiki/List_of_men%27s_national_association_football_teams "List of men's national association football teams") | | [Women's](/wiki/Women%27s_association_football "Women's association football") | * Competitions * Families * Players * Top scorers * Clubs * National teams | | | Related topics | * 12th man * Alcohol * Association football films * Beautiful Game * [Captain](/wiki/Captain_(association_football) "Captain (association football)") * Child abuse * Culture * Ethnicity * Football club * Homosexuality * [Names](/wiki/Names_for_association_football "Names for association football") * Politics * Professionalism * Racism * Retired numbers (list) * Rivalries (list) * Smoking * Squad number * Stadiums (list) * [Transfer](/wiki/Transfer_(association_football) "Transfer (association football)") * World XI | | * [Category](/wiki/Category:Association_football "Category:Association football") * [Commons](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Association_football "commons:Category:Association football") * Portal * WikiProject |
| | | | --- | --- | | | This list may have too many red links. You can help Wikipedia by writing articles to help lower the number of red links. (February 2022) | This is a full list of women's national association football teams. AFC (Asia) Australia Bahrain Bangladesh Bhutan Cambodia China PR Chinese Taipei Guam Hong Kong India Indonesia Iran Iraq Japan Jordan North Korea South Korea Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Laos Lebanon Macau Malaysia Maldives Mongolia Myanmar Nepal Northern Mariana Islands* Pakistan Palestine Philippines Qatar Saudi Arabia Singapore Sri Lanka Syria Tajikistan Thailand Timor-Leste Turkmenistan United Arab Emirates Uzbekistan Vietnam * Not a FIFA member. Brunei, Oman, and  Yemen have no national teams despite being AFC and FIFA members. Afghanistan, also a AFC and FIFA member, formerly had a national team until 2021. CAF (Africa) Algeria Angola Benin Botswana Burkina Faso Burundi Cameroon Cape Verde Central African Republic Chad Comoros Congo DR Congo Djibouti Egypt Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Eswatini Ethiopia Gabon Gambia Ghana Guinea Guinea-Bissau Ivory Coast Kenya Lesotho Liberia Libya Madagascar Malawi Mali Mauritania Mauritius Morocco Mozambique Namibia Niger Nigeria Réunion* Rwanda São Tomé and Príncipe Senegal Seychelles Sierra Leone South Africa South Sudan Sudan Tanzania Togo Tunisia Uganda Zambia Zanzibar* Zimbabwe * Not a FIFA member. Somalia has no national team despite being CAF and FIFA member. CONCACAF (North America, Central America and the Caribbean) Anguilla Antigua and Barbuda Aruba Bahamas Barbados Belize Bermuda British Virgin Islands Canada Cayman Islands Costa Rica Cuba Curaçao Dominica Dominican Republic French Guiana Match in 2014 El Salvador Grenada Guadeloupe* Guatemala Guyana Haiti Honduras Jamaica Martinique* Mexico Nicaragua Panama Puerto Rico Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Sint Maarten Match in 2022 Suriname Trinidad and Tobago Turks and Caicos Islands United States U.S. Virgin Islands * Not a FIFA member. Bonaire, Montserrat and Saint Martin have no national teams despite being CONCACAF members. CONMEBOL (South America) Argentina Bolivia Brazil Chile Colombia Ecuador Paraguay Peru Uruguay Venezuela French Guiana,  Guyana and  Suriname are all members of CONCACAF, despite all being located in South America. OFC (Oceania) American Samoa Cook Islands Fiji Kiribati* New Caledonia New Zealand Papua New Guinea Samoa Solomon Islands Tahiti Tonga Vanuatu * Not a