User:Narky Blert/sandbox
Unfortunately, Neue Nekrolog der Deutschen isn't in Wikisource. However, de:Wikisource/Biographische Nachschlagewerke led me to two other scans: one the same as Google (it's watermarked)[1] and one different (the page fold is less marked).[2]
My transcription:
Karl Anton Epiphanius Matzel
Kollaberator[3] an d. höheren Bürgerschule zu Breslau
geb. den 5. Febr. 1810, gest. den 28 März 1843
M. wurde zu Kieserstädtel bei Gleiwitz geboren, besuchte daselbst die Stadtschule und von 1823-32 das kathol. Gymnasium in Gleiwitz, wo seine Vorliebe für die Mathematik und Naturwissenschaften zeitig hervortrat. Es steigerte sich selbige auf der Universität Breslau, welche er zu Michaelis 1832 bezog, um sich der katholischen Theologie zu widmen, so, daß er 1834 dem Studium der Theologie entsagte, um sich dem naturwissenschaftlichen Fache ganz hingeben zu können. Leider ŭberfiel ihm schon 1836 in Ratibor ein Blutsturz, sowie eine Lungenentzǔndung, an welcher er bald darauf in Gleiwitz erkrankte. Es entwickelte sich ein tiefbegrūndetes Leiden, welches eine Badekur in Reinerz nicht zu heben vermochte. Er kehrte zu den Studien nach Breslau zurūck, ohne sich der vollen Gesundheit je noch erfreuen zu dūrfen. Im Herbste 1837 verließ er die Universität, erwarb bei der philosoph. Fakultät daselbst am 6. Febr. 1839 die Doktorwürde und trat bald nach Eröffnung der höheren Bürgerschule in Breslau als Kollaborator in das Lehrerkollegium derselben ein, und dem er zu Ostern 1843 scheiden sollte, um eine mit einem Gehalte vom 350 Thlr. gebundene Kollaboratur am kathol. Gymnasium daselbst, an welchem er seit Anfang 1843 bereits thätig war, zu übernehmen. Doch er starb am 28. März, nachdem ihn 8 Tage vorher ein neuer Blutsturz überfallen hatte. Wir besitzen von M., der sich durch gebiegenes Wissen, Pflichtreue und Biederkeit auszeichnete, eine von dem Naturhistorikern beifällig aufgenommene Abhandlung u. Necropherorum monographiae particula prima. Acc. IV tab. lith. (Vrat. 1839.) Für die Schles. Prov.=Blätter und das Lit.=Blatt von und für Schlesien hatte er seit dem J. 1840 schatzbare Beiträge geliefert.
My translation:
Karl Anton Epiphanius Matzel
Born 5 February 1810, died 28 March 1843
Matzek was born in Kieserstädtel near Gleiwitz, attended the town school there, and from 1823-32 the Catholic grammar school in Gleiwitz, where his interest in mathematics and natural sciences soon became apparent. He attended the University of Breslau from Michaelmas 1832 to study Catholic theology, but gave up studying theology in 1834 to devote himself entirely to the natural sciences. Unfortunately, in 1836 he suffered a internal hemorrhage in Ratibor (modern Racibórz), followed soon thereafter by pneumonia in Gleiwitz. A chronic ailment developed, which was not alleviated by spa treatment in Reinerz. He returned to Breslau to study, without enjoying full health. In autumn 1837, he left the university, securing a degree from the philosophy faculty there on 6 February 1839, and joined the college of teachers as a Kollaborator soon after the opening of the higher public school in Breslau at a salary of 350 thaler Kollaborator at the Catholic grammar school there, where he had been active since the beginning of 1843. He died on 28 March, after a new hemorrhage had attacked him 8 days before. We have a treatise by M., who was distinguished by bent knowledge, devotion to duty, and uprightness, which was applauded by the natural historian, on Necropherorum monographiae particula prima. Acc. IV tab. lith. (Vrat. 1839.) He had made valuable contributions to the Schles. Prov.-Blätter and the Lit.-Blatt von und zu Schlesien since 1840.
