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Which employer did Jaroslav Pelikan work for in Jan, 1948? | January 11, 1948 | {
"text": [
"Valparaiso University"
]
} | L2_Q457939_P108_0 | Jaroslav Pelikan works for Concordia Seminary from Jan, 1949 to Jan, 1953.
Jaroslav Pelikan works for University of Chicago from Jan, 1953 to Jan, 1962.
Jaroslav Pelikan works for Valparaiso University from Jan, 1946 to Jan, 1949.
Jaroslav Pelikan works for Yale University from Jan, 1962 to Jan, 1962. | Jaroslav PelikanJaroslav Jan Pelikan Jr. (December 17, 1923 – May 13, 2006) was an American scholar of the history of Christianity, Christian theology, and medieval intellectual history at Yale University.Jaroslav Jan Pelikan Jr. was born on December 17, 1923, in Akron, Ohio, to a Slovak father Jaroslav Jan Pelikan Sr. and Slovak mother Anna Buzekova Pelikan from Šid in Serbia. His father was pastor of Trinity Slovak Lutheran Church in Chicago, Illinois, and his paternal grandfather a bishop of the Synod of Evangelical Lutheran Churches, then known as the Slovak Lutheran Church in America.According to family members, Pelikan's mother taught him how to use a typewriter when he was three years old, as he could not yet hold a pen properly but wanted to write. Pelikan's facility with languages may be traced to his multilingual childhood and early training. That facility was to serve him well in the career he ultimately chose (after contemplating becoming a concert pianist) as an historian of Christian doctrine. He did not confine his studies to Roman Catholic and Protestant theological history, but also embraced that of the Christian East.In 1946 when he was 22, he earned both a seminary degree from Concordia Seminary in St. Louis, Missouri, and a PhD at the University of Chicago.Pelikan wrote more than 30 books, including the five-volume "The Christian Tradition: A History of the Development of Doctrine" (1971–1989). Some of his later works attained crossover appeal, reaching beyond the scholarly sphere into the general reading public (notably, "Mary Through the Centuries", "Jesus Through the Centuries" and "Whose Bible Is It?").His 1983 Jefferson Lecture, "The Vindication of Tradition" included an often quoted one liner, which he elaborated in a 1989 interview in "U.S. News & World Report". He said:He joined Yale University in 1962 as the Titus Street Professor of Ecclesiastical History and in 1972 was named Sterling Professor of History, a position he held until achieving emeritus status in 1996. He served as acting dean and then dean of the Graduate School from 1973 to 1978 and was the William Clyde DeVane Lecturer 1984–1986 and again in the fall of 1995. Awards include the Graduate School's 1979 Wilbur Cross Medal and the Medieval Academy of America's 1985 Haskins Medal.While at Yale, Pelikan won a contest sponsored by "Field & Stream" magazine for Ed Zern's column "Exit Laughing" to translate the motto of the Madison Avenue Rod, Gun, Bloody Mary & Labrador Retriever Benevolent Association ("Keep your powder, your trout flies and your martinis dry") into Latin. Pelikan's winning entry mentioned the martini first, but Pelikan explained that it seemed no less than fitting to have the apéritif come first. His winning entry:Semper siccandae sunt: potioPulvis, et pelliculatio.Pelikan was appointed to numerous leadership positions in American intellectual life. He was the president of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He was editor of the religion section of "Encyclopædia Britannica", and in 1980 he founded the Council of Scholars at the Library of Congress.In 1983 the National Endowment for the Humanities selected him to deliver the 12th annual Jefferson Lecture, the highest honor conferred by the federal government for outstanding achievement in the humanities. Pelikan's lecture became the basis for his book "The Vindication of Tradition".Pelikan gave the 1992–1993 Gifford lectures at the University of Aberdeen, which were published as the book "Christianity and Classical Culture".President Bill Clinton appointed Pelikan to serve on the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities. Pelikan received honorary degrees from 42 universities around the world. At the age of 80, he was appointed scholarly director for the "Institutions of Democracy Project" at the Annenberg Foundation.In 2004, having received the John W. Kluge Prize for Lifetime Achievement in the Human Sciences, an honor he shared with the French philosopher Paul Ricoeur, Pelikan donated his award ($500,000) to Saint Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary, of which he was a trustee. At the ceremony, he quoted a leitmotif passage from Johann Wolfgang von Goethe that had moved him all his life: ""Was du ererbt von deinen Vaetern hast, Erwirb es um es zu besitzen"" ("Take what you have inherited from your fathers and work to make it your own.").For most of his life Pelikan was a Lutheran and was a pastor in that tradition. He was an ordained pastor in the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod before becoming a member of a Lutheran Church in America congregation, which subsequently became part of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA).In 1998, however, he and his wife Sylvia left the ELCA and were received into the Orthodox Church in America at the Chapel of St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary in Crestwood, New York. According to family members, his conversion followed his meeting Pope John Paul II. Members of Pelikan's family remember him saying that he had not as much converted to Orthodoxy as "returned to it, peeling back the layers of my own belief to reveal the Orthodoxy that was always there." Delighted with this turn of phrase, he used it (or close variants) several times among family and friends, including during a visit to St. Vladimir's for Divine Liturgy, the "last before his death."Nevertheless, Pelikan was still ecumenical in many ways. Not long before his own death, he praised Pope John Paul II in an article in "The New York Times" when the pope died in 2005:It will be a celebration of the legacy of Pope John Paul II and an answer to his prayers (and to those of all Christians, beginning with their Lord himself) if the Eastern and Western churches can produce the necessary mixture of charity and sincere effort to continue to work toward the time when they all may be one.Pelikan died on May 13, 2006, at his home in Hamden, Connecticut, at the age of 82, after a seventeen-month battle with lung cancer. He was interred at Grove Street Cemetery in New Haven, Connecticut, on May 17, 2006. Pelikan was honored by a memorial service in Yale's Battell Chapel on October 10, 2006, with speeches by distinguished scholars and musical performances by cellist Yo-Yo Ma and the Yale Russian Chorus. | [
"Concordia Seminary",
"University of Chicago",
"Yale University"
] |
|
Which employer did Jaroslav Pelikan work for in Sep, 1950? | September 23, 1950 | {
"text": [
"Concordia Seminary"
]
} | L2_Q457939_P108_1 | Jaroslav Pelikan works for Valparaiso University from Jan, 1946 to Jan, 1949.
Jaroslav Pelikan works for University of Chicago from Jan, 1953 to Jan, 1962.
Jaroslav Pelikan works for Yale University from Jan, 1962 to Jan, 1962.
Jaroslav Pelikan works for Concordia Seminary from Jan, 1949 to Jan, 1953. | Jaroslav PelikanJaroslav Jan Pelikan Jr. (December 17, 1923 – May 13, 2006) was an American scholar of the history of Christianity, Christian theology, and medieval intellectual history at Yale University.Jaroslav Jan Pelikan Jr. was born on December 17, 1923, in Akron, Ohio, to a Slovak father Jaroslav Jan Pelikan Sr. and Slovak mother Anna Buzekova Pelikan from Šid in Serbia. His father was pastor of Trinity Slovak Lutheran Church in Chicago, Illinois, and his paternal grandfather a bishop of the Synod of Evangelical Lutheran Churches, then known as the Slovak Lutheran Church in America.According to family members, Pelikan's mother taught him how to use a typewriter when he was three years old, as he could not yet hold a pen properly but wanted to write. Pelikan's facility with languages may be traced to his multilingual childhood and early training. That facility was to serve him well in the career he ultimately chose (after contemplating becoming a concert pianist) as an historian of Christian doctrine. He did not confine his studies to Roman Catholic and Protestant theological history, but also embraced that of the Christian East.In 1946 when he was 22, he earned both a seminary degree from Concordia Seminary in St. Louis, Missouri, and a PhD at the University of Chicago.Pelikan wrote more than 30 books, including the five-volume "The Christian Tradition: A History of the Development of Doctrine" (1971–1989). Some of his later works attained crossover appeal, reaching beyond the scholarly sphere into the general reading public (notably, "Mary Through the Centuries", "Jesus Through the Centuries" and "Whose Bible Is It?").His 1983 Jefferson Lecture, "The Vindication of Tradition" included an often quoted one liner, which he elaborated in a 1989 interview in "U.S. News & World Report". He said:He joined Yale University in 1962 as the Titus Street Professor of Ecclesiastical History and in 1972 was named Sterling Professor of History, a position he held until achieving emeritus status in 1996. He served as acting dean and then dean of the Graduate School from 1973 to 1978 and was the William Clyde DeVane Lecturer 1984–1986 and again in the fall of 1995. Awards include the Graduate School's 1979 Wilbur Cross Medal and the Medieval Academy of America's 1985 Haskins Medal.While at Yale, Pelikan won a contest sponsored by "Field & Stream" magazine for Ed Zern's column "Exit Laughing" to translate the motto of the Madison Avenue Rod, Gun, Bloody Mary & Labrador Retriever Benevolent Association ("Keep your powder, your trout flies and your martinis dry") into Latin. Pelikan's winning entry mentioned the martini first, but Pelikan explained that it seemed no less than fitting to have the apéritif come first. His winning entry:Semper siccandae sunt: potioPulvis, et pelliculatio.Pelikan was appointed to numerous leadership positions in American intellectual life. He was the president of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He was editor of the religion section of "Encyclopædia Britannica", and in 1980 he founded the Council of Scholars at the Library of Congress.In 1983 the National Endowment for the Humanities selected him to deliver the 12th annual Jefferson Lecture, the highest honor conferred by the federal government for outstanding achievement in the humanities. Pelikan's lecture became the basis for his book "The Vindication of Tradition".Pelikan gave the 1992–1993 Gifford lectures at the University of Aberdeen, which were published as the book "Christianity and Classical Culture".President Bill Clinton appointed Pelikan to serve on the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities. Pelikan received honorary degrees from 42 universities around the world. At the age of 80, he was appointed scholarly director for the "Institutions of Democracy Project" at the Annenberg Foundation.In 2004, having received the John W. Kluge Prize for Lifetime Achievement in the Human Sciences, an honor he shared with the French philosopher Paul Ricoeur, Pelikan donated his award ($500,000) to Saint Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary, of which he was a trustee. At the ceremony, he quoted a leitmotif passage from Johann Wolfgang von Goethe that had moved him all his life: ""Was du ererbt von deinen Vaetern hast, Erwirb es um es zu besitzen"" ("Take what you have inherited from your fathers and work to make it your own.").For most of his life Pelikan was a Lutheran and was a pastor in that tradition. He was an ordained pastor in the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod before becoming a member of a Lutheran Church in America congregation, which subsequently became part of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA).In 1998, however, he and his wife Sylvia left the ELCA and were received into the Orthodox Church in America at the Chapel of St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary in Crestwood, New York. According to family members, his conversion followed his meeting Pope John Paul II. Members of Pelikan's family remember him saying that he had not as much converted to Orthodoxy as "returned to it, peeling back the layers of my own belief to reveal the Orthodoxy that was always there." Delighted with this turn of phrase, he used it (or close variants) several times among family and friends, including during a visit to St. Vladimir's for Divine Liturgy, the "last before his death."Nevertheless, Pelikan was still ecumenical in many ways. Not long before his own death, he praised Pope John Paul II in an article in "The New York Times" when the pope died in 2005:It will be a celebration of the legacy of Pope John Paul II and an answer to his prayers (and to those of all Christians, beginning with their Lord himself) if the Eastern and Western churches can produce the necessary mixture of charity and sincere effort to continue to work toward the time when they all may be one.Pelikan died on May 13, 2006, at his home in Hamden, Connecticut, at the age of 82, after a seventeen-month battle with lung cancer. He was interred at Grove Street Cemetery in New Haven, Connecticut, on May 17, 2006. Pelikan was honored by a memorial service in Yale's Battell Chapel on October 10, 2006, with speeches by distinguished scholars and musical performances by cellist Yo-Yo Ma and the Yale Russian Chorus. | [
"Valparaiso University",
"University of Chicago",
"Yale University"
] |
|
Which employer did Jaroslav Pelikan work for in Jul, 1961? | July 08, 1961 | {
"text": [
"University of Chicago"
]
} | L2_Q457939_P108_2 | Jaroslav Pelikan works for University of Chicago from Jan, 1953 to Jan, 1962.
Jaroslav Pelikan works for Yale University from Jan, 1962 to Jan, 1962.
Jaroslav Pelikan works for Valparaiso University from Jan, 1946 to Jan, 1949.