FIFA member. Australia,  Guam and the  Northern Mariana Islands are all members of the AFC, despite all being located in Oceania. Tuvalu has no national team despite being an OFC member. UEFA (Europe) Albania Andorra Armenia Austria Azerbaijan Belarus Belgium Bosnia and Herzegovina Bulgaria Croatia Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark England Estonia Faroe Islands Finland France Georgia Germany Gibraltar Greece Hungary Iceland Republic of Ireland Israel Italy Kazakhstan Kosovo Latvia Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Malta Moldova Montenegro Netherlands North Macedonia Northern Ireland Norway Poland Portugal Romania Russia Scotland Serbia Slovakia Slovenia Spain Sweden Switzerland Turkey Ukraine Wales San Marino has no women's national football team. Bold teams did not enter for 2023–24 UEFA Women's Nations League. Related pages Women's association football List of women's association football clubs International competitions in women's association football Geography of women's association football List of association football competitions List of men's national association football teams | * v * t * e International women's association football | | --- | | * FIFA * Federations * Teams * Competitions * World Ranking * Player of the Year * The Best FIFA Women's Player | | Worldwide | FIFA Women's World Cup U-20 U-17 | | | Asia | AFC Women's Asian Cup U-20 U-17 Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament Regional ASEAN EAFF SAFF WAFF, CAFA Intercontinental (Arab) | | Africa | CAF Women's Cup of Nations U-20 U-17 Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament Regional CECAFA COSAFA UNAF WAFU A WAFU B UNIFFAC Intercontinental (Arab) | | North America,Central Americaand the Caribbean | CONCACAF W Championship U-20 U-17 W Gold Cup Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament | | South America | CONMEBOL Copa América Femenina U-20 U-17 | | Oceania | OFC Women's Nations Cup U-19 U-16 Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament | | Europe | UEFA Women's Championship U-19 U-17 Women's Nations League | | Non-FIFA | NF-Board Women's Viva World Cup | | Games | * Olympics * Youth Olympics * Universiade * African Games * Asian Games * Central America and Caribbean * Central American Games * Goodwill Games * Pan American Games * Pacific Games * Indian Ocean Island Games * South Asian Games * Southeast Asian Games * Island Games | | Invitationals | * Aisha Buhari Cup * Albena Cup * Algarve Cup * Aphrodite Women Cup * Arnold Clark Cup * Australia Cup * Balaton Cup * Baltic Cup * Brazil Cup * Chungua Cup * Cyprus Women's Cup * European Competition ('69,'79) * Cup of Nations * Finalissima * Four Nations Tournament * FIFA Invitation Tournament * Gold Cup * JENESYS U-17 Women's Football Memorial Cup * Istria Cup * Women's Kirin Challenge Cup * Malta International * Matchworld Cup * MS&AD Cup * Mundialito * Nordic Championship * Our Game Tournament * Peace Queen Cup * Pinatar Cup * Revelations Cup * SAFF Women's Friendly Tournament * SheBelieves Cup * Sud Ladies Cup * Tournament of Nations * Tournoi de France * Turkish Women's Cup * Valais Cup * Women's World Cup ('70,'71) * Yongchuan International Tournament | | * Geography * Codes * Player of the Century * Men's football | | * v * t * e Association football | | --- | | Chronology | | | | | --- | --- | | Modern code | * History * Timeline * First league * First international * Oldest clubs * Oldest competitions * Attempts to ban the sport | | Ancestors | * Caid * Cuju * Calcio Fiorentino * English school games * Episkyros * Harpastum * La soule * Marn Grook * Medieval + Ba + Camping + Cnapan + Cornish hurling + Old Division + Royal Shrovetide + Uppies and Downies | | | | Rules | | | | | --- | --- | | Current | * Away goals rule * Ball * Ball in/out * Corner kick * Duration of the match * Equipment * Field * Fouls and misconduct * Free kick * Goal kick * Goal difference * Offside * Penalty kick * Penalty shoot-out * Players * Referee + Assistants * Scoring * Start and restart * Throw-in | | Former | * Sheffield rules * Cambridge rules | | Board | * IFAB | | | Equipment | * Ball * Boots * Kit + Away colours + Third jersey + Throwback uniform | | Variants of the game | * Amputee * Beach * Crab * Five-a-side + Futsal + Indoor * Freestyle * Keepie uppie + Footbag * Paralympic + Powerchair * Jorkyball * Roller * Rush goalie * Seven-a-side (Sevens) * Swamp * Street * Three-sided * 3v3 Soccer * Walking | | Positions | * Goalkeeper * Defender * Midfielder * Forward | | Strategy | * Formation * Tactics | | Skills | * Bicycle kick * Curl * Nutmeg * Rabona * Step over | | Terminology | * Anti-football * Catenaccio * Tiki-taka * Total football * Zona mista * Equaliser | | Memorabilia | * Trading cards | | Organised supporters | * Barra brava * Curva * Hooliganism * Torcida * Ultras * Chant | | Comparisons | * Futsal * Rugby union | | Main associations | * FIFA * Africa * Asia * Europe * North & Central America * Oceania * South America | | Olympic | * Summer Olympics * Youth Olympics | | Lists | | | | | --- | --- | | Men's | * Competitions * Families * Players * Top scorers * Clubs * National teams | | Women's | * Competitions * Families * Players * Top scorers * Clubs * National teams | | | Related topics | * 12th man * Alcohol * Association football films * Beautiful Game * Captain * Child abuse * Culture * Ethnicity * Football club * Homosexuality * Names * Politics * Professionalism * Racism * Retired numbers (list) * Rivalries (list) * Smoking * Squad number * Stadiums (list) * Transfer * World XI | | * Category * Commons * Portal * WikiProject |
595,822
Weilheim_an_der_Teck
Weilheim an der Teck
8,358,363
| Weilheim an der Teck | | --- | | [Town](/wiki/Town#Germany "Town") | | Church of St. Peter | | Coat of arms | | Location of Weilheim an der Teck within Esslingen district | | Weilheim an der Teck Show map of GermanyWeilheim an der Teck Show map of Baden-Württemberg | | Coordinates: [48°36′54″N 9°32′19″E / 48.61500°N 9.53861°E / 48.61500; 9.53861](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Weilheim_an_der_Teck&params=48_36_54_N_9_32_19_E_type:city(10269)_region:DE-BW)[Coordinates](/wiki/Geographic_coordinate_system "Geographic coordinate system"): [48°36′54″N 9°32′19″E / 48.61500°N 9.53861°E / 48.61500; 9.53861](//geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Weilheim_an_der_Teck&params=48_36_54_N_9_32_19_E_type:city(10269)_region:DE-BW) | | Country | [Germany](/wiki/Germany "Germany") | | [State](/wiki/States_of_Germany "States of Germany") | [Baden-Württemberg](/wiki/Baden-W%C3%BCrttemberg "Baden-Württemberg") | | [Admin. region](/wiki/Regierungsbezirk "Regierungsbezirk") | [Stuttgart](/wiki/Stuttgart_(region) "Stuttgart (region)") | | [District](/wiki/Districts_of_Germany "Districts of Germany") | [Esslingen](/wiki/Esslingen_(district) "Esslingen (district)") | | Subdivisions | 3 | | Government | |  • [Mayor](/wiki/Burgomaster "Burgomaster") | Johannes Züfle | | Area | |  • Total | 26.51 km2 (10.24 sq mi) | | Elevation | 385 m (1,263 ft) | | Population (2021-12-31)[[1]](#cite_note-1) | |  • Total | 10,269 | |  • Density | 390/km2 (1,000/sq mi) | | [Time zone](/wiki/Time_in_Germany "Time in Germany") | [UTC+01:00](/wiki/UTC%2B01:00 "UTC+01:00") ([CET](/wiki/Central_European_Time "Central European Time")) | |  • Summer ([DST](/wiki/Daylight_saving_time "Daylight saving time")) | [UTC+02:00](/wiki/UTC%2B02:00 "UTC+02:00") ([CEST](/wiki/Central_European_Summer_Time "Central European Summer Time")) | | [Postal codes](/wiki/List_of_postal_codes_in_Germany "List of postal codes in Germany") | 73231–73235 | | [Dialling codes](/wiki/List_of_dialling_codes_in_Germany "List of dialling codes in Germany") | 07023 | | [Vehicle registration](/wiki/Vehicle_registration_plate "Vehicle registration plate") | ES | | Website | [www.weilheim-teck.de](http://www.weilheim-teck.de/) | **Weilheim an der Teck** (Swabian: *Weile*) is a [town](/wiki/Town "Town") in [Baden-Württemberg](/wiki/Baden-W%C3%BCrttemberg "Baden-Württemberg"), [Germany](/wiki/Germany "Germany"). It is 7 kilometres (4.3 miles) southeast of [Kirchheim unter Teck](/wiki/Kirchheim_unter_Teck "Kirchheim unter Teck"), and 13 kilometres (8.1 miles) southwest of [Göppingen](/wiki/G%C3%B6ppingen "Göppingen"). ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["Bevölkerung nach Nationalität und Geschlecht am 31. Dezember 2021"](https://www.statistik-bw.de/BevoelkGebiet/Bevoelk_I_D_A_vj.csv) [Population by nationality and sex as of December 31, 2021] (CSV) (in German). [Statistisches Landesamt Baden-Württemberg](/wiki/Statistisches_Landesamt_Baden-W%C3%BCrttemberg "Statistisches Landesamt Baden-Württemberg"). June 2022. ## Other websites Media related to [Weilheim an der Teck](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Weilheim_an_der_Teck "commons:Category:Weilheim an der Teck") at Wikimedia Commons | * [v](/wiki/Template:Cities_and_towns_in_Esslingen_(district) "Template:Cities and towns in Esslingen (district)") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Cities_and_towns_in_Esslingen_(district)&action=edit) Towns and municipalities in [Esslingen (district)](/wiki/Esslingen_(district) "Esslingen (district)") | | --- | | * [Aichtal](/wiki/Aichtal "Aichtal") * [Aichwald](/wiki/Aichwald "Aichwald") * Altbach * [Altdorf](/wiki/Altdorf,_Esslingen "Altdorf, Esslingen") * Altenriet * Baltmannsweiler * Bempflingen * Beuren * Bissingen (Teck) * Deizisau * Denkendorf * Dettingen (Teck) * Erkenbrechtsweiler * [Esslingen am Neckar](/wiki/Esslingen_am_Neckar "Esslingen am Neckar") * [Filderstadt](/wiki/Filderstadt "Filderstadt") * [Frickenhausen](/wiki/Frickenhausen "Frickenhausen") * Großbettlingen * Hochdorf * Holzmaden * [Kirchheim (Teck)](/wiki/Kirchheim_unter_Teck "Kirchheim unter Teck") * Kohlberg * Köngen * [Leinfelden-Echterdingen](/wiki/Leinfelden-Echterdingen "Leinfelden-Echterdingen") * Lenningen * Lichtenwald * Neckartailfingen * Neckartenzlingen * Neidlingen * [Neuffen](/wiki/Neuffen "Neuffen") * [Neuhausen (Fildern)](/wiki/Neuhausen_auf_den_Fildern "Neuhausen auf den Fildern") * Notzingen * [Nürtingen](/wiki/N%C3%BCrtingen "Nürtingen") * Oberboihingen * Ohmden * [Ostfildern](/wiki/Ostfildern "Ostfildern") * [Owen](/wiki/Owen,_Germany "Owen, Germany") * Plochingen * [Reichenbach an der Fils](/wiki/Reichenbach_an_der_Fils "Reichenbach an der Fils") * Schlaitdorf * Unterensingen * Weilheim * Wendlingen * Wernau * Wolfschlugen | | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [Europe](/wiki/Category:Europe_stubs "Category:Europe stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Weilheim_an_der_Teck&action=edit)*.