Karl Anton Epiphanius Matzel Kollaberator at the higher municipal school in Breslau
Michaelis (Michaelmas)
References
- ^ Neue Nekrolog der Deutschen.
{{cite book}}
:|website=
ignored (help) - ^ Neue Nekrolog der Deutschen.
{{cite book}}
:|website=
ignored (help) - ^ I've been unable to find a definition of Kollaberator/ur. The context suggests it is a junior teaching position in a hierarchical structure.
A grand experiment is an experiment conducted on all or a large proportion of a population, particularly if the experimental subjects have no say in the matter.
The term was first used when in 1854 English physician John Snow compared the incidence of cholera in two London neighbourhoods which received water from two different suppliers. One took its supply from the River Thames in London itself, contaminated with sewage; and the other from the upper reaches of the river, away from urban pollution.[1] He found that the incidence of the disease in the former neightbourhood was fourteen times that in the latter.
The term has also been used in relation to such various things as
Christian evangelism in India[2]
environmental protection[3]
social mobility in Soviet Hungary[4]
evolution by means of natural selection (in which the experimenter is nature itself) both by a zoologist[5] and by a Christian apologist[6]
town planning[7]
Soviet communism[8]
education[9]
nationwide science planning[10]
reintroduction of cheetahs in India[11]
and as hyperbole
References
[edit]- ^ Frerichs, Ralph. "John Snow". britannica.com. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
- ^ Mangalwadi, Vishal (1997). India, The Grand Experiment. Pippa Rann Books. ISBN 9780951308943.
- ^ Stavins, Robert N. (Summer 1998). "What Can We Learn from the Grand Policy Experiment? Lessons from SO2 Allowance Trading". Journal of Economic Perspectives. 12 (3): 69–88. doi:10.1257/jep.12.3.69.
- ^ Szelényi, Szonja (1999). Equality by Design: The Grand Experiment in Destratification in Socialist Hungary. Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804731072.
- ^ Barlow, George W. (2008) [2000]. The Cichlid Fishes: Nature’s Grand Experiment in Evolution. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-7382-0528-1.
- ^ Werner, Carl (1 July 2007). Evolution: The Grand Experiment: The Quest for an Answer (Revised and updated ed.). New Leaf Press. ISBN 978-0892216819.
- ^ Ouroussoff, Nicolai (3 March 2002). "City on the Gulf: Koolhaas Lays Out a Grand Urban Experiment in Dubai".
- ^ Doctorow, Cory (14 August 2007). "Don't fall for the Potemkin scam". The Guardian.
- ^ Hao, Karen (2 August 2019). "China has started a grand experiment in AI education. It could reshape how the world learns". MIT Technology Review. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
- ^ Sun, Yutao; Cao, Cong (2021). "Planning for science: China's "grand experiment" and global implications". Humanit Soc Sci Commun. 8: 215. doi:10.1057/s41599-021-00895-7.
- ^ Schmall, Emily; Kumar, Hari (16 September 2022). "After 75 Years, Cheetahs Return to India in a Grand Experiment". New York Times.
- ^ Chimal, Alberto (November 2018). "El gran experimento". Revista de la Universidad de México (in Spanish). National Autonomous University of Mexico. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
- ^ Chimal, Alberto (Summer 2019). "The Grand Experiment". World Literature Today. Translated from the Spanish by George Henson. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
- Maxwell Hope-Thomson
- Battle of Shangshak
- 50th Parachute Brigade (India)
- Gazette search
- "No. 33748". The London Gazette. 28 August 1931. p. 5623. 2nd Lt.
- "No. 34338". The London Gazette. 6 November 1936. p. 7123. MC (Lt.)
- "No. 34660". The London Gazette. 29 August 1939. p. 5917. Capt.
- "No. 37635". The London Gazette (Supplement). 28 June 1946. p. 3372. Maj. (RSFus. War Subs Lt-Col.)