Jaroslav Pelikan works for Concordia Seminary from Jan, 1949 to Jan, 1953. | Jaroslav PelikanJaroslav Jan Pelikan Jr. (December 17, 1923 – May 13, 2006) was an American scholar of the history of Christianity, Christian theology, and medieval intellectual history at Yale University.Jaroslav Jan Pelikan Jr. was born on December 17, 1923, in Akron, Ohio, to a Slovak father Jaroslav Jan Pelikan Sr. and Slovak mother Anna Buzekova Pelikan from Šid in Serbia. His father was pastor of Trinity Slovak Lutheran Church in Chicago, Illinois, and his paternal grandfather a bishop of the Synod of Evangelical Lutheran Churches, then known as the Slovak Lutheran Church in America.According to family members, Pelikan's mother taught him how to use a typewriter when he was three years old, as he could not yet hold a pen properly but wanted to write. Pelikan's facility with languages may be traced to his multilingual childhood and early training. That facility was to serve him well in the career he ultimately chose (after contemplating becoming a concert pianist) as an historian of Christian doctrine. He did not confine his studies to Roman Catholic and Protestant theological history, but also embraced that of the Christian East.In 1946 when he was 22, he earned both a seminary degree from Concordia Seminary in St. Louis, Missouri, and a PhD at the University of Chicago.Pelikan wrote more than 30 books, including the five-volume "The Christian Tradition: A History of the Development of Doctrine" (1971–1989). Some of his later works attained crossover appeal, reaching beyond the scholarly sphere into the general reading public (notably, "Mary Through the Centuries", "Jesus Through the Centuries" and "Whose Bible Is It?").His 1983 Jefferson Lecture, "The Vindication of Tradition" included an often quoted one liner, which he elaborated in a 1989 interview in "U.S. News & World Report". He said:He joined Yale University in 1962 as the Titus Street Professor of Ecclesiastical History and in 1972 was named Sterling Professor of History, a position he held until achieving emeritus status in 1996. He served as acting dean and then dean of the Graduate School from 1973 to 1978 and was the William Clyde DeVane Lecturer 1984–1986 and again in the fall of 1995. Awards include the Graduate School's 1979 Wilbur Cross Medal and the Medieval Academy of America's 1985 Haskins Medal.While at Yale, Pelikan won a contest sponsored by "Field & Stream" magazine for Ed Zern's column "Exit Laughing" to translate the motto of the Madison Avenue Rod, Gun, Bloody Mary & Labrador Retriever Benevolent Association ("Keep your powder, your trout flies and your martinis dry") into Latin. Pelikan's winning entry mentioned the martini first, but Pelikan explained that it seemed no less than fitting to have the apéritif come first. His winning entry:Semper siccandae sunt: potioPulvis, et pelliculatio.Pelikan was appointed to numerous leadership positions in American intellectual life. He was the president of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He was editor of the religion section of "Encyclopædia Britannica", and in 1980 he founded the Council of Scholars at the Library of Congress.In 1983 the National Endowment for the Humanities selected him to deliver the 12th annual Jefferson Lecture, the highest honor conferred by the federal government for outstanding achievement in the humanities. Pelikan's lecture became the basis for his book "The Vindication of Tradition".Pelikan gave the 1992–1993 Gifford lectures at the University of Aberdeen, which were published as the book "Christianity and Classical Culture".President Bill Clinton appointed Pelikan to serve on the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities. Pelikan received honorary degrees from 42 universities around the world. At the age of 80, he was appointed scholarly director for the "Institutions of Democracy Project" at the Annenberg Foundation.In 2004, having received the John W. Kluge Prize for Lifetime Achievement in the Human Sciences, an honor he shared with the French philosopher Paul Ricoeur, Pelikan donated his award ($500,000) to Saint Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary, of which he was a trustee. At the ceremony, he quoted a leitmotif passage from Johann Wolfgang von Goethe that had moved him all his life: ""Was du ererbt von deinen Vaetern hast, Erwirb es um es zu besitzen"" ("Take what you have inherited from your fathers and work to make it your own.").For most of his life Pelikan was a Lutheran and was a pastor in that tradition. He was an ordained pastor in the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod before becoming a member of a Lutheran Church in America congregation, which subsequently became part of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA).In 1998, however, he and his wife Sylvia left the ELCA and were received into the Orthodox Church in America at the Chapel of St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary in Crestwood, New York. According to family members, his conversion followed his meeting Pope John Paul II. Members of Pelikan's family remember him saying that he had not as much converted to Orthodoxy as "returned to it, peeling back the layers of my own belief to reveal the Orthodoxy that was always there." Delighted with this turn of phrase, he used it (or close variants) several times among family and friends, including during a visit to St. Vladimir's for Divine Liturgy, the "last before his death."Nevertheless, Pelikan was still ecumenical in many ways. Not long before his own death, he praised Pope John Paul II in an article in "The New York Times" when the pope died in 2005:It will be a celebration of the legacy of Pope John Paul II and an answer to his prayers (and to those of all Christians, beginning with their Lord himself) if the Eastern and Western churches can produce the necessary mixture of charity and sincere effort to continue to work toward the time when they all may be one.Pelikan died on May 13, 2006, at his home in Hamden, Connecticut, at the age of 82, after a seventeen-month battle with lung cancer. He was interred at Grove Street Cemetery in New Haven, Connecticut, on May 17, 2006. Pelikan was honored by a memorial service in Yale's Battell Chapel on October 10, 2006, with speeches by distinguished scholars and musical performances by cellist Yo-Yo Ma and the Yale Russian Chorus. | [
"Valparaiso University",
"Concordia Seminary",
"Yale University"
] |
|
Which employer did Jaroslav Pelikan work for in Jan, 1962? | January 01, 1962 | {
"text": [
"University of Chicago",
"Yale University"
]
} | L2_Q457939_P108_3 | Jaroslav Pelikan works for Valparaiso University from Jan, 1946 to Jan, 1949.
Jaroslav Pelikan works for University of Chicago from Jan, 1953 to Jan, 1962.
Jaroslav Pelikan works for Concordia Seminary from Jan, 1949 to Jan, 1953.
Jaroslav Pelikan works for Yale University from Jan, 1962 to Jan, 1962. | Jaroslav PelikanJaroslav Jan Pelikan Jr. (December 17, 1923 – May 13, 2006) was an American scholar of the history of Christianity, Christian theology, and medieval intellectual history at Yale University.Jaroslav Jan Pelikan Jr. was born on December 17, 1923, in Akron, Ohio, to a Slovak father Jaroslav Jan Pelikan Sr. and Slovak mother Anna Buzekova Pelikan from Šid in Serbia. His father was pastor of Trinity Slovak Lutheran Church in Chicago, Illinois, and his paternal grandfather a bishop of the Synod of Evangelical Lutheran Churches, then known as the Slovak Lutheran Church in America.According to family members, Pelikan's mother taught him how to use a typewriter when he was three years old, as he could not yet hold a pen properly but wanted to write. Pelikan's facility with languages may be traced to his multilingual childhood and early training. That facility was to serve him well in the career he ultimately chose (after contemplating becoming a concert pianist) as an historian of Christian doctrine. He did not confine his studies to Roman Catholic and Protestant theological history, but also embraced that of the Christian East.In 1946 when he was 22, he earned both a seminary degree from Concordia Seminary in St. Louis, Missouri, and a PhD at the University of Chicago.Pelikan wrote more than 30 books, including the five-volume "The Christian Tradition: A History of the Development of Doctrine" (1971–1989). Some of his later works attained crossover appeal, reaching beyond the scholarly sphere into the general reading public (notably, "Mary Through the Centuries", "Jesus Through the Centuries" and "Whose Bible Is It?").His 1983 Jefferson Lecture, "The Vindication of Tradition" included an often quoted one liner, which he elaborated in a 1989 interview in "U.S. News & World Report". He said:He joined Yale University in 1962 as the Titus Street Professor of Ecclesiastical History and in 1972 was named Sterling Professor of History, a position he held until achieving emeritus status in 1996. He served as acting dean and then dean of the Graduate School from 1973 to 1978 and was the William Clyde DeVane Lecturer 1984–1986 and again in the fall of 1995. Awards include the Graduate School's 1979 Wilbur Cross Medal and the Medieval Academy of America's 1985 Haskins Medal.While at Yale, Pelikan won a contest sponsored by "Field & Stream" magazine for Ed Zern's column "Exit Laughing" to translate the motto of the Madison Avenue Rod, Gun, Bloody Mary & Labrador Retriever Benevolent Association ("Keep your powder, your trout flies and your martinis dry") into Latin. Pelikan's winning entry mentioned the martini first, but Pelikan explained that it seemed no less than fitting to have the apéritif come first. His winning entry:Semper siccandae sunt: potioPulvis, et pelliculatio.Pelikan was appointed to numerous leadership positions in American intellectual life. He was the president of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He was editor of the religion section of "Encyclopædia Britannica", and in 1980 he founded the Council of Scholars at the Library of Congress.In 1983 the National Endowment for the Humanities selected him to deliver the 12th annual Jefferson Lecture, the highest honor conferred by the federal government for outstanding achievement in the humanities. Pelikan's lecture became the basis for his book "The Vindication of Tradition".Pelikan gave the 1992–1993 Gifford lectures at the University of Aberdeen, which were published as the book "Christianity and Classical Culture".President Bill Clinton appointed Pelikan to serve on the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities. Pelikan received honorary degrees from 42 universities around the world. At the age of 80, he was appointed scholarly director for the "Institutions of Democracy Project" at the Annenberg Foundation.In 2004, having received the John W. Kluge Prize for Lifetime Achievement in the Human Sciences, an honor he shared with the French philosopher Paul Ricoeur, Pelikan donated his award ($500,000) to Saint Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary, of which he was a trustee. At the ceremony, he quoted a leitmotif passage from Johann Wolfgang von Goethe that had moved him all his life: ""Was du ererbt von deinen Vaetern hast, Erwirb es um es zu besitzen"" ("Take what you have inherited from your fathers and work to make it your own.").For most of his life Pelikan was a Lutheran and was a pastor in that tradition. He was an ordained pastor in the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod before becoming a member of a Lutheran Church in America congregation, which subsequently became part of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA).In 1998, however, he and his wife Sylvia left the ELCA and were received into the Orthodox Church in America at the Chapel of St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary in Crestwood, New York. According to family members, his conversion followed his meeting Pope John Paul II. Members of Pelikan's family remember him saying that he had not as much converted to Orthodoxy as "returned to it, peeling back the layers of my own belief to reveal the Orthodoxy that was always there." Delighted with this turn of phrase, he used it (or close variants) several times among family and friends, including during a visit to St. Vladimir's for Divine Liturgy, the "last before his death."Nevertheless, Pelikan was still ecumenical in many ways. Not long before his own death, he praised Pope John Paul II in an article in "The New York Times" when the pope died in 2005:It will be a celebration of the legacy of Pope John Paul II and an answer to his prayers (and to those of all Christians, beginning with their Lord himself) if the Eastern and Western churches can produce the necessary mixture of charity and sincere effort to continue to work toward the time when they all may be one.Pelikan died on May 13, 2006, at his home in Hamden, Connecticut, at the age of 82, after a seventeen-month battle with lung cancer. He was interred at Grove Street Cemetery in New Haven, Connecticut, on May 17, 2006. Pelikan was honored by a memorial service in Yale's Battell Chapel on October 10, 2006, with speeches by distinguished scholars and musical performances by cellist Yo-Yo Ma and the Yale Russian Chorus. | [
"Valparaiso University",
"Concordia Seminary",
"Valparaiso University",
"Concordia Seminary"
] |
|
Which team did Glynn Snodin play for in Nov, 1978? | November 17, 1978 | {
"text": [
"Doncaster Rovers F.C."
]
} | L2_Q5572988_P54_0 | Glynn Snodin plays for Barnsley F.C. from Jan, 1993 to Jan, 1995.
Glynn Snodin plays for Sheffield Wednesday F.C. from Jan, 1985 to Jan, 1987.
Glynn Snodin plays for Rotherham United F.C. from Jan, 1992 to Jan, 1992.
Glynn Snodin plays for Gainsborough Trinity F.C. from Jan, 1995 to Jan, 1997.
Glynn Snodin plays for Leeds United F.C. from Jan, 1987 to Jan, 1992.
Glynn Snodin plays for Doncaster Rovers F.C. from Jan, 1977 to Jan, 1985.
Glynn Snodin plays for Heart of Midlothian F.C. from Jan, 1992 to Jan, 1993.
Glynn Snodin plays for Oldham Athletic A.F.C. from Jan, 1991 to Jan, 1991. | Glynn SnodinGlynn Snodin (born 14 February 1960) is an English football coach, currently assistant manager at Chesterfield and former professional player.As a player, he was a midfielder from 1977 to 1997. He played for Doncaster Rovers and later made just under 100 appearances for Leeds United and spent two years with Sheffield Wednesday. Whilst with Leeds, Snodin was loaned out to Oldham Athletic and Rotherham United before having spell with Scottish Premier Division side Hearts. In 1993, he spent two years with Barnsley before finishing his playing career in the Northern Premier League with Gainsborough Trinity, Later joining Yorkshire Main F.C. in non League Football.Since retiring Snodin has held various scouting and coaching roles firstly with Carlisle United and then returning to former club Doncaster. He later became manager of Charlton Athletic's reserve team before joining the coaching staff at Southampton and Northern Ireland. He has since been on the coaching staff at West Ham United, Leeds United and Huddersfield Town.He started his professional career at Doncaster Rovers as a 16-year-old in 1977 and remained with the club until June 1985 as they moved up and down between Division's 4 and 3. At Doncaster he made over 300 appearances, many of them alongside his younger brother Ian.In June 1985 he was sold for £135,000 to First Division Sheffield Wednesday, where he stayed for two seasons, playing 59 league games, and also reaching the FA Cup semi-final in 1986, before taking a move down a division to Leeds United (for a fee of £150,000) from a desire to rejoin former boss Billy Bremner from his Doncaster days. A whole-hearted and dependable player, he scored 13 goals in 116 appearances for Leeds, but found his chances limited by the arrival of Tony Dorigo. By the 1989–90 season he was a fringe player as Leeds gained promotion to Division 1.He then had periods on loan to Oldham Athletic and Rotherham United, before to Scotland to join Joe Jordan's Hearts in March 1992. During his time at Tynecastle he scored once in the UEFA Cup against Slavia Prague, to give Hearts a 4–2 victory which saw them progress 4–3 on aggregate. When Jordan left Tynecastle, Snodin returned South to join Barnsley in July 1993, spending two seasons in the First Division, before a move to Gainsborough Trinity, where he saw out his final playing years with the club, retiring in the summer of 1997.Snodin initially began coaching youngsters whilst playing at Gainsborough Trinity as he ran the "Glynn Snodin Soccer Academy" at Gainsborough Leisure Centre on Saturday mornings between 1995 and 1997. He then became chief scout at Carlisle United under Mick Wadsworth while he took his coaching badges. He followed Wadsworth to Scarborough as youth team coach, before returning to his first club, Doncaster Rovers as assistant manager to his brother Ian.In 2000, he joined the coaching staff at Charlton Athletic as reserve team manager, leading them to the Reserve League title in 2004 and 2005. He completed his UEFA Pro Licence alongside George Burley and in March 2006, Burley brought Snodin to Southampton as first team coach.In a press conference on 1 June 2007, to reveal Nigel Worthington as the new manager of Northern Ireland, Snodin was made assistant manager and Fred Barber was announced as coach. On 26 June 2007, he joined his former Charlton Athletic colleague Alan Curbishley at West Ham United. When Curbishley left in September 2008 and Gianfranco Zola was appointed in his place, Snodin was not retained on the coaching staff.On 2 February 2009, Snodin was appointed the new assistant manager of Leeds United. Snodin was part of the Leeds management team who earned a 1–0 win away to Manchester United in the FA Cup Third Round. Glynn had some great times at Leeds, including some famous results in the FA Cup and promotion from League One back to the Championship in the 09/10 season. With Leeds in tenth position in the Championship, three points below the play-off places, Snodin was sacked as assistant manager along with manager Simon Grayson and coach Ian Miller on Wednesday 1 February 2012.Less than three weeks after leaving Leeds United, the management trio was back in work at neighbouring League One club Huddersfield Town, when on 21 February 2012 Simon Grayson was appointed manager, saying "Glynn Snodin and Ian Miller are the perfect pair to help me achieve success." They won promotion at the end of that season. Grayson, Snodin and Miller were dismissed from Huddersfield on 24 January 2013.In May 2013 Grayson was announced as the new manager at Preston North End replacing Graham Westley, with Snodin joining him again.He worked with Grayson at Sunderland, as assistant manager.He worked with Grayson at Bradford City, as assistant manager. | [
"Leeds United F.C.",
"Sheffield Wednesday F.C.",
"Rotherham United F.C.",
"Heart of Midlothian F.C.",
"Gainsborough Trinity F.C.",
"Oldham Athletic A.F.C.",
"Barnsley F.C."