| Weilheim an der Teck | | --- | | Town | | Church of St. Peter | | Coat of arms | | Location of Weilheim an der Teck within Esslingen district | | Weilheim an der Teck Show map of GermanyWeilheim an der Teck Show map of Baden-Württemberg | | Coordinates: 48°36′54″N 9°32′19″E / 48.61500°N 9.53861°E / 48.61500; 9.53861Coordinates: 48°36′54″N 9°32′19″E / 48.61500°N 9.53861°E / 48.61500; 9.53861 | | Country | Germany | | State | Baden-Württemberg | | Admin. region | Stuttgart | | District | Esslingen | | Subdivisions | 3 | | Government | |  • Mayor | Johannes Züfle | | Area | |  • Total | 26.51 km2 (10.24 sq mi) | | Elevation | 385 m (1,263 ft) | | Population (2021-12-31)[1] | |  • Total | 10,269 | |  • Density | 390/km2 (1,000/sq mi) | | Time zone | UTC+01:00 (CET) | |  • Summer (DST) | UTC+02:00 (CEST) | | Postal codes | 73231–73235 | | Dialling codes | 07023 | | Vehicle registration | ES | | Website | www.weilheim-teck.de | Weilheim an der Teck (Swabian: Weile) is a town in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is 7 kilometres (4.3 miles) southeast of Kirchheim unter Teck, and 13 kilometres (8.1 miles) southwest of Göppingen. References ↑ "Bevölkerung nach Nationalität und Geschlecht am 31. Dezember 2021" [Population by nationality and sex as of December 31, 2021] (CSV) (in German). Statistisches Landesamt Baden-Württemberg. June 2022. Other websites Media related to Weilheim an der Teck at Wikimedia Commons | * v * t * e Towns and municipalities in Esslingen (district) | | --- | | * Aichtal * Aichwald * Altbach * Altdorf * Altenriet * Baltmannsweiler * Bempflingen * Beuren * Bissingen (Teck) * Deizisau * Denkendorf * Dettingen (Teck) * Erkenbrechtsweiler * Esslingen am Neckar * Filderstadt * Frickenhausen * Großbettlingen * Hochdorf * Holzmaden * Kirchheim (Teck) * Kohlberg * Köngen * Leinfelden-Echterdingen * Lenningen * Lichtenwald * Neckartailfingen * Neckartenzlingen * Neidlingen * Neuffen * Neuhausen (Fildern) * Notzingen * Nürtingen * Oberboihingen * Ohmden * Ostfildern * Owen * Plochingen * Reichenbach an der Fils * Schlaitdorf * Unterensingen * Weilheim * Wendlingen * Wernau * Wolfschlugen | | This short article about Europe can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
680,376
United_States_presidential_election_in_Alaska,_2016
United States presidential election in Alaska, 2016
6,435,454
Redirect to: * [2016 United States presidential election in Alaska](/wiki/2016_United_States_presidential_election_in_Alaska "2016 United States presidential election in Alaska")
Redirect to: 2016 United States presidential election in Alaska
299,693
High_Easter
High Easter
9,025,893
| | | | --- | --- | | | This article **needs more [sources](/wiki/Wikipedia:Citing_sources "Wikipedia:Citing sources") for [reliability](/wiki/Wikipedia:Verifiability "Wikipedia:Verifiability").** Please help [improve this article](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=High_Easter&action=edit) by adding [reliable sources](/wiki/Wikipedia:Reliable_sources "Wikipedia:Reliable sources"). Unsourced material may be [challenged](/wiki/Template:Fact "Template:Fact") or removed.*Find sources:* ["High Easter"](//www.google.com/search?as_eq=wikipedia&q=%22High+Easter%22) – [news](//www.google.com/search?tbm=nws&q=%22High+Easter%22+-wikipedia) **·** [newspapers](//www.google.com/search?&q=%22High+Easter%22+site:news.google.com/newspapers&source=newspapers) **·** [books](//www.google.com/search?tbs=bks:1&q=%22High+Easter%22+-wikipedia) **·** [scholar](//scholar.google.com/scholar?q=%22High+Easter%22) **·** [JSTOR](https://www.jstor.org/action/doBasicSearch?Query=%22High+Easter%22&acc=on&wc=on) *([Learn how and when to remove this template message](/wiki/Help:Maintenance_template_removal "Help:Maintenance template removal"))* | **High Easter** is a [village](/wiki/Village "Village") and [civil parish](/wiki/Civil_parishes_in_England "Civil parishes in England") in [Uttlesford](/wiki/Uttlesford "Uttlesford"), [Essex](/wiki/Essex "Essex"), England. In 2001 there were 657 people living in High Easter.