- "No. 39921". The London Gazette (Supplement). 21 July 1953. p. 4051. Lt-Col. (now D.S.O., O.B.E., M.C.)
- "No. 40593". The London Gazette (Supplement). 23 September 1955. p. 5427. Emp. List
- "No. 40613". The London Gazette (Supplement). 21 October 1955. p. 5966. Malaya
- "No. 40707". The London Gazette (Supplement). 10 February 1956. p. 895. Lt-Col., on full pay
- "No. 40944". The London Gazette (Supplement). 7 December 1956. p. 7003. Col.
- "No. 42186". The London Gazette (Supplement). 4 November 1960. p. 7543. Brig.
- "No. 42652". The London Gazette (Supplement). 17 April 1962. p. 3265. AdC to Queen (Brig.)
- "No. 42839". The London Gazette (Supplement). 21 November 1962. p. 9147. supernumary Brig.
- "No. 43287". The London Gazette (Supplement). 31 March 1964. p. 2889. retd.
- "No. 43365". The London Gazette (Supplement). 23 June 1964. p. 5529. retired as AdC to Queen (Brig.)
- "Lieutenant-Colonel Maxwell RJ Hope DSO OBE MC". paradata.org.uk. dob, dod
- "Brigadier Maxwell Richard Julian HOPE-THOMSON, D.S.O., O.B.E., M.C. (52731)". Worcestershire Regiment.
- "1st Battalion Worcestershire Regiment 1944-45 - Awards and Citations – S/Capt., W/S Maj., A/Lieut.-Col. M. R. J. HOPE-THOMSON M.C. (52731)". Worcestershire Regiment.
- "Hope-Thomson, Maxwell Richard Julian". generals.dk. dates only
- Blog
- Sanderson, Myles. "SANGSAK 1944 – PART 1". The Parachute Regimental Association.
- Sanderson, Myles. "SANGSHAK 1944 – CONTINUED". The Parachute Regimental Association.
- 44th Indian Airborne Division
- Secret Service in the Cold War: An SIS Officer from Philby to the Cuban ...
- Airborne Landing to Air Assault: A History of Military Parachuting
- Oman's Insurgencies: The Sultanate's Struggle for Supremacy
Mononyms - hndis and dab|hndis
[edit]u:Clarityfiend and I have been discussing this topic at User talk:Narky Blert#Hndis, and have failed to agree. We have cooperated in drafting this post, and have brought it here for discussion and (hopefully) WP:CONSENSUS.
The question is in two parts, but we think they deserve similar answers. (Others may disagree.) (1) Should navigation pages which contain only mononyms be categorised as {{hndis}} or {{given name}}? (2) Should DAB pages which contain two or more mononyms be classified as {{dab|given name}} or {{dab|hndis}}? If existing guidelines are clear and appropriate for 2021, they should be applied; if they are unclear or obsolete, they should be updated.
This discussion will be advertised at WT:APO.
Acting career
In London, Rockas began acting under the direction of George Eugeniou at Theatro Technis[9] hxxp://web.a.ebscohost.com/abstract?site=ehost&scope=site&jrnl=08248621&AN=52410713&h=D4pQVSHa%2blft3Fkw0PfL0P6VsqS5LzgL3rJ0zFn6HFeAqgqGTLhjLJEzqMvoOl2cN5%2fokwT3iEkKRUTPN9UnqA%3d%3d&crl=c&resultLocal=ErrCrlNoResults&resultNs=Ehost&crlhashurl=login.aspx%3fdirect%3dtrue%26profile%3dehost%26scope%3dsite%26authtype%3dcrawler%26jrnl%3d08248621%26AN%3d52410713 [failed verification] use https://ejournals.lib.uoc.gr/index.php/hellst/article/view/617/531 where she participated in Greek classical productions.