] |
|
Which team did Glynn Snodin play for in Oct, 1986? | October 21, 1986 | {
"text": [
"Sheffield Wednesday F.C."
]
} | L2_Q5572988_P54_1 | Glynn Snodin plays for Doncaster Rovers F.C. from Jan, 1977 to Jan, 1985.
Glynn Snodin plays for Leeds United F.C. from Jan, 1987 to Jan, 1992.
Glynn Snodin plays for Rotherham United F.C. from Jan, 1992 to Jan, 1992.
Glynn Snodin plays for Oldham Athletic A.F.C. from Jan, 1991 to Jan, 1991.
Glynn Snodin plays for Sheffield Wednesday F.C. from Jan, 1985 to Jan, 1987.
Glynn Snodin plays for Barnsley F.C. from Jan, 1993 to Jan, 1995.
Glynn Snodin plays for Heart of Midlothian F.C. from Jan, 1992 to Jan, 1993.
Glynn Snodin plays for Gainsborough Trinity F.C. from Jan, 1995 to Jan, 1997. | Glynn SnodinGlynn Snodin (born 14 February 1960) is an English football coach, currently assistant manager at Chesterfield and former professional player.As a player, he was a midfielder from 1977 to 1997. He played for Doncaster Rovers and later made just under 100 appearances for Leeds United and spent two years with Sheffield Wednesday. Whilst with Leeds, Snodin was loaned out to Oldham Athletic and Rotherham United before having spell with Scottish Premier Division side Hearts. In 1993, he spent two years with Barnsley before finishing his playing career in the Northern Premier League with Gainsborough Trinity, Later joining Yorkshire Main F.C. in non League Football.Since retiring Snodin has held various scouting and coaching roles firstly with Carlisle United and then returning to former club Doncaster. He later became manager of Charlton Athletic's reserve team before joining the coaching staff at Southampton and Northern Ireland. He has since been on the coaching staff at West Ham United, Leeds United and Huddersfield Town.He started his professional career at Doncaster Rovers as a 16-year-old in 1977 and remained with the club until June 1985 as they moved up and down between Division's 4 and 3. At Doncaster he made over 300 appearances, many of them alongside his younger brother Ian.In June 1985 he was sold for £135,000 to First Division Sheffield Wednesday, where he stayed for two seasons, playing 59 league games, and also reaching the FA Cup semi-final in 1986, before taking a move down a division to Leeds United (for a fee of £150,000) from a desire to rejoin former boss Billy Bremner from his Doncaster days. A whole-hearted and dependable player, he scored 13 goals in 116 appearances for Leeds, but found his chances limited by the arrival of Tony Dorigo. By the 1989–90 season he was a fringe player as Leeds gained promotion to Division 1.He then had periods on loan to Oldham Athletic and Rotherham United, before to Scotland to join Joe Jordan's Hearts in March 1992. During his time at Tynecastle he scored once in the UEFA Cup against Slavia Prague, to give Hearts a 4–2 victory which saw them progress 4–3 on aggregate. When Jordan left Tynecastle, Snodin returned South to join Barnsley in July 1993, spending two seasons in the First Division, before a move to Gainsborough Trinity, where he saw out his final playing years with the club, retiring in the summer of 1997.Snodin initially began coaching youngsters whilst playing at Gainsborough Trinity as he ran the "Glynn Snodin Soccer Academy" at Gainsborough Leisure Centre on Saturday mornings between 1995 and 1997. He then became chief scout at Carlisle United under Mick Wadsworth while he took his coaching badges. He followed Wadsworth to Scarborough as youth team coach, before returning to his first club, Doncaster Rovers as assistant manager to his brother Ian.In 2000, he joined the coaching staff at Charlton Athletic as reserve team manager, leading them to the Reserve League title in 2004 and 2005. He completed his UEFA Pro Licence alongside George Burley and in March 2006, Burley brought Snodin to Southampton as first team coach.In a press conference on 1 June 2007, to reveal Nigel Worthington as the new manager of Northern Ireland, Snodin was made assistant manager and Fred Barber was announced as coach. On 26 June 2007, he joined his former Charlton Athletic colleague Alan Curbishley at West Ham United. When Curbishley left in September 2008 and Gianfranco Zola was appointed in his place, Snodin was not retained on the coaching staff.On 2 February 2009, Snodin was appointed the new assistant manager of Leeds United. Snodin was part of the Leeds management team who earned a 1–0 win away to Manchester United in the FA Cup Third Round. Glynn had some great times at Leeds, including some famous results in the FA Cup and promotion from League One back to the Championship in the 09/10 season. With Leeds in tenth position in the Championship, three points below the play-off places, Snodin was sacked as assistant manager along with manager Simon Grayson and coach Ian Miller on Wednesday 1 February 2012.Less than three weeks after leaving Leeds United, the management trio was back in work at neighbouring League One club Huddersfield Town, when on 21 February 2012 Simon Grayson was appointed manager, saying "Glynn Snodin and Ian Miller are the perfect pair to help me achieve success." They won promotion at the end of that season. Grayson, Snodin and Miller were dismissed from Huddersfield on 24 January 2013.In May 2013 Grayson was announced as the new manager at Preston North End replacing Graham Westley, with Snodin joining him again.He worked with Grayson at Sunderland, as assistant manager.He worked with Grayson at Bradford City, as assistant manager. | [
"Leeds United F.C.",
"Doncaster Rovers F.C.",
"Rotherham United F.C.",
"Heart of Midlothian F.C.",
"Gainsborough Trinity F.C.",
"Oldham Athletic A.F.C.",
"Barnsley F.C."
] |
|
Which team did Glynn Snodin play for in Apr, 1988? | April 03, 1988 | {
"text": [
"Leeds United F.C."
]
} | L2_Q5572988_P54_2 | Glynn Snodin plays for Barnsley F.C. from Jan, 1993 to Jan, 1995.
Glynn Snodin plays for Doncaster Rovers F.C. from Jan, 1977 to Jan, 1985.
Glynn Snodin plays for Sheffield Wednesday F.C. from Jan, 1985 to Jan, 1987.
Glynn Snodin plays for Heart of Midlothian F.C. from Jan, 1992 to Jan, 1993.
Glynn Snodin plays for Oldham Athletic A.F.C. from Jan, 1991 to Jan, 1991.
Glynn Snodin plays for Rotherham United F.C. from Jan, 1992 to Jan, 1992.
Glynn Snodin plays for Gainsborough Trinity F.C. from Jan, 1995 to Jan, 1997.
Glynn Snodin plays for Leeds United F.C. from Jan, 1987 to Jan, 1992. | Glynn SnodinGlynn Snodin (born 14 February 1960) is an English football coach, currently assistant manager at Chesterfield and former professional player.As a player, he was a midfielder from 1977 to 1997. He played for Doncaster Rovers and later made just under 100 appearances for Leeds United and spent two years with Sheffield Wednesday. Whilst with Leeds, Snodin was loaned out to Oldham Athletic and Rotherham United before having spell with Scottish Premier Division side Hearts. In 1993, he spent two years with Barnsley before finishing his playing career in the Northern Premier League with Gainsborough Trinity, Later joining Yorkshire Main F.C. in non League Football.Since retiring Snodin has held various scouting and coaching roles firstly with Carlisle United and then returning to former club Doncaster. He later became manager of Charlton Athletic's reserve team before joining the coaching staff at Southampton and Northern Ireland. He has since been on the coaching staff at West Ham United, Leeds United and Huddersfield Town.He started his professional career at Doncaster Rovers as a 16-year-old in 1977 and remained with the club until June 1985 as they moved up and down between Division's 4 and 3. At Doncaster he made over 300 appearances, many of them alongside his younger brother Ian.In June 1985 he was sold for £135,000 to First Division Sheffield Wednesday, where he stayed for two seasons, playing 59 league games, and also reaching the FA Cup semi-final in 1986, before taking a move down a division to Leeds United (for a fee of £150,000) from a desire to rejoin former boss Billy Bremner from his Doncaster days. A whole-hearted and dependable player, he scored 13 goals in 116 appearances for Leeds, but found his chances limited by the arrival of Tony Dorigo. By the 1989–90 season he was a fringe player as Leeds gained promotion to Division 1.He then had periods on loan to Oldham Athletic and Rotherham United, before to Scotland to join Joe Jordan's Hearts in March 1992. During his time at Tynecastle he scored once in the UEFA Cup against Slavia Prague, to give Hearts a 4–2 victory which saw them progress 4–3 on aggregate. When Jordan left Tynecastle, Snodin returned South to join Barnsley in July 1993, spending two seasons in the First Division, before a move to Gainsborough Trinity, where he saw out his final playing years with the club, retiring in the summer of 1997.Snodin initially began coaching youngsters whilst playing at Gainsborough Trinity as he ran the "Glynn Snodin Soccer Academy" at Gainsborough Leisure Centre on Saturday mornings between 1995 and 1997. He then became chief scout at Carlisle United under Mick Wadsworth while he took his coaching badges. He followed Wadsworth to Scarborough as youth team coach, before returning to his first club, Doncaster Rovers as assistant manager to his brother Ian.In 2000, he joined the coaching staff at Charlton Athletic as reserve team manager, leading them to the Reserve League title in 2004 and 2005. He completed his UEFA Pro Licence alongside George Burley and in March 2006, Burley brought Snodin to Southampton as first team coach.In a press conference on 1 June 2007, to reveal Nigel Worthington as the new manager of Northern Ireland, Snodin was made assistant manager and Fred Barber was announced as coach. On 26 June 2007, he joined his former Charlton Athletic colleague Alan Curbishley at West Ham United. When Curbishley left in September 2008 and Gianfranco Zola was appointed in his place, Snodin was not retained on the coaching staff.On 2 February 2009, Snodin was appointed the new assistant manager of Leeds United. Snodin was part of the Leeds management team who earned a 1–0 win away to Manchester United in the FA Cup Third Round. Glynn had some great times at Leeds, including some famous results in the FA Cup and promotion from League One back to the Championship in the 09/10 season. With Leeds in tenth position in the Championship, three points below the play-off places, Snodin was sacked as assistant manager along with manager Simon Grayson and coach Ian Miller on Wednesday 1 February 2012.Less than three weeks after leaving Leeds United, the management trio was back in work at neighbouring League One club Huddersfield Town, when on 21 February 2012 Simon Grayson was appointed manager, saying "Glynn Snodin and Ian Miller are the perfect pair to help me achieve success." They won promotion at the end of that season. Grayson, Snodin and Miller were dismissed from Huddersfield on 24 January 2013.In May 2013 Grayson was announced as the new manager at Preston North End replacing Graham Westley, with Snodin joining him again.He worked with Grayson at Sunderland, as assistant manager.He worked with Grayson at Bradford City, as assistant manager. | [
"Sheffield Wednesday F.C.",
"Doncaster Rovers F.C.",
"Rotherham United F.C.",
"Heart of Midlothian F.C.",
"Gainsborough Trinity F.C.",
"Oldham Athletic A.F.C.",
"Barnsley F.C."
] |
|
Which team did Glynn Snodin play for in Jan, 1991? | January 01, 1991 | {
"text": [
"Leeds United F.C.",
"Oldham Athletic A.F.C."
]
} | L2_Q5572988_P54_3 | Glynn Snodin plays for Heart of Midlothian F.C. from Jan, 1992 to Jan, 1993.
Glynn Snodin plays for Doncaster Rovers F.C. from Jan, 1977 to Jan, 1985.
Glynn Snodin plays for Barnsley F.C. from Jan, 1993 to Jan, 1995.
Glynn Snodin plays for Rotherham United F.C. from Jan, 1992 to Jan, 1992.
Glynn Snodin plays for Gainsborough Trinity F.C. from Jan, 1995 to Jan, 1997.
Glynn Snodin plays for Oldham Athletic A.F.C. from Jan, 1991 to Jan, 1991.