[[1]](#cite_note-1) ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["Local statistics - Office for National Statistics"](https://www.ons.gov.uk/help/localstatistics). *www.ons.gov.uk*. | * [v](/wiki/Template:Uttlesford "Template:Uttlesford") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Uttlesford&action=edit) [Category:Uttlesford](/wiki/Category:Uttlesford "Category:Uttlesford") | | --- | | [Arkesden](/wiki/Arkesden "Arkesden") **·** [Ashdon](/wiki/Ashdon "Ashdon") **·** [Aythorpe Roding](/wiki/Aythorpe_Roding "Aythorpe Roding") **·** [Barnston](/wiki/Barnston "Barnston") **·** [Berden](/wiki/Berden "Berden") **·** [Birchanger](/wiki/Birchanger "Birchanger") **·** [Broxted](/wiki/Broxted "Broxted") **·** [Chickney](/wiki/Chickney "Chickney") **·** [Chrishall](/wiki/Chrishall "Chrishall") **·** [Clavering](/wiki/Clavering "Clavering") **·** [Debden](/wiki/Debden "Debden") **·** [Elmdon](/wiki/Elmdon "Elmdon") **·** [Elsenham](/wiki/Elsenham "Elsenham") **·** [Farnham](/wiki/Farnham,_Essex "Farnham, Essex") **·** [Felsted](/wiki/Felsted "Felsted") **·** [Great Canfield](/wiki/Great_Canfield "Great Canfield") **·** [Great Chesterford](/wiki/Great_Chesterford "Great Chesterford") **·** [Great Dunmow](/wiki/Great_Dunmow "Great Dunmow") **·** [Great Easton](/wiki/Great_Easton "Great Easton") **·** [Great Hallingbury](/wiki/Great_Hallingbury "Great Hallingbury") **·** [Great Sampford](/wiki/Great_Sampford "Great Sampford") **·** [Hadstock](/wiki/Hadstock "Hadstock") **·** [Hatfield Broad Oak](/wiki/Hatfield_Broad_Oak "Hatfield Broad Oak") **·** [Hatfield Heath](/wiki/Hatfield_Heath "Hatfield Heath") **·** [Hempstead](/wiki/Hempstead "Hempstead") **·** [Henham](/wiki/Henham "Henham") **·** High Easter **·** High Roothing **·** [Langley](/wiki/Langley "Langley") **·** [Leaden Roding](/wiki/Leaden_Roding "Leaden Roding") **·** [Lindsell](/wiki/Lindsell "Lindsell") **·** [Little Bardfield](/wiki/Little_Bardfield "Little Bardfield") **·** Little Canfield **·** [Little Chesterford](/wiki/Little_Chesterford "Little Chesterford") **·** [Little Dunmow](/wiki/Little_Dunmow "Little Dunmow") **·** [Little Easton](/wiki/Little_Easton "Little Easton") **·** [Little Hallingbury](/wiki/Little_Hallingbury "Little Hallingbury") **·** [Little Sampford](/wiki/Little_Sampford "Little Sampford") **·** [Littlebury](/wiki/Littlebury "Littlebury") **·** [Manuden](/wiki/Manuden "Manuden") **·** [Margaret Roding](/wiki/Margaret_Roding "Margaret Roding") **·** [Newport](/wiki/Newport,_Essex "Newport, Essex") **·** Quendon and Rickling **·** [Radwinter](/wiki/Radwinter "Radwinter") **·** [Saffron Walden](/wiki/Saffron_Walden "Saffron Walden") **·** [Stansted Mountfitchet](/wiki/Stansted_Mountfitchet "Stansted Mountfitchet") **·** [Stebbing](/wiki/Stebbing "Stebbing") **·** [Strethall](/wiki/Strethall "Strethall") **·** [Takeley](/wiki/Takeley "Takeley") **·** [Thaxted](/wiki/Thaxted "Thaxted") **·** [Tilty](/wiki/Tilty "Tilty") **·** [Ugley](/wiki/Ugley "Ugley") **·** Wenden Lofts **·** [Wendens Ambo](/wiki/Wendens_Ambo "Wendens Ambo") **·** White Roothing **·** [Wicken Bonhunt](/wiki/Wicken_Bonhunt "Wicken Bonhunt") **·** [Widdington](/wiki/Widdington "Widdington") **·** [Wimbish](/wiki/Wimbish "Wimbish") | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [place or feature](/wiki/Category:Geography_stubs "Category:Geography stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=High_Easter&action=edit)*. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about the [United Kingdom](/wiki/Category:United_Kingdom_stubs "Category:United Kingdom stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=High_Easter&action=edit)*.