Rockas also played Io in a production of Prometheus Bound.[10] https://archive.org/details/TheatroTechnisLondonPrometheusBoundAeschyllusTimeOut [11] http://www.apgrd.ox.ac.uk/productions/people/3272 She also performed under the name of Angeliki in dual language productions (Greek/English) based on improvisations about issues that touched the Greek Cypriot community, and the tragedy of the Turkish invasion of Cyprus, Attilas '74.[12] https://vimeo.com/72538143 The plays included Dowry with Two White Doves, Afrodite Unbound, A Revolutionary Nicknamed Roosevelt, Ethnikos Aravonas.[13] https://archive.org/details/AnniversaryOfTheatroTechnis [14] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cJK-3eZISic [15] https://archive.org/details/InterviewAngeliqueRockasParakiakiHaravgi In 1982, she played the lead role in the stage play Medea by Euripides, directed by George Eugeniou at Theatro Technis (Cypriot Community in London).[16] http://www.apgrd.ox.ac.uk/productions/production/3038
Rockas performed Lady Macbeth in Shakespeare's Macbeth[17] https://archive.org/details/MacbethProgram at the Tramshed [18] [dead link ] Woolwich .
Rockas begann ihre Schauspielkarriere bei Theatro Technis London, wo sie an Klassikern wie 'Prometheus Gebunden', 'Lysistrata', Die Ritter Oh Demokratie[14] http://www.apgrd.ox.ac.uk/productions/people/3272 und an politischen Stücken in griechischer / englischer Sprache teilnahm[15] https://archive.org/details/InterviewAngeliqueRockasParakiakiHaravgi Rockas erhielt als Schauspielerin für ihre Interpretation von Rollen wie die der Yvette in Mutter Courage und ihre Kinder von Bertolt Brecht[16] https://archive.org/details/AngeliuqeAsYvette008 oder der Carmen in Der Balkon von Jean Genet gute Kritiken.[17] https://archive.org/details/TheBalconyReviewJohnLeachWhereToGo Ihre Darstellung in Medea wurde als "extrem wendig" beschrieben.[18] https://ia800702.us.archive.org/1/items/Screengrab1SundayTelegraphWomenssWorldsMidPage24Januray1982/Screengrab%20%201%20Sunday%20Telegraph%20Womens%60s%20Worlds%20%20mid%20page%2024%20Januray%201982.png Sie spielte auch die Emma in El Campo von Griselda Gambaro, von BBC Latin American Service als "magistralmente" bezeichnet[19] https://archive.org/details/BBCLatinAmericanReview2 [20] https://archive.org/details/BBCLatinAmericanReview1 [21] https://archive.org/details/SearingMorningStarOriginalCamp [22] https://archive.org/details/SpareRibElCampoTheCampReview Ihre bahnbrechende Leistung von Strinberg Fräulein Julie als kurze, griechisch aussehende Aristokratin wurde als eine Leistung beschrieben, die "große Dimensionen in die Figur bringt", die in früheren Produktionen ignoriert wurde[23] https://archive.org/details/MorningStarProfoundConflictArticle Angelique Rockas, Emma, El Campo, Griselda Gambaro
'Tis Pity She`sa Whore'[24] https://archive.org/details/ScrrengrabTisPityShesAWhore , die auch Rockas erste Theaterproduktion unter dem Banner von 'New Theatre' war und jetzt als eine von aufgeführt wird die Hauptproduktionen von Tis Pity für das Jahrzehnt der 1980er Jahre im 20. Jahrhundert[25] https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=vECJAwAAQBAJ&pg=PT43&lpg=PT43&dq=tis+pity+she%60s#v=onepage&q=tis%20pity%20she%60s&f=false
linksto: insource:/\[\[White\]\]/
- Soyuz
- Oil
- Statuary
- Manslaughter
- English law 1
- UC Dance, Dancer, Dancing
- Black and white
- Stream
- Saxon [Milesian -> Milesians]
- Electorate 1
- Hamlet +ballet
- strings 1
- Milan (several hundred)
- basketball 1
- volleyball 1
- Conservatory 1
- rapper 1
- Duchy 1
- redlink -> blue 1
- Triennale 1
- dabentry 2
- Genova
- {{-r|Padova}
- Firenze Nürnberg, München, Warszawa, Warschau, Praha, Napoli, Venezia, Sevilla, Genève, Lombardia, Italia, Toscana, Warschau, Torino
What to do if you can't find your DABlink
[edit]Ingenious editors have devised numerous ways to make their DABlinks difficult to find. This section can never be complete; there will always be new ones.