Glynn Snodin plays for Sheffield Wednesday F.C. from Jan, 1985 to Jan, 1987.
Glynn Snodin plays for Leeds United F.C. from Jan, 1987 to Jan, 1992. | Glynn SnodinGlynn Snodin (born 14 February 1960) is an English football coach, currently assistant manager at Chesterfield and former professional player.As a player, he was a midfielder from 1977 to 1997. He played for Doncaster Rovers and later made just under 100 appearances for Leeds United and spent two years with Sheffield Wednesday. Whilst with Leeds, Snodin was loaned out to Oldham Athletic and Rotherham United before having spell with Scottish Premier Division side Hearts. In 1993, he spent two years with Barnsley before finishing his playing career in the Northern Premier League with Gainsborough Trinity, Later joining Yorkshire Main F.C. in non League Football.Since retiring Snodin has held various scouting and coaching roles firstly with Carlisle United and then returning to former club Doncaster. He later became manager of Charlton Athletic's reserve team before joining the coaching staff at Southampton and Northern Ireland. He has since been on the coaching staff at West Ham United, Leeds United and Huddersfield Town.He started his professional career at Doncaster Rovers as a 16-year-old in 1977 and remained with the club until June 1985 as they moved up and down between Division's 4 and 3. At Doncaster he made over 300 appearances, many of them alongside his younger brother Ian.In June 1985 he was sold for £135,000 to First Division Sheffield Wednesday, where he stayed for two seasons, playing 59 league games, and also reaching the FA Cup semi-final in 1986, before taking a move down a division to Leeds United (for a fee of £150,000) from a desire to rejoin former boss Billy Bremner from his Doncaster days. A whole-hearted and dependable player, he scored 13 goals in 116 appearances for Leeds, but found his chances limited by the arrival of Tony Dorigo. By the 1989–90 season he was a fringe player as Leeds gained promotion to Division 1.He then had periods on loan to Oldham Athletic and Rotherham United, before to Scotland to join Joe Jordan's Hearts in March 1992. During his time at Tynecastle he scored once in the UEFA Cup against Slavia Prague, to give Hearts a 4–2 victory which saw them progress 4–3 on aggregate. When Jordan left Tynecastle, Snodin returned South to join Barnsley in July 1993, spending two seasons in the First Division, before a move to Gainsborough Trinity, where he saw out his final playing years with the club, retiring in the summer of 1997.Snodin initially began coaching youngsters whilst playing at Gainsborough Trinity as he ran the "Glynn Snodin Soccer Academy" at Gainsborough Leisure Centre on Saturday mornings between 1995 and 1997. He then became chief scout at Carlisle United under Mick Wadsworth while he took his coaching badges. He followed Wadsworth to Scarborough as youth team coach, before returning to his first club, Doncaster Rovers as assistant manager to his brother Ian.In 2000, he joined the coaching staff at Charlton Athletic as reserve team manager, leading them to the Reserve League title in 2004 and 2005. He completed his UEFA Pro Licence alongside George Burley and in March 2006, Burley brought Snodin to Southampton as first team coach.In a press conference on 1 June 2007, to reveal Nigel Worthington as the new manager of Northern Ireland, Snodin was made assistant manager and Fred Barber was announced as coach. On 26 June 2007, he joined his former Charlton Athletic colleague Alan Curbishley at West Ham United. When Curbishley left in September 2008 and Gianfranco Zola was appointed in his place, Snodin was not retained on the coaching staff.On 2 February 2009, Snodin was appointed the new assistant manager of Leeds United. Snodin was part of the Leeds management team who earned a 1–0 win away to Manchester United in the FA Cup Third Round. Glynn had some great times at Leeds, including some famous results in the FA Cup and promotion from League One back to the Championship in the 09/10 season. With Leeds in tenth position in the Championship, three points below the play-off places, Snodin was sacked as assistant manager along with manager Simon Grayson and coach Ian Miller on Wednesday 1 February 2012.Less than three weeks after leaving Leeds United, the management trio was back in work at neighbouring League One club Huddersfield Town, when on 21 February 2012 Simon Grayson was appointed manager, saying "Glynn Snodin and Ian Miller are the perfect pair to help me achieve success." They won promotion at the end of that season. Grayson, Snodin and Miller were dismissed from Huddersfield on 24 January 2013.In May 2013 Grayson was announced as the new manager at Preston North End replacing Graham Westley, with Snodin joining him again.He worked with Grayson at Sunderland, as assistant manager.He worked with Grayson at Bradford City, as assistant manager. | [
"Sheffield Wednesday F.C.",
"Doncaster Rovers F.C.",
"Rotherham United F.C.",
"Heart of Midlothian F.C.",
"Gainsborough Trinity F.C.",
"Barnsley F.C."
] |
|
Which team did Glynn Snodin play for in Apr, 1992? | April 12, 1992 | {
"text": [
"Heart of Midlothian F.C."
]
} | L2_Q5572988_P54_4 | Glynn Snodin plays for Leeds United F.C. from Jan, 1987 to Jan, 1992.
Glynn Snodin plays for Gainsborough Trinity F.C. from Jan, 1995 to Jan, 1997.
Glynn Snodin plays for Heart of Midlothian F.C. from Jan, 1992 to Jan, 1993.
Glynn Snodin plays for Sheffield Wednesday F.C. from Jan, 1985 to Jan, 1987.
Glynn Snodin plays for Oldham Athletic A.F.C. from Jan, 1991 to Jan, 1991.
Glynn Snodin plays for Doncaster Rovers F.C. from Jan, 1977 to Jan, 1985.
Glynn Snodin plays for Barnsley F.C. from Jan, 1993 to Jan, 1995.
Glynn Snodin plays for Rotherham United F.C. from Jan, 1992 to Jan, 1992. | Glynn SnodinGlynn Snodin (born 14 February 1960) is an English football coach, currently assistant manager at Chesterfield and former professional player.As a player, he was a midfielder from 1977 to 1997. He played for Doncaster Rovers and later made just under 100 appearances for Leeds United and spent two years with Sheffield Wednesday. Whilst with Leeds, Snodin was loaned out to Oldham Athletic and Rotherham United before having spell with Scottish Premier Division side Hearts. In 1993, he spent two years with Barnsley before finishing his playing career in the Northern Premier League with Gainsborough Trinity, Later joining Yorkshire Main F.C. in non League Football.Since retiring Snodin has held various scouting and coaching roles firstly with Carlisle United and then returning to former club Doncaster. He later became manager of Charlton Athletic's reserve team before joining the coaching staff at Southampton and Northern Ireland. He has since been on the coaching staff at West Ham United, Leeds United and Huddersfield Town.He started his professional career at Doncaster Rovers as a 16-year-old in 1977 and remained with the club until June 1985 as they moved up and down between Division's 4 and 3. At Doncaster he made over 300 appearances, many of them alongside his younger brother Ian.In June 1985 he was sold for £135,000 to First Division Sheffield Wednesday, where he stayed for two seasons, playing 59 league games, and also reaching the FA Cup semi-final in 1986, before taking a move down a division to Leeds United (for a fee of £150,000) from a desire to rejoin former boss Billy Bremner from his Doncaster days. A whole-hearted and dependable player, he scored 13 goals in 116 appearances for Leeds, but found his chances limited by the arrival of Tony Dorigo. By the 1989–90 season he was a fringe player as Leeds gained promotion to Division 1.He then had periods on loan to Oldham Athletic and Rotherham United, before to Scotland to join Joe Jordan's Hearts in March 1992. During his time at Tynecastle he scored once in the UEFA Cup against Slavia Prague, to give Hearts a 4–2 victory which saw them progress 4–3 on aggregate. When Jordan left Tynecastle, Snodin returned South to join Barnsley in July 1993, spending two seasons in the First Division, before a move to Gainsborough Trinity, where he saw out his final playing years with the club, retiring in the summer of 1997.Snodin initially began coaching youngsters whilst playing at Gainsborough Trinity as he ran the "Glynn Snodin Soccer Academy" at Gainsborough Leisure Centre on Saturday mornings between 1995 and 1997. He then became chief scout at Carlisle United under Mick Wadsworth while he took his coaching badges. He followed Wadsworth to Scarborough as youth team coach, before returning to his first club, Doncaster Rovers as assistant manager to his brother Ian.In 2000, he joined the coaching staff at Charlton Athletic as reserve team manager, leading them to the Reserve League title in 2004 and 2005. He completed his UEFA Pro Licence alongside George Burley and in March 2006, Burley brought Snodin to Southampton as first team coach.In a press conference on 1 June 2007, to reveal Nigel Worthington as the new manager of Northern Ireland, Snodin was made assistant manager and Fred Barber was announced as coach. On 26 June 2007, he joined his former Charlton Athletic colleague Alan Curbishley at West Ham United. When Curbishley left in September 2008 and Gianfranco Zola was appointed in his place, Snodin was not retained on the coaching staff.On 2 February 2009, Snodin was appointed the new assistant manager of Leeds United. Snodin was part of the Leeds management team who earned a 1–0 win away to Manchester United in the FA Cup Third Round. Glynn had some great times at Leeds, including some famous results in the FA Cup and promotion from League One back to the Championship in the 09/10 season. With Leeds in tenth position in the Championship, three points below the play-off places, Snodin was sacked as assistant manager along with manager Simon Grayson and coach Ian Miller on Wednesday 1 February 2012.Less than three weeks after leaving Leeds United, the management trio was back in work at neighbouring League One club Huddersfield Town, when on 21 February 2012 Simon Grayson was appointed manager, saying "Glynn Snodin and Ian Miller are the perfect pair to help me achieve success." They won promotion at the end of that season. Grayson, Snodin and Miller were dismissed from Huddersfield on 24 January 2013.In May 2013 Grayson was announced as the new manager at Preston North End replacing Graham Westley, with Snodin joining him again.He worked with Grayson at Sunderland, as assistant manager.He worked with Grayson at Bradford City, as assistant manager. | [
"Leeds United F.C.",
"Sheffield Wednesday F.C.",
"Doncaster Rovers F.C.",
"Rotherham United F.C.",
"Gainsborough Trinity F.C.",
"Oldham Athletic A.F.C.",
"Barnsley F.C."
] |
|
Which team did Glynn Snodin play for in Jan, 1992? | January 01, 1992 | {
"text": [
"Leeds United F.C.",
"Rotherham United F.C.",
"Heart of Midlothian F.C."
]
} | L2_Q5572988_P54_5 | Glynn Snodin plays for Heart of Midlothian F.C. from Jan, 1992 to Jan, 1993.
Glynn Snodin plays for Oldham Athletic A.F.C. from Jan, 1991 to Jan, 1991.
Glynn Snodin plays for Leeds United F.C. from Jan, 1987 to Jan, 1992.
Glynn Snodin plays for Gainsborough Trinity F.C. from Jan, 1995 to Jan, 1997.
Glynn Snodin plays for Barnsley F.C. from Jan, 1993 to Jan, 1995.
Glynn Snodin plays for Rotherham United F.C. from Jan, 1992 to Jan, 1992.
Glynn Snodin plays for Doncaster Rovers F.C. from Jan, 1977 to Jan, 1985.
Glynn Snodin plays for Sheffield Wednesday F.C. from Jan, 1985 to Jan, 1987. | Glynn SnodinGlynn Snodin (born 14 February 1960) is an English football coach, currently assistant manager at Chesterfield and former professional player.As a player, he was a midfielder from 1977 to 1997. He played for Doncaster Rovers and later made just under 100 appearances for Leeds United and spent two years with Sheffield Wednesday. Whilst with Leeds, Snodin was loaned out to Oldham Athletic and Rotherham United before having spell with Scottish Premier Division side Hearts. In 1993, he spent two years with Barnsley before finishing his playing career in the Northern Premier League with Gainsborough Trinity, Later joining Yorkshire Main F.C. in non League Football.Since retiring Snodin has held various scouting and coaching roles firstly with Carlisle United and then returning to former club Doncaster. He later became manager of Charlton Athletic's reserve team before joining the coaching staff at Southampton and Northern Ireland. He has since been on the coaching staff at West Ham United, Leeds United and Huddersfield Town.He started his professional career at Doncaster Rovers as a 16-year-old in 1977 and remained with the club until June 1985 as they moved up and down between Division's 4 and 3. At Doncaster he made over 300 appearances, many of them alongside his younger brother Ian.In June 1985 he was sold for £135,000 to First Division Sheffield Wednesday, where he stayed for two seasons, playing 59 league games, and also reaching the FA Cup semi-final in 1986, before taking a move down a division to Leeds United (for a fee of £150,000) from a desire to rejoin former boss Billy Bremner from his Doncaster days. A whole-hearted and dependable player, he scored 13 goals in 116 appearances for Leeds, but found his chances limited by the arrival of Tony Dorigo. By the 1989–90 season he was a fringe player as Leeds gained promotion to Division 1.He then had periods on loan to Oldham Athletic and Rotherham United, before to Scotland to join Joe Jordan's Hearts in March 1992. During his time at Tynecastle he scored once in the UEFA Cup against Slavia Prague, to give Hearts a 4–2 victory which saw them progress 4–3 on aggregate. When Jordan left Tynecastle, Snodin returned South to join Barnsley in July 1993, spending two seasons in the First Division, before a move to Gainsborough Trinity, where he saw out his final playing years with the club, retiring in the summer of 1997.Snodin initially began coaching youngsters whilst playing at Gainsborough Trinity as he ran the "Glynn Snodin Soccer Academy" at Gainsborough Leisure Centre on Saturday mornings between 1995 and 1997. He then became chief scout at Carlisle United under Mick Wadsworth while he took his coaching badges. He followed Wadsworth to Scarborough as youth team coach, before returning to his first club, Doncaster Rovers as assistant manager to his brother Ian.In 2000, he joined the coaching staff at Charlton Athletic as reserve team manager, leading them to the Reserve League title in 2004 and 2005. He completed his UEFA Pro Licence alongside George Burley and in March 2006, Burley brought Snodin to Southampton as first team coach.In a press conference on 1 June 2007, to reveal Nigel Worthington as the new manager of Northern Ireland, Snodin was made assistant manager and Fred Barber was announced as coach. On 26 June 2007, he joined his former Charlton Athletic colleague Alan Curbishley at West Ham United. When Curbishley left in September 2008 and Gianfranco Zola was appointed in his place, Snodin was not retained on the coaching staff.On 2 February 2009, Snodin was appointed the new assistant manager of Leeds United. Snodin was part of the Leeds management team who earned a 1–0 win away to Manchester United in the FA Cup Third Round. Glynn had some great times at Leeds, including some famous results in the FA Cup and promotion from League One back to the Championship in the 09/10 season. With Leeds in tenth position in the Championship, three points below the play-off places, Snodin was sacked as assistant manager along with manager Simon Grayson and coach Ian Miller on Wednesday 1 February 2012.Less than three weeks after leaving Leeds United, the management trio was back in work at neighbouring League One club Huddersfield Town, when on 21 February 2012 Simon Grayson was appointed manager, saying "Glynn Snodin and Ian Miller are the perfect pair to help me achieve success." They won promotion at the end of that season. Grayson, Snodin and Miller were dismissed from Huddersfield on 24 January 2013.In May 2013 Grayson was announced as the new manager at Preston North End replacing Graham Westley, with Snodin joining him again.He worked with Grayson at Sunderland, as assistant manager.He worked with Grayson at Bradford City, as assistant manager. | [
"Sheffield Wednesday F.C.",
"Doncaster Rovers F.C.",
"Gainsborough Trinity F.C.",
"Oldham Athletic A.F.C.",
"Barnsley F.C.",
"Sheffield Wednesday F.C.",
"Doncaster Rovers F.C.",
"Gainsborough Trinity F.C.",
"Oldham Athletic A.F.C.",
"Barnsley F.C.",
"Sheffield Wednesday F.C.",
"Doncaster Rovers F.C.",
"Gainsborough Trinity F.C.",
"Oldham Athletic A.F.C.",
"Barnsley F.C."