| | | | --- | --- | | | This article needs more sources for reliability. Please help improve this article by adding reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged or removed.Find sources: "High Easter" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (Learn how and when to remove this template message) | High Easter is a village and civil parish in Uttlesford, Essex, England. In 2001 there were 657 people living in High Easter.[1] References ↑ "Local statistics - Office for National Statistics". www.ons.gov.uk. | * v * t * e Category:Uttlesford | | --- | | Arkesden · Ashdon · Aythorpe Roding · Barnston · Berden · Birchanger · Broxted · Chickney · Chrishall · Clavering · Debden · Elmdon · Elsenham · Farnham · Felsted · Great Canfield · Great Chesterford · Great Dunmow · Great Easton · Great Hallingbury · Great Sampford · Hadstock · Hatfield Broad Oak · Hatfield Heath · Hempstead · Henham · High Easter · High Roothing · Langley · Leaden Roding · Lindsell · Little Bardfield · Little Canfield · Little Chesterford · Little Dunmow · Little Easton · Little Hallingbury · Little Sampford · Littlebury · Manuden · Margaret Roding · Newport · Quendon and Rickling · Radwinter · Saffron Walden · Stansted Mountfitchet · Stebbing · Strethall · Takeley · Thaxted · Tilty · Ugley · Wenden Lofts · Wendens Ambo · White Roothing · Wicken Bonhunt · Widdington · Wimbish | This short article about a place or feature can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it. This short article about the United Kingdom can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
831,898
Tivat
Tivat
8,031,960
Tivat Coat of arms **Tivat** ([Serbian Cyrillic](/wiki/Serbian_Cyrillic_alphabet "Serbian Cyrillic alphabet"): Тиват) is a coastal town in southwestern [Montenegro](/wiki/Montenegro "Montenegro"), on the [Bay of Kotor](/wiki/Bay_of_Kotor "Bay of Kotor"). In 2011, 9,367 people lived there. It is the smallest municipality by area in Montenegro. | * [v](/wiki/Template:Municipalities_of_Montenegro "Template:Municipalities of Montenegro") * t * [e](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Municipalities_of_Montenegro&action=edit) Municipalities of [Montenegro](/wiki/Montenegro "Montenegro") | | --- | | * [Andrijevica](/wiki/Andrijevica "Andrijevica") * [Bar](/wiki/Bar,_Montenegro "Bar, Montenegro") * [Berane](/wiki/Berane "Berane") * [Bijelo Polje](/wiki/Bijelo_Polje "Bijelo Polje") * [Budva](/wiki/Budva "Budva") * [Cetinje](/wiki/Cetinje "Cetinje") * [Danilovgrad](/wiki/Danilovgrad "Danilovgrad") * [Gusinje](/wiki/Gusinje "Gusinje") * [Herceg Novi](/wiki/Herceg_Novi "Herceg Novi") * [Kolašin](/wiki/Kola%C5%A1in "Kolašin") * [Kotor](/wiki/Kotor "Kotor") * [Mojkovac](/wiki/Mojkovac "Mojkovac") * [Nikšić](/wiki/Nik%C5%A1i%C4%87 "Nikšić") * [Petnjica](/wiki/Petnjica "Petnjica") * [Plav](/wiki/Plav,_Montenegro "Plav, Montenegro") * [Pljevlja](/wiki/Pljevlja "Pljevlja") * [Plužine](/wiki/Plu%C5%BEine "Plužine") * [Podgorica](/wiki/Podgorica "Podgorica") * [Rožaje](/wiki/Ro%C5%BEaje "Rožaje") * [Šavnik](/wiki/%C5%A0avnik "Šavnik") * Tivat * [Tuzi](/wiki/Tuzi "Tuzi") * [Ulcinj](/wiki/Ulcinj "Ulcinj") * [Žabljak](/wiki/%C5%BDabljak "Žabljak") | | *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about [Europe](/wiki/Category:Europe_stubs "Category:Europe stubs") can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tivat&action=edit)*.