If you're here because you're fuming that you can't find a DABlink, try the ideas here first. The last resort is to post at WT:DPL, where a regular might have seen the same problem before. If you find a new problem - and, ideally, a new solution - add it here.
The first step is to check the edit history. A recent addition may have been reverted, or another DABfixer may have beaten you to it.
The second is to check for navigation templates, both in infoboxes and at the end of the article.
Single words
[edit]These shouldn't be a problem, right? Not a bit of it!
- Check for navigational templates, usually at the bottom of the page. If the link there seems to have been fixed, make a WP:NULLEDIT. Changes in templates can take time to filter through the system unless given a push.
- Autogenerated links Part I. Some templates
- Links like [[Fiz|Buz]], where the pipe has crept in by accident and the link should be [[Fiz Buz]] or [[Fiz Buz|Buz]]. (In a small number of cases, there's no obvious connection between the two parts of the link, or between either and the subject of the article; add a {{dn}} tag, and move on, hoping that a pagewatcher knows what is meant.)
- Imports from Wikidata into {{infobox}}es. These can be real brutes, because nothing shows up in edit mode and you have to find them by eye. (Recommended: Preferences/Gadgets/Display links to disambiguation pages in orange) Solution: find the relevant field in the infobox documentation (happy hunting!) and override it in the infobox using |field=correct_link
Several words
[edit]This RFC is not about WP:PTOPICs in general or any PTOPIC in particular. It is purely about {{R from plural}}s to PTOPICs, particularly those which are common nouns.
Relevant guidelines include WP:COMMONNAME, WP:PLURALPT, WP:PRIMARYREDIRECT and
There may be others which I have overlooked (which may or may not be consistent with those and with each other).
No reader is inconvenienced by having to search for the singular rather than the plural of a common noun. Many readers can be inconvenienced or misled by clicking on a bad link. Bad links not only degrade the encyclopaedia, they present opportunities to make it a laughing-stock. I very recently fixed links to two musicians who had played in, and to a record label which had recorded, cows. It is no good saying, Oh, but someone will fix bad links like those eventually. They had been in the encyclopaedia since 2006, 2017, and 2007
some which I consider wrong, but that is by the way
Proposal.
Klondike or Klondyke Kate may refer to:
- Katherine Ryan (pioneer) (1869-1932), known as Klondike Kate, Canadian hotelier, prospector, nurse and police officer in the Yukon
- Kathleen Rockwell (1873-1957), known as Klondike Kate, American dancer and vaudeville star
- Klondyke Kate (Jayne Porter, born 1962 or 1963), English female professional wrestler
- Klondike Kate Kenner, a fictional character in the lost film Ruggles of Red Gap (1918 film)
- Klondike Kate (film), a 1943 American Western film loosely based on the life of Katherine Rockwell
- Gates, Michael (December 1, 2018). "History Hunter: It was Klondike Kate vs. Klondike Kate on TV". Yukon News. Retrieved April 20, 2020. Ruggles of Red Gap
- "Katherine "Klondike Kate" Ryan". Government of Yukon.
- Ricketts, Bruce. "Klondike Kate Ryan". mysteriesofcanada.com.
- [2] lifted from Brennan
- "Klondike Kate". Historica Canada.
- Brennan, Ann (November 14, 2015). "THE GREAT JOURNEY "OF KLONDIKE KATE" KATHERINE RYAN FROM JOHNVILLE, N.B. CANADA". altonm.ca. Revised by Morrell, Alton. Retrieved April 19, 2020.
- "Behind every good member is a dedicated civilian". Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
- {{cite web |url=http://frontierseatt