] |
|
Which team did Glynn Snodin play for in Jul, 1993? | July 10, 1993 | {
"text": [
"Barnsley F.C."
]
} | L2_Q5572988_P54_6 | Glynn Snodin plays for Barnsley F.C. from Jan, 1993 to Jan, 1995.
Glynn Snodin plays for Doncaster Rovers F.C. from Jan, 1977 to Jan, 1985.
Glynn Snodin plays for Oldham Athletic A.F.C. from Jan, 1991 to Jan, 1991.
Glynn Snodin plays for Leeds United F.C. from Jan, 1987 to Jan, 1992.
Glynn Snodin plays for Rotherham United F.C. from Jan, 1992 to Jan, 1992.
Glynn Snodin plays for Sheffield Wednesday F.C. from Jan, 1985 to Jan, 1987.
Glynn Snodin plays for Gainsborough Trinity F.C. from Jan, 1995 to Jan, 1997.
Glynn Snodin plays for Heart of Midlothian F.C. from Jan, 1992 to Jan, 1993. | Glynn SnodinGlynn Snodin (born 14 February 1960) is an English football coach, currently assistant manager at Chesterfield and former professional player.As a player, he was a midfielder from 1977 to 1997. He played for Doncaster Rovers and later made just under 100 appearances for Leeds United and spent two years with Sheffield Wednesday. Whilst with Leeds, Snodin was loaned out to Oldham Athletic and Rotherham United before having spell with Scottish Premier Division side Hearts. In 1993, he spent two years with Barnsley before finishing his playing career in the Northern Premier League with Gainsborough Trinity, Later joining Yorkshire Main F.C. in non League Football.Since retiring Snodin has held various scouting and coaching roles firstly with Carlisle United and then returning to former club Doncaster. He later became manager of Charlton Athletic's reserve team before joining the coaching staff at Southampton and Northern Ireland. He has since been on the coaching staff at West Ham United, Leeds United and Huddersfield Town.He started his professional career at Doncaster Rovers as a 16-year-old in 1977 and remained with the club until June 1985 as they moved up and down between Division's 4 and 3. At Doncaster he made over 300 appearances, many of them alongside his younger brother Ian.In June 1985 he was sold for £135,000 to First Division Sheffield Wednesday, where he stayed for two seasons, playing 59 league games, and also reaching the FA Cup semi-final in 1986, before taking a move down a division to Leeds United (for a fee of £150,000) from a desire to rejoin former boss Billy Bremner from his Doncaster days. A whole-hearted and dependable player, he scored 13 goals in 116 appearances for Leeds, but found his chances limited by the arrival of Tony Dorigo. By the 1989–90 season he was a fringe player as Leeds gained promotion to Division 1.He then had periods on loan to Oldham Athletic and Rotherham United, before to Scotland to join Joe Jordan's Hearts in March 1992. During his time at Tynecastle he scored once in the UEFA Cup against Slavia Prague, to give Hearts a 4–2 victory which saw them progress 4–3 on aggregate. When Jordan left Tynecastle, Snodin returned South to join Barnsley in July 1993, spending two seasons in the First Division, before a move to Gainsborough Trinity, where he saw out his final playing years with the club, retiring in the summer of 1997.Snodin initially began coaching youngsters whilst playing at Gainsborough Trinity as he ran the "Glynn Snodin Soccer Academy" at Gainsborough Leisure Centre on Saturday mornings between 1995 and 1997. He then became chief scout at Carlisle United under Mick Wadsworth while he took his coaching badges. He followed Wadsworth to Scarborough as youth team coach, before returning to his first club, Doncaster Rovers as assistant manager to his brother Ian.In 2000, he joined the coaching staff at Charlton Athletic as reserve team manager, leading them to the Reserve League title in 2004 and 2005. He completed his UEFA Pro Licence alongside George Burley and in March 2006, Burley brought Snodin to Southampton as first team coach.In a press conference on 1 June 2007, to reveal Nigel Worthington as the new manager of Northern Ireland, Snodin was made assistant manager and Fred Barber was announced as coach. On 26 June 2007, he joined his former Charlton Athletic colleague Alan Curbishley at West Ham United. When Curbishley left in September 2008 and Gianfranco Zola was appointed in his place, Snodin was not retained on the coaching staff.On 2 February 2009, Snodin was appointed the new assistant manager of Leeds United. Snodin was part of the Leeds management team who earned a 1–0 win away to Manchester United in the FA Cup Third Round. Glynn had some great times at Leeds, including some famous results in the FA Cup and promotion from League One back to the Championship in the 09/10 season. With Leeds in tenth position in the Championship, three points below the play-off places, Snodin was sacked as assistant manager along with manager Simon Grayson and coach Ian Miller on Wednesday 1 February 2012.Less than three weeks after leaving Leeds United, the management trio was back in work at neighbouring League One club Huddersfield Town, when on 21 February 2012 Simon Grayson was appointed manager, saying "Glynn Snodin and Ian Miller are the perfect pair to help me achieve success." They won promotion at the end of that season. Grayson, Snodin and Miller were dismissed from Huddersfield on 24 January 2013.In May 2013 Grayson was announced as the new manager at Preston North End replacing Graham Westley, with Snodin joining him again.He worked with Grayson at Sunderland, as assistant manager.He worked with Grayson at Bradford City, as assistant manager. | [
"Leeds United F.C.",
"Sheffield Wednesday F.C.",
"Doncaster Rovers F.C.",
"Rotherham United F.C.",
"Heart of Midlothian F.C.",
"Gainsborough Trinity F.C.",
"Oldham Athletic A.F.C."
] |
|
Which team did Glynn Snodin play for in Jul, 1996? | July 10, 1996 | {
"text": [
"Gainsborough Trinity F.C."
]
} | L2_Q5572988_P54_7 | Glynn Snodin plays for Rotherham United F.C. from Jan, 1992 to Jan, 1992.
Glynn Snodin plays for Gainsborough Trinity F.C. from Jan, 1995 to Jan, 1997.
Glynn Snodin plays for Heart of Midlothian F.C. from Jan, 1992 to Jan, 1993.
Glynn Snodin plays for Sheffield Wednesday F.C. from Jan, 1985 to Jan, 1987.
Glynn Snodin plays for Doncaster Rovers F.C. from Jan, 1977 to Jan, 1985.
Glynn Snodin plays for Leeds United F.C. from Jan, 1987 to Jan, 1992.
Glynn Snodin plays for Barnsley F.C. from Jan, 1993 to Jan, 1995.
Glynn Snodin plays for Oldham Athletic A.F.C. from Jan, 1991 to Jan, 1991. | Glynn SnodinGlynn Snodin (born 14 February 1960) is an English football coach, currently assistant manager at Chesterfield and former professional player.As a player, he was a midfielder from 1977 to 1997. He played for Doncaster Rovers and later made just under 100 appearances for Leeds United and spent two years with Sheffield Wednesday. Whilst with Leeds, Snodin was loaned out to Oldham Athletic and Rotherham United before having spell with Scottish Premier Division side Hearts. In 1993, he spent two years with Barnsley before finishing his playing career in the Northern Premier League with Gainsborough Trinity, Later joining Yorkshire Main F.C. in non League Football.Since retiring Snodin has held various scouting and coaching roles firstly with Carlisle United and then returning to former club Doncaster. He later became manager of Charlton Athletic's reserve team before joining the coaching staff at Southampton and Northern Ireland. He has since been on the coaching staff at West Ham United, Leeds United and Huddersfield Town.He started his professional career at Doncaster Rovers as a 16-year-old in 1977 and remained with the club until June 1985 as they moved up and down between Division's 4 and 3. At Doncaster he made over 300 appearances, many of them alongside his younger brother Ian.In June 1985 he was sold for £135,000 to First Division Sheffield Wednesday, where he stayed for two seasons, playing 59 league games, and also reaching the FA Cup semi-final in 1986, before taking a move down a division to Leeds United (for a fee of £150,000) from a desire to rejoin former boss Billy Bremner from his Doncaster days. A whole-hearted and dependable player, he scored 13 goals in 116 appearances for Leeds, but found his chances limited by the arrival of Tony Dorigo. By the 1989–90 season he was a fringe player as Leeds gained promotion to Division 1.He then had periods on loan to Oldham Athletic and Rotherham United, before to Scotland to join Joe Jordan's Hearts in March 1992. During his time at Tynecastle he scored once in the UEFA Cup against Slavia Prague, to give Hearts a 4–2 victory which saw them progress 4–3 on aggregate. When Jordan left Tynecastle, Snodin returned South to join Barnsley in July 1993, spending two seasons in the First Division, before a move to Gainsborough Trinity, where he saw out his final playing years with the club, retiring in the summer of 1997.Snodin initially began coaching youngsters whilst playing at Gainsborough Trinity as he ran the "Glynn Snodin Soccer Academy" at Gainsborough Leisure Centre on Saturday mornings between 1995 and 1997. He then became chief scout at Carlisle United under Mick Wadsworth while he took his coaching badges. He followed Wadsworth to Scarborough as youth team coach, before returning to his first club, Doncaster Rovers as assistant manager to his brother Ian.In 2000, he joined the coaching staff at Charlton Athletic as reserve team manager, leading them to the Reserve League title in 2004 and 2005. He completed his UEFA Pro Licence alongside George Burley and in March 2006, Burley brought Snodin to Southampton as first team coach.In a press conference on 1 June 2007, to reveal Nigel Worthington as the new manager of Northern Ireland, Snodin was made assistant manager and Fred Barber was announced as coach. On 26 June 2007, he joined his former Charlton Athletic colleague Alan Curbishley at West Ham United. When Curbishley left in September 2008 and Gianfranco Zola was appointed in his place, Snodin was not retained on the coaching staff.On 2 February 2009, Snodin was appointed the new assistant manager of Leeds United. Snodin was part of the Leeds management team who earned a 1–0 win away to Manchester United in the FA Cup Third Round. Glynn had some great times at Leeds, including some famous results in the FA Cup and promotion from League One back to the Championship in the 09/10 season. With Leeds in tenth position in the Championship, three points below the play-off places, Snodin was sacked as assistant manager along with manager Simon Grayson and coach Ian Miller on Wednesday 1 February 2012.Less than three weeks after leaving Leeds United, the management trio was back in work at neighbouring League One club Huddersfield Town, when on 21 February 2012 Simon Grayson was appointed manager, saying "Glynn Snodin and Ian Miller are the perfect pair to help me achieve success." They won promotion at the end of that season. Grayson, Snodin and Miller were dismissed from Huddersfield on 24 January 2013.In May 2013 Grayson was announced as the new manager at Preston North End replacing Graham Westley, with Snodin joining him again.He worked with Grayson at Sunderland, as assistant manager.He worked with Grayson at Bradford City, as assistant manager. | [
"Leeds United F.C.",
"Sheffield Wednesday F.C.",
"Doncaster Rovers F.C.",
"Rotherham United F.C.",
"Heart of Midlothian F.C.",
"Oldham Athletic A.F.C.",
"Barnsley F.C."
] |
|
Which employer did Eduard Winkelmann work for in Mar, 1859? | March 29, 1859 | {
"text": [
"Monumenta Germaniae Historica"
]
} | L2_Q96252_P108_0 | Eduard Winkelmann works for Monumenta Germaniae Historica from Jan, 1859 to Jan, 1860.
Eduard Winkelmann works for University of Bern from Jan, 1869 to Jan, 1873.
Eduard Winkelmann works for Heidelberg University from Jan, 1873 to Jan, 1896.
Eduard Winkelmann works for Imperial University of Dorpat from Jan, 1865 to Jan, 1869.