Tivat Coat of arms Tivat (Serbian Cyrillic: Тиват) is a coastal town in southwestern Montenegro, on the Bay of Kotor. In 2011, 9,367 people lived there. It is the smallest municipality by area in Montenegro. | * v * t * e Municipalities of Montenegro | | --- | | * Andrijevica * Bar * Berane * Bijelo Polje * Budva * Cetinje * Danilovgrad * Gusinje * Herceg Novi * Kolašin * Kotor * Mojkovac * Nikšić * Petnjica * Plav * Pljevlja * Plužine * Podgorica * Rožaje * Šavnik * Tivat * Tuzi * Ulcinj * Žabljak | | This short article about Europe can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
449,482
Stacy_Lattisaw
Stacy Lattisaw
7,345,577
| | | | --- | --- | | | This article **relies on [references](/wiki/Wikipedia:Verifiability "Wikipedia:Verifiability") to [primary sources](/wiki/Wikipedia:No_original_research#Primary.2C_secondary_and_tertiary_sources "Wikipedia:No original research") or sources affiliated with the subject**, rather on neutral material. Please add more appropriate [citations](/wiki/Wikipedia:Citing_sources "Wikipedia:Citing sources") from [reliable sources](/wiki/Wikipedia:Reliable_sources "Wikipedia:Reliable sources"). *(May 2014)* | **Stacy Lattisaw** (born November 25, 1966) is an [American](/wiki/Americans "Americans") R&B and gospel [singer](/wiki/Singer "Singer"). Since the 1990s, she has performed only gospel music.[[1]](#cite_note-1) Lattisaw's major [singles](/wiki/Single_(music) "Single (music)") include "Love on a Two-Way Street" and 1989's "Where Do We Go from Here". Lattisaw was born in [Washington, D.C.](/wiki/Washington,_D.C. "Washington, D.C."). ## References 1. [↑](#cite_ref-1) ["Stacy Lattisaw"](https://web.archive.org/web/20130603155127/http://www.stacylattisaw.net/stacys-biography). Stacy Lattisaw. Archived from [the original](http://www.stacylattisaw.net/stacys-biography) on June 3, 2013. Retrieved May 5, 2014. *This [short article](/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub "Wikipedia:Stub") about a [person](/wiki/Category:American_people_stubs "Category:American people stubs") from the United States can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by [adding to it](https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Stacy_Lattisaw&action=edit)*.
| | | | --- | --- | | | This article relies on references to primary sources or sources affiliated with the subject, rather on neutral material. Please add more appropriate citations from reliable sources. (May 2014) | Stacy Lattisaw (born November 25, 1966) is an American R&B and gospel singer. Since the 1990s, she has performed only gospel music.[1] Lattisaw's major singles include "Love on a Two-Way Street" and 1989's "Where Do We Go from Here". Lattisaw was born in Washington, D.C.. References ↑ "Stacy Lattisaw". Stacy Lattisaw. Archived from the original on June 3, 2013. Retrieved May 5, 2014. This short article about a person from the United States can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it.