Eduard Winkelmann works for Tallinn Cathedral School from Jan, 1860 to Jan, 1865. | Eduard WinkelmannEduard Winkelmann (June 25, 1838 – February 10, 1896) was a German historian.He was born at Danzig (Gdańsk) in the Province of Prussia. He studied at the universities of Berlin and Göttingen, worked at the "Monumenta Germaniae historica", and in 1869 became professor of history at the University of Bern, and four years later at Heidelberg. He also spent some time in the Russian Empire, where he was headmaster at the knight and chapter school in Reval (Tallinn) beginning in 1860, and was later appointed professor at the University of Dorpat (1865). He died at Heidelberg.Winkelmann wrote a "Geschichte der Angelsachsen bis zum Tode König Ælfreds" (Berlin, 1883); and his residence in Russia induced him to compile a "Bibliotheca Livoniae historica" (St Petersburg, 1869–1870, and Berlin, 1878); but his chief works deal with the history of the Holy Roman Empire during the Later Middle Ages.The most important of these are:He edited the "Acta imperii inedita" (Innsbruck, 1880-1885), and with Julius Ficker, "Die Regesten des Kaiserreichs unter Wilhelm, Alfons X und Richard" (Innsbruck, 1882, 1901).Among Winkelmann's other works are: | [
"University of Bern",
"Tallinn Cathedral School",
"Imperial University of Dorpat",
"Heidelberg University"
] |
|
Which employer did Eduard Winkelmann work for in Mar, 1861? | March 06, 1861 | {
"text": [
"Tallinn Cathedral School"
]
} | L2_Q96252_P108_1 | Eduard Winkelmann works for Heidelberg University from Jan, 1873 to Jan, 1896.
Eduard Winkelmann works for Imperial University of Dorpat from Jan, 1865 to Jan, 1869.
Eduard Winkelmann works for University of Bern from Jan, 1869 to Jan, 1873.
Eduard Winkelmann works for Tallinn Cathedral School from Jan, 1860 to Jan, 1865.
Eduard Winkelmann works for Monumenta Germaniae Historica from Jan, 1859 to Jan, 1860. | Eduard WinkelmannEduard Winkelmann (June 25, 1838 – February 10, 1896) was a German historian.He was born at Danzig (Gdańsk) in the Province of Prussia. He studied at the universities of Berlin and Göttingen, worked at the "Monumenta Germaniae historica", and in 1869 became professor of history at the University of Bern, and four years later at Heidelberg. He also spent some time in the Russian Empire, where he was headmaster at the knight and chapter school in Reval (Tallinn) beginning in 1860, and was later appointed professor at the University of Dorpat (1865). He died at Heidelberg.Winkelmann wrote a "Geschichte der Angelsachsen bis zum Tode König Ælfreds" (Berlin, 1883); and his residence in Russia induced him to compile a "Bibliotheca Livoniae historica" (St Petersburg, 1869–1870, and Berlin, 1878); but his chief works deal with the history of the Holy Roman Empire during the Later Middle Ages.The most important of these are:He edited the "Acta imperii inedita" (Innsbruck, 1880-1885), and with Julius Ficker, "Die Regesten des Kaiserreichs unter Wilhelm, Alfons X und Richard" (Innsbruck, 1882, 1901).Among Winkelmann's other works are: | [
"University of Bern",
"Monumenta Germaniae Historica",
"Imperial University of Dorpat",
"Heidelberg University"
] |
|
Which employer did Eduard Winkelmann work for in Oct, 1865? | October 30, 1865 | {
"text": [
"Imperial University of Dorpat"
]
} | L2_Q96252_P108_2 | Eduard Winkelmann works for Imperial University of Dorpat from Jan, 1865 to Jan, 1869.
Eduard Winkelmann works for Tallinn Cathedral School from Jan, 1860 to Jan, 1865.
Eduard Winkelmann works for University of Bern from Jan, 1869 to Jan, 1873.
Eduard Winkelmann works for Heidelberg University from Jan, 1873 to Jan, 1896.
Eduard Winkelmann works for Monumenta Germaniae Historica from Jan, 1859 to Jan, 1860. | Eduard WinkelmannEduard Winkelmann (June 25, 1838 – February 10, 1896) was a German historian.He was born at Danzig (Gdańsk) in the Province of Prussia. He studied at the universities of Berlin and Göttingen, worked at the "Monumenta Germaniae historica", and in 1869 became professor of history at the University of Bern, and four years later at Heidelberg. He also spent some time in the Russian Empire, where he was headmaster at the knight and chapter school in Reval (Tallinn) beginning in 1860, and was later appointed professor at the University of Dorpat (1865). He died at Heidelberg.Winkelmann wrote a "Geschichte der Angelsachsen bis zum Tode König Ælfreds" (Berlin, 1883); and his residence in Russia induced him to compile a "Bibliotheca Livoniae historica" (St Petersburg, 1869–1870, and Berlin, 1878); but his chief works deal with the history of the Holy Roman Empire during the Later Middle Ages.The most important of these are:He edited the "Acta imperii inedita" (Innsbruck, 1880-1885), and with Julius Ficker, "Die Regesten des Kaiserreichs unter Wilhelm, Alfons X und Richard" (Innsbruck, 1882, 1901).Among Winkelmann's other works are: | [
"University of Bern",
"Monumenta Germaniae Historica",
"Heidelberg University",
"Tallinn Cathedral School"
] |
|
Which employer did Eduard Winkelmann work for in Jan, 1872? | January 08, 1872 | {
"text": [
"University of Bern"
]
} | L2_Q96252_P108_3 | Eduard Winkelmann works for Imperial University of Dorpat from Jan, 1865 to Jan, 1869.
Eduard Winkelmann works for University of Bern from Jan, 1869 to Jan, 1873.
Eduard Winkelmann works for Heidelberg University from Jan, 1873 to Jan, 1896.
Eduard Winkelmann works for Monumenta Germaniae Historica from Jan, 1859 to Jan, 1860.
Eduard Winkelmann works for Tallinn Cathedral School from Jan, 1860 to Jan, 1865. | Eduard WinkelmannEduard Winkelmann (June 25, 1838 – February 10, 1896) was a German historian.He was born at Danzig (Gdańsk) in the Province of Prussia. He studied at the universities of Berlin and Göttingen, worked at the "Monumenta Germaniae historica", and in 1869 became professor of history at the University of Bern, and four years later at Heidelberg. He also spent some time in the Russian Empire, where he was headmaster at the knight and chapter school in Reval (Tallinn) beginning in 1860, and was later appointed professor at the University of Dorpat (1865). He died at Heidelberg.Winkelmann wrote a "Geschichte der Angelsachsen bis zum Tode König Ælfreds" (Berlin, 1883); and his residence in Russia induced him to compile a "Bibliotheca Livoniae historica" (St Petersburg, 1869–1870, and Berlin, 1878); but his chief works deal with the history of the Holy Roman Empire during the Later Middle Ages.The most important of these are:He edited the "Acta imperii inedita" (Innsbruck, 1880-1885), and with Julius Ficker, "Die Regesten des Kaiserreichs unter Wilhelm, Alfons X und Richard" (Innsbruck, 1882, 1901).Among Winkelmann's other works are: | [
"Monumenta Germaniae Historica",
"Imperial University of Dorpat",
"Heidelberg University",
"Tallinn Cathedral School"
] |
|
Which employer did Eduard Winkelmann work for in Jan, 1877? | January 25, 1877 | {
"text": [
"Heidelberg University"
]
} | L2_Q96252_P108_4 | Eduard Winkelmann works for Monumenta Germaniae Historica from Jan, 1859 to Jan, 1860.
Eduard Winkelmann works for Heidelberg University from Jan, 1873 to Jan, 1896.
Eduard Winkelmann works for Tallinn Cathedral School from Jan, 1860 to Jan, 1865.
Eduard Winkelmann works for Imperial University of Dorpat from Jan, 1865 to Jan, 1869.
Eduard Winkelmann works for University of Bern from Jan, 1869 to Jan, 1873. | Eduard WinkelmannEduard Winkelmann (June 25, 1838 – February 10, 1896) was a German historian.He was born at Danzig (Gdańsk) in the Province of Prussia. He studied at the universities of Berlin and Göttingen, worked at the "Monumenta Germaniae historica", and in 1869 became professor of history at the University of Bern, and four years later at Heidelberg. He also spent some time in the Russian Empire, where he was headmaster at the knight and chapter school in Reval (Tallinn) beginning in 1860, and was later appointed professor at the University of Dorpat (1865). He died at Heidelberg.Winkelmann wrote a "Geschichte der Angelsachsen bis zum Tode König Ælfreds" (Berlin, 1883); and his residence in Russia induced him to compile a "Bibliotheca Livoniae historica" (St Petersburg, 1869–1870, and Berlin, 1878); but his chief works deal with the history of the Holy Roman Empire during the Later Middle Ages.The most important of these are:He edited the "Acta imperii inedita" (Innsbruck, 1880-1885), and with Julius Ficker, "Die Regesten des Kaiserreichs unter Wilhelm, Alfons X und Richard" (Innsbruck, 1882, 1901).Among Winkelmann's other works are: | [
"University of Bern",
"Monumenta Germaniae Historica",
"Imperial University of Dorpat",
"Tallinn Cathedral School"
] |
|
Which team did Nenad Panić play for in Feb, 2001? | February 17, 2001 | {
"text": [
"FK Železničar Beograd"
]
} | L2_Q22162739_P54_0 | Nenad Panić plays for Floridsdorfer AC from Jan, 2013 to Jan, 2014.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Hajduk Kula from Jan, 2011 to Jan, 2011.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Čukarički from Jan, 2003 to Jan, 2007.
Nenad Panić plays for SV Würmla from Jan, 2008 to Jan, 2009.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Železničar Beograd from Jan, 2001 to Jan, 2002.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Javor Ivanjica from Jan, 2009 to Jan, 2010.
Nenad Panić plays for SC-ESV Parndorf 1919 from Jan, 2014 to Jan, 2014.
Nenad Panić plays for Red Star Belgrade from Jan, 2002 to Jan, 2003. | Nenad PanićNenad Panić (; born 12 January 1984) is a Serbian football forward who plays for SV Stockerau. | [
"Floridsdorfer AC",
"Red Star Belgrade",
"FK Čukarički",
"FK Javor Ivanjica",
"FK Hajduk Kula",
"SC-ESV Parndorf 1919",
"SV Würmla"
] |
|
Which team did Nenad Panić play for in Dec, 2002? | December 18, 2002 | {
"text": [
"Red Star Belgrade"
]
} | L2_Q22162739_P54_1 | Nenad Panić plays for FK Železničar Beograd from Jan, 2001 to Jan, 2002.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Čukarički from Jan, 2003 to Jan, 2007.
Nenad Panić plays for Floridsdorfer AC from Jan, 2013 to Jan, 2014.
Nenad Panić plays for Red Star Belgrade from Jan, 2002 to Jan, 2003.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Javor Ivanjica from Jan, 2009 to Jan, 2010.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Hajduk Kula from Jan, 2011 to Jan, 2011.
Nenad Panić plays for SV Würmla from Jan, 2008 to Jan, 2009.
Nenad Panić plays for SC-ESV Parndorf 1919 from Jan, 2014 to Jan, 2014. | Nenad PanićNenad Panić (; born 12 January 1984) is a Serbian football forward who plays for SV Stockerau. | [
"Floridsdorfer AC",
"FK Železničar Beograd",
"FK Čukarički",
"FK Javor Ivanjica",
"FK Hajduk Kula",
"SC-ESV Parndorf 1919",
"SV Würmla"
] |
|
Which team did Nenad Panić play for in Jul, 2003? | July 13, 2003 | {
"text": [
"FK Čukarički"
]
} | L2_Q22162739_P54_2 | Nenad Panić plays for FK Čukarički from Jan, 2003 to Jan, 2007.
Nenad Panić plays for SC-ESV Parndorf 1919 from Jan, 2014 to Jan, 2014.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Hajduk Kula from Jan, 2011 to Jan, 2011.
Nenad Panić plays for Floridsdorfer AC from Jan, 2013 to Jan, 2014.
Nenad Panić plays for Red Star Belgrade from Jan, 2002 to Jan, 2003.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Javor Ivanjica from Jan, 2009 to Jan, 2010.
Nenad Panić plays for SV Würmla from Jan, 2008 to Jan, 2009.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Železničar Beograd from Jan, 2001 to Jan, 2002. | Nenad PanićNenad Panić (; born 12 January 1984) is a Serbian football forward who plays for SV Stockerau. | [
"Floridsdorfer AC",
"FK Železničar Beograd",
"Red Star Belgrade",
"FK Javor Ivanjica",
"FK Hajduk Kula",
"SC-ESV Parndorf 1919",
"SV Würmla"
] |
|
Which team did Nenad Panić play for in Nov, 2008? | November 15, 2008 | {
"text": [
"SV Würmla"
]
} | L2_Q22162739_P54_3 | Nenad Panić plays for Floridsdorfer AC from Jan, 2013 to Jan, 2014.
Nenad Panić plays for SC-ESV Parndorf 1919 from Jan, 2014 to Jan, 2014.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Javor Ivanjica from Jan, 2009 to Jan, 2010.
Nenad Panić plays for SV Würmla from Jan, 2008 to Jan, 2009.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Hajduk Kula from Jan, 2011 to Jan, 2011.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Čukarički from Jan, 2003 to Jan, 2007.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Železničar Beograd from Jan, 2001 to Jan, 2002.
Nenad Panić plays for Red Star Belgrade from Jan, 2002 to Jan, 2003. | Nenad PanićNenad Panić (; born 12 January 1984) is a Serbian football forward who plays for SV Stockerau. | [
"Floridsdorfer AC",
"FK Železničar Beograd",
"Red Star Belgrade",
"FK Čukarički",
"FK Javor Ivanjica",
"FK Hajduk Kula",
"SC-ESV Parndorf 1919"
] |
|
Which team did Nenad Panić play for in Dec, 2009? | December 16, 2009 | {
"text": [
"FK Javor Ivanjica"
]
} | L2_Q22162739_P54_4 | Nenad Panić plays for SV Würmla from Jan, 2008 to Jan, 2009.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Hajduk Kula from Jan, 2011 to Jan, 2011.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Čukarički from Jan, 2003 to Jan, 2007.
Nenad Panić plays for SC-ESV Parndorf 1919 from Jan, 2014 to Jan, 2014.
Nenad Panić plays for Red Star Belgrade from Jan, 2002 to Jan, 2003.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Javor Ivanjica from Jan, 2009 to Jan, 2010.
Nenad Panić plays for Floridsdorfer AC from Jan, 2013 to Jan, 2014.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Železničar Beograd from Jan, 2001 to Jan, 2002. | Nenad PanićNenad Panić (; born 12 January 1984) is a Serbian football forward who plays for SV Stockerau. | [
"Floridsdorfer AC",
"FK Železničar Beograd",
"Red Star Belgrade",
"FK Čukarički",
"FK Hajduk Kula",
"SC-ESV Parndorf 1919",
"SV Würmla"
] |
|
Which team did Nenad Panić play for in Jan, 2011? | January 01, 2011 | {
"text": [
"FK Hajduk Kula"
]
} | L2_Q22162739_P54_5 | Nenad Panić plays for Red Star Belgrade from Jan, 2002 to Jan, 2003.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Železničar Beograd from Jan, 2001 to Jan, 2002.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Hajduk Kula from Jan, 2011 to Jan, 2011.
Nenad Panić plays for SV Würmla from Jan, 2008 to Jan, 2009.
Nenad Panić plays for SC-ESV Parndorf 1919 from Jan, 2014 to Jan, 2014.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Čukarički from Jan, 2003 to Jan, 2007.
Nenad Panić plays for Floridsdorfer AC from Jan, 2013 to Jan, 2014.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Javor Ivanjica from Jan, 2009 to Jan, 2010. | Nenad PanićNenad Panić (; born 12 January 1984) is a Serbian football forward who plays for SV Stockerau. | [
"Floridsdorfer AC",
"FK Železničar Beograd",
"Red Star Belgrade",
"FK Čukarički",
"FK Javor Ivanjica",
"SC-ESV Parndorf 1919",
"SV Würmla"
] |
|
Which team did Nenad Panić play for in Feb, 2013? | February 22, 2013 | {
"text": [
"Floridsdorfer AC"
]
} | L2_Q22162739_P54_6 | Nenad Panić plays for FK Železničar Beograd from Jan, 2001 to Jan, 2002.
Nenad Panić plays for Red Star Belgrade from Jan, 2002 to Jan, 2003.
Nenad Panić plays for Floridsdorfer AC from Jan, 2013 to Jan, 2014.
Nenad Panić plays for SC-ESV Parndorf 1919 from Jan, 2014 to Jan, 2014.
Nenad Panić plays for SV Würmla from Jan, 2008 to Jan, 2009.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Čukarički from Jan, 2003 to Jan, 2007.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Javor Ivanjica from Jan, 2009 to Jan, 2010.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Hajduk Kula from Jan, 2011 to Jan, 2011. | Nenad PanićNenad Panić (; born 12 January 1984) is a Serbian football forward who plays for SV Stockerau. | [
"FK Železničar Beograd",
"Red Star Belgrade",
"FK Čukarički",
"FK Javor Ivanjica",
"FK Hajduk Kula",
"SC-ESV Parndorf 1919",
"SV Würmla"
] |
|
Which team did Nenad Panić play for in Jan, 2014? | January 01, 2014 | {
"text": [
"Floridsdorfer AC",
"SC-ESV Parndorf 1919"
]
} | L2_Q22162739_P54_7 | Nenad Panić plays for Floridsdorfer AC from Jan, 2013 to Jan, 2014.
Nenad Panić plays for Red Star Belgrade from Jan, 2002 to Jan, 2003.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Hajduk Kula from Jan, 2011 to Jan, 2011.
Nenad Panić plays for SC-ESV Parndorf 1919 from Jan, 2014 to Jan, 2014.
Nenad Panić plays for SV Würmla from Jan, 2008 to Jan, 2009.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Javor Ivanjica from Jan, 2009 to Jan, 2010.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Železničar Beograd from Jan, 2001 to Jan, 2002.
Nenad Panić plays for FK Čukarički from Jan, 2003 to Jan, 2007. | Nenad PanićNenad Panić (; born 12 January 1984) is a Serbian football forward who plays for SV Stockerau. | [
"FK Železničar Beograd",
"SV Würmla",
"Red Star Belgrade",
"FK Čukarički",
"FK Javor Ivanjica",
"FK Hajduk Kula",
"FK Železničar Beograd",
"SV Würmla",
"Red Star Belgrade",
"FK Čukarički",
"FK Javor Ivanjica",
"FK Hajduk Kula"
] |
|
Who was the head coach of the team HNK Rijeka in Jul, 2019? | July 15, 2019 | {
"text": [
"Igor Bišćan"
]
} | L2_Q318969_P286_0 | Goran Tomić is the head coach of HNK Rijeka from Mar, 2021 to May, 2022.
Fausto Budicin is the head coach of HNK Rijeka from Jul, 2022 to Dec, 2022.
Simon Rožman is the head coach of HNK Rijeka from Sep, 2019 to Feb, 2021.
Igor Bišćan is the head coach of HNK Rijeka from Oct, 2018 to Sep, 2019. | HNK RijekaHrvatski nogometni klub Rijeka (), commonly referred to as HNK Rijeka or simply Rijeka, is a Croatian professional football club from the city of Rijeka.HNK Rijeka compete in Croatia's top division, HT Prva liga, of which they have been members since its foundation in 1992. During the reconstruction of Stadion Kantrida, their traditional home ground has been Stadion Rujevica. Rijeka's traditional home colours are all white.The club was founded in 1946 as "Sportsko Društvo Kvarner" (Croatian) / "Società Sportiva Quarnero" (Italian). The club's official name was changed to "Nogometni klub Rijeka" on 2 July 1954. In the summer of 1995, the club management added the adjective "hrvatski" () to the official name. Rijeka are the third-most successful Croatian football club, having won one Croatian First League title, two Yugoslav Cups, six Croatian Cups, one Croatian Super Cup and the 1977–78 Balkans Cup.During the early period in Yugoslavia, Kvarner had moderate success in various Yugoslav and local club championships. They were relegated at the end of their inaugural season in the Yugoslav First League in 1946–47. Kvarner changed its name to NK Rijeka on 2 July 1954 and returned to the First League in 1958. Rijeka remained in the top tier for 11 consecutive seasons until 1969, when they were once again relegated to the Yugoslav Second League. Despite finishing on top in four (out of five) seasons in the second tier, due to three failed qualifying attempts, the club only gained promotion back to the top tier in 1974. With varying success, Rijeka remained in top tier until the breakup of Yugoslavia in 1991. The club's greatest success during this period involved back-to-back Yugoslav Cup titles in 1978 and 1979. Rijeka were also a Cup runner-up in 1987, when they lost the final after a penalty shoot-out. Rijeka never finished higher than the fourth place in the Yugoslav First League. In 1984, the club came closest to their first championship title, finishing only two points behind Red Star Belgrade. Rijeka were also the best placed Croatian club in the Yugoslav First League in 1965, 1984 and 1987.Following the breakup of Yugoslavia, in 1992 Rijeka joined the Croatian First Football League in its inaugural season. Rijeka remain one of only four founding member clubs to never have been relegated. In terms of greatest successes in this period, the club won its first-ever league title in 2017, ending Dinamo Zagreb's run of 11 successive titles. Rijeka has also won six Croatian Cups, including back-to-back titles in 2005 and 2006, in 2014, in 2017, which helped them secure the historic Double, and most recently in 2019 and 2020. In the final round of the 1998–99 season, a refereeing error denied Rijeka their first championship title. With one match to play, Rijeka were one point ahead of Croatia Zagreb, needing a home win against Osijek to secure the title. With the match tied at 1–1, in the 89th minute, Rijeka forward Admir Hasančić converted a cross by Barnabás Sztipánovics. However, moments later, assistant referee Krečak raised his flag and referee Šupraha disallowed Rijeka's winning goal for an alleged offside. Following an investigation, 3D analysis revealed Hasančić was not, in fact, in an offside position, and that Rijeka were wrongfully denied their first championship title. An investigation by "Nacional" revealed Franjo Tuđman, the president of the Republic of Croatia and an ardent Croatia Zagreb supporter, earlier in 1999 ordered the country's intelligence agencies to spy on football referees, officials and journalists, with the aim of ensuring the Zagreb club wins the league title.Rijeka participated in UEFA competitions on 20 occasions, including eight consecutive appearances since 2013–14. The greatest success was the quarter-final of the 1979–80 European Cup Winners' Cup, where they lost to Italian giants Juventus 2–0 on aggregate. The most memorable result in Europe was the home win (3–1) against eventual winners Real Madrid in the 1984–85 UEFA Cup. Controversially, in the return leg at Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, which Rijeka lost 3–0, three of their players were sent off. Madrid scored their first goal from a doubtful penalty in the 67th minute with Rijeka already down to ten men. Over the next ten minutes, two additional Rijeka players were sent off, most notably Damir Desnica. While Desnica received the first yellow card because he did not stop play after Schoeters blew his whistle, the second yellow was issued because he allegedly insulted the referee. However, unbeknownst to the referee, Desnica had been a deaf-mute since birth. With Rijeka reduced to eight players, Madrid scored two additional goals, progressed to the next round and eventually won the trophy.In 2013, after winning 4–3 on aggregate against VfB Stuttgart, Rijeka qualified for the 2013–14 UEFA Europa League group stage. Rijeka also participated in the 2014–15 UEFA Europa League group stage, where they defeated Feyenoord and Standard Liège and drew with title-holders and eventual winners Sevilla. In 2017, Rijeka reached the 2017–18 UEFA Champions League play-off, where they lost 3–1 on aggregate to Greek champions Olympiacos, and automatically qualified for the 2017–18 UEFA Europa League group stage. In the group stage they recorded a famous home win (2–0) against AC Milan but once again failed to progress to the knockout stages.In February 2012, Gabriele Volpi – an Italian businessman and the founder of Orlean Invest, as well as the owner of football club Spezia and water polo club Pro Recco – injected much needed capital into the club. With the privatization process complete by September 2013, Volpi, through Dutch-based Stichting Social Sport Foundation, became the owner of 70% of the club, with the City of Rijeka in control of the remaining 30%. On 29 December 2017 it was announced that chairman Damir Mišković, through London-based Teanna Limited, acquired the majority stake in the club from Stichting Social Sport Foundation.In January 2015, Rijeka sold their star striker Andrej Kramarić to Leicester City for a club-record £9.7 million transfer fee.Until July 2015, Rijeka were based at Stadion Kantrida, their traditional home ground for over 60 years. With Kantrida awaiting demolition and reconstruction, since August 2015, Rijeka have been based at the newly built Stadion Rujevica, an all-seater with the capacity of 8,279. Stadion Rujevica is part of Rijeka's new training centre and serves as the club's temporary home ground. Following the demolition of old Kantrida, a new, state-of-the art, 14,600-capacity all-seater stadium will be built at the same location. In addition to the stadium, the investors are planning to build a commercial complex that will include a shopping mall and a hotel.Rijeka's ultras group are called "Armada Rijeka", or simply Armada. The group has been active since 1987.During most home matches, the majority of the seats are occupied by season ticket holders. For the 2017–18 season the club had 5,922 season ticket holders and 8,403 members.Rijeka's greatest rivalry is with Hajduk Split. Since 1946, the Adriatic derby is contested between the two most popular Croatian football clubs from the Adriatic coast, Rijeka and Hajduk. Other rivalries exist with Dinamo Zagreb and, at the regional level, with Istra Pula. The origins of the Rijeka–Pula rivalry date back to the clashes between Fiumana and Grion Pola since the late 1920s.According to a 2005–07 survey of former players (older than 40 years of age) and respected journalists, Marinko Lazzarich found that the best all-time team of Rijeka is as follows:1. Jantoljak, 2. Milevoj, 3. Hrstić, 4. Radaković, 5. Radin, 6. Juričić, 7. Lukarić, 8. Gračan, 9. Osojnak, 10. Naumović, 11. Desnica.Rijeka's daily, "Novi list", in 2011 declared the following 11 players as Rijeka's best all time team:1. Jantoljak, 2. Šarić, 3. Radin, 4. Juričić, 5. Hrstić, 6. Loik, 7. Radaković, 8. Mladenović, 9. Naumović, 10. Skoblar, 11. Desnica.In 2020, the club's fans voted to select the best squad over the past decade to fit in a 4–2–3–1 formation:Prskalo – Ristovski, Župarić, Mitrović, Zuta – Kreilach, Moisés – Vešović, Andrijašević, Sharbini – Kramarić. Manager: Kek.Rijeka has won one Croatian First Football League title, two Yugoslav Cups and six Croatian Cups. In European competitions, the club has reached the quarter-final of the Cup Winners' Cup in 1979–80, UEFA Cup Round of 32 in 1984–85, and group stages of the UEFA Europa League in 2013–14, 2014–15, 2017–18 and 2020–21. The club has also won the 1977–78 Balkans Cup.CroatiaYugoslavia"(As of 1 March 2021), Source:"Non-UEFA competitions are listed in "italics". | [
"Goran Tomić",
"Simon Rožman",
"Fausto Budicin"
] |
|
Who was the head coach of the team HNK Rijeka in Oct, 2020? | October 11, 2020 | {
"text": [
"Simon Rožman"
]
} | L2_Q318969_P286_1 | Fausto Budicin is the head coach of HNK Rijeka from Jul, 2022 to Dec, 2022.
Goran Tomić is the head coach of HNK Rijeka from Mar, 2021 to May, 2022.
Igor Bišćan is the head coach of HNK Rijeka from Oct, 2018 to Sep, 2019.
Simon Rožman is the head coach of HNK Rijeka from Sep, 2019 to Feb, 2021. | HNK RijekaHrvatski nogometni klub Rijeka (), commonly referred to as HNK Rijeka or simply Rijeka, is a Croatian professional football club from the city of Rijeka.HNK Rijeka compete in Croatia's top division, HT Prva liga, of which they have been members since its foundation in 1992. During the reconstruction of Stadion Kantrida, their traditional home ground has been Stadion Rujevica. Rijeka's traditional home colours are all white.The club was founded in 1946 as "Sportsko Društvo Kvarner" (Croatian) / "Società Sportiva Quarnero" (Italian). The club's official name was changed to "Nogometni klub Rijeka" on 2 July 1954. In the summer of 1995, the club management added the adjective "hrvatski" () to the official name. Rijeka are the third-most successful Croatian football club, having won one Croatian First League title, two Yugoslav Cups, six Croatian Cups, one Croatian Super Cup and the 1977–78 Balkans Cup.During the early period in Yugoslavia, Kvarner had moderate success in various Yugoslav and local club championships. They were relegated at the end of their inaugural season in the Yugoslav First League in 1946–47. Kvarner changed its name to NK Rijeka on 2 July 1954 and returned to the First League in 1958. Rijeka remained in the top tier for 11 consecutive seasons until 1969, when they were once again relegated to the Yugoslav Second League. Despite finishing on top in four (out of five) seasons in the second tier, due to three failed qualifying attempts, the club only gained promotion back to the top tier in 1974. With varying success, Rijeka remained in top tier until the breakup of Yugoslavia in 1991. The club's greatest success during this period involved back-to-back Yugoslav Cup titles in 1978 and 1979. Rijeka were also a Cup runner-up in 1987, when they lost the final after a penalty shoot-out. Rijeka never finished higher than the fourth place in the Yugoslav First League. In 1984, the club came closest to their first championship title, finishing only two points behind Red Star Belgrade. Rijeka were also the best placed Croatian club in the Yugoslav First League in 1965, 1984 and 1987.Following the breakup of Yugoslavia, in 1992 Rijeka joined the Croatian First Football League in its inaugural season. Rijeka remain one of only four founding member clubs to never have been relegated. In terms of greatest successes in this period, the club won its first-ever league title in 2017, ending Dinamo Zagreb's run of 11 successive titles. Rijeka has also won six Croatian Cups, including back-to-back titles in 2005 and 2006, in 2014, in 2017, which helped them secure the historic Double, and most recently in 2019 and 2020. In the final round of the 1998–99 season, a refereeing error denied Rijeka their first championship title. With one match to play, Rijeka were one point ahead of Croatia Zagreb, needing a home win against Osijek to secure the title. With the match tied at 1–1, in the 89th minute, Rijeka forward Admir Hasančić converted a cross by Barnabás Sztipánovics. However, moments later, assistant referee Krečak raised his flag and referee Šupraha disallowed Rijeka's winning goal for an alleged offside. Following an investigation, 3D analysis revealed Hasančić was not, in fact, in an offside position, and that Rijeka were wrongfully denied their first championship title. An investigation by "Nacional" revealed Franjo Tuđman, the president of the Republic of Croatia and an ardent Croatia Zagreb supporter, earlier in 1999 ordered the country's intelligence agencies to spy on football referees, officials and journalists, with the aim of ensuring the Zagreb club wins the league title.Rijeka participated in UEFA competitions on 20 occasions, including eight consecutive appearances since 2013–14. The greatest success was the quarter-final of the 1979–80 European Cup Winners' Cup, where they lost to Italian giants Juventus 2–0 on aggregate. The most memorable result in Europe was the home win (3–1) against eventual winners Real Madrid in the 1984–85 UEFA Cup. Controversially, in the return leg at Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, which Rijeka lost 3–0, three of their players were sent off. Madrid scored their first goal from a doubtful penalty in the 67th minute with Rijeka already down to ten men. Over the next ten minutes, two additional Rijeka players were sent off, most notably Damir Desnica. While Desnica received the first yellow card because he did not stop play after Schoeters blew his whistle, the second yellow was issued because he allegedly insulted the referee. However, unbeknownst to the referee, Desnica had been a deaf-mute since birth. With Rijeka reduced to eight players, Madrid scored two additional goals, progressed to the next round and eventually won the trophy.In 2013, after winning 4–3 on aggregate against VfB Stuttgart, Rijeka qualified for the 2013–14 UEFA Europa League group stage. Rijeka also participated in the 2014–15 UEFA Europa League group stage, where they defeated Feyenoord and Standard Liège and drew with title-holders and eventual winners Sevilla. In 2017, Rijeka reached the 2017–18 UEFA Champions League play-off, where they lost 3–1 on aggregate to Greek champions Olympiacos, and automatically qualified for the 2017–18 UEFA Europa League group stage. In the group stage they recorded a famous home win (2–0) against AC Milan but once again failed to progress to the knockout stages.In February 2012, Gabriele Volpi – an Italian businessman and the founder of Orlean Invest, as well as the owner of football club Spezia and water polo club Pro Recco – injected much needed capital into the club. With the privatization process complete by September 2013, Volpi, through Dutch-based Stichting Social Sport Foundation, became the owner of 70% of the club, with the City of Rijeka in control of the remaining 30%. On 29 December 2017 it was announced that chairman Damir Mišković, through London-based Teanna Limited, acquired the majority stake in the club from Stichting Social Sport Foundation.In January 2015, Rijeka sold their star striker Andrej Kramarić to Leicester City for a club-record £9.7 million transfer fee.Until July 2015, Rijeka were based at Stadion Kantrida, their traditional home ground for over 60 years. With Kantrida awaiting demolition and reconstruction, since August 2015, Rijeka have been based at the newly built Stadion Rujevica, an all-seater with the capacity of 8,279. Stadion Rujevica is part of Rijeka's new training centre and serves as the club's temporary home ground. Following the demolition of old Kantrida, a new, state-of-the art, 14,600-capacity all-seater stadium will be built at the same location. In addition to the stadium, the investors are planning to build a commercial complex that will include a shopping mall and a hotel.Rijeka's ultras group are called "Armada Rijeka", or simply Armada. The group has been active since 1987.During most home matches, the majority of the seats are occupied by season ticket holders. For the 2017–18 season the club had 5,922 season ticket holders and 8,403 members.Rijeka's greatest rivalry is with Hajduk Split. Since 1946, the Adriatic derby is contested between the two most popular Croatian football clubs from the Adriatic coast, Rijeka and Hajduk. Other rivalries exist with Dinamo Zagreb and, at the regional level, with Istra Pula. The origins of the Rijeka–Pula rivalry date back to the clashes between Fiumana and Grion Pola since the late 1920s.According to a 2005–07 survey of former players (older than 40 years of age) and respected journalists, Marinko Lazzarich found that the best all-time team of Rijeka is as follows:1. Jantoljak, 2. Milevoj, 3. Hrstić, 4. Radaković, 5. Radin, 6. Juričić, 7. Lukarić, 8. Gračan, 9. Osojnak, 10. Naumović, 11. Desnica.Rijeka's daily, "Novi list", in 2011 declared the following 11 players as Rijeka's best all time team:1. Jantoljak, 2. Šarić, 3. Radin, 4. Juričić, 5. Hrstić, 6. Loik, 7. Radaković, 8. Mladenović, 9. Naumović, 10. Skoblar, 11. Desnica.In 2020, the club's fans voted to select the best squad over the past decade to fit in a 4–2–3–1 formation:Prskalo – Ristovski, Župarić, Mitrović, Zuta – Kreilach, Moisés – Vešović, Andrijašević, Sharbini – Kramarić. Manager: Kek.Rijeka has won one Croatian First Football League title, two Yugoslav Cups and six Croatian Cups. In European competitions, the club has reached the quarter-final of the Cup Winners' Cup in 1979–80, UEFA Cup Round of 32 in 1984–85, and group stages of the UEFA Europa League in 2013–14, 2014–15, 2017–18 and 2020–21. The club has also won the 1977–78 Balkans Cup.CroatiaYugoslavia"(As of 1 March 2021), Source:"Non-UEFA competitions are listed in "italics". | [
"Goran Tomić",
"Igor Bišćan",
"Fausto Budicin"
] |
|
Who was the head coach of the team HNK Rijeka in Jun, 2021? | June 02, 2021 | {
"text": [
"Goran Tomić"
]
} | L2_Q318969_P286_2 | Fausto Budicin is the head coach of HNK Rijeka from Jul, 2022 to Dec, 2022.
Simon Rožman is the head coach of HNK Rijeka from Sep, 2019 to Feb, 2021.
Igor Bišćan is the head coach of HNK Rijeka from Oct, 2018 to Sep, 2019.
Goran Tomić is the head coach of HNK Rijeka from Mar, 2021 to May, 2022. | HNK RijekaHrvatski nogometni klub Rijeka (), commonly referred to as HNK Rijeka or simply Rijeka, is a Croatian professional football club from the city of Rijeka.HNK Rijeka compete in Croatia's top division, HT Prva liga, of which they have been members since its foundation in 1992. During the reconstruction of Stadion Kantrida, their traditional home ground has been Stadion Rujevica. Rijeka's traditional home colours are all white.The club was founded in 1946 as "Sportsko Društvo Kvarner" (Croatian) / "Società Sportiva Quarnero" (Italian). The club's official name was changed to "Nogometni klub Rijeka" on 2 July 1954. In the summer of 1995, the club management added the adjective "hrvatski" () to the official name. Rijeka are the third-most successful Croatian football club, having won one Croatian First League title, two Yugoslav Cups, six Croatian Cups, one Croatian Super Cup and the 1977–78 Balkans Cup.During the early period in Yugoslavia, Kvarner had moderate success in various Yugoslav and local club championships. They were relegated at the end of their inaugural season in the Yugoslav First League in 1946–47. Kvarner changed its name to NK Rijeka on 2 July 1954 and returned to the First League in 1958. Rijeka remained in the top tier for 11 consecutive seasons until 1969, when they were once again relegated to the Yugoslav Second League. Despite finishing on top in four (out of five) seasons in the second tier, due to three failed qualifying attempts, the club only gained promotion back to the top tier in 1974. With varying success, Rijeka remained in top tier until the breakup of Yugoslavia in 1991. The club's greatest success during this period involved back-to-back Yugoslav Cup titles in 1978 and 1979. Rijeka were also a Cup runner-up in 1987, when they lost the final after a penalty shoot-out. Rijeka never finished higher than the fourth place in the Yugoslav First League. In 1984, the club came closest to their first championship title, finishing only two points behind Red Star Belgrade. Rijeka were also the best placed Croatian club in the Yugoslav First League in 1965, 1984 and 1987.Following the breakup of Yugoslavia, in 1992 Rijeka joined the Croatian First Football League in its inaugural season. Rijeka remain one of only four founding member clubs to never have been relegated. In terms of greatest successes in this period, the club won its first-ever league title in 2017, ending Dinamo Zagreb's run of 11 successive titles. Rijeka has also won six Croatian Cups, including back-to-back titles in 2005 and 2006, in 2014, in 2017, which helped them secure the historic Double, and most recently in 2019 and 2020. In the final round of the 1998–99 season, a refereeing error denied Rijeka their first championship title. With one match to play, Rijeka were one point ahead of Croatia Zagreb, needing a home win against Osijek to secure the title. With the match tied at 1–1, in the 89th minute, Rijeka forward Admir Hasančić converted a cross by Barnabás Sztipánovics. However, moments later, assistant referee Krečak raised his flag and referee Šupraha disallowed Rijeka's winning goal for an alleged offside. Following an investigation, 3D analysis revealed Hasančić was not, in fact, in an offside position, and that Rijeka were wrongfully denied their first championship title. An investigation by "Nacional" revealed Franjo Tuđman, the president of the Republic of Croatia and an ardent Croatia Zagreb supporter, earlier in 1999 ordered the country's intelligence agencies to spy on football referees, officials and journalists, with the aim of ensuring the Zagreb club wins the league title.Rijeka participated in UEFA competitions on 20 occasions, including eight consecutive appearances since 2013–14. The greatest success was the quarter-final of the 1979–80 European Cup Winners' Cup, where they lost to Italian giants Juventus 2–0 on aggregate. The most memorable result in Europe was the home win (3–1) against eventual winners Real Madrid in the 1984–85 UEFA Cup. Controversially, in the return leg at Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, which Rijeka lost 3–0, three of their players were sent off. Madrid scored their first goal from a doubtful penalty in the 67th minute with Rijeka already down to ten men. Over the next ten minutes, two additional Rijeka players were sent off, most notably Damir Desnica. While Desnica received the first yellow card because he did not stop play after Schoeters blew his whistle, the second yellow was issued because he allegedly insulted the referee. However, unbeknownst to the referee, Desnica had been a deaf-mute since birth. With Rijeka reduced to eight players, Madrid scored two additional goals, progressed to the next round and eventually won the trophy.In 2013, after winning 4–3 on aggregate against VfB Stuttgart, Rijeka qualified for the 2013–14 UEFA Europa League group stage. Rijeka also participated in the 2014–15 UEFA Europa League group stage, where they defeated Feyenoord and Standard Liège and drew with title-holders and eventual winners Sevilla. In 2017, Rijeka reached the 2017–18 UEFA Champions League play-off, where they lost 3–1 on aggregate to Greek champions Olympiacos, and automatically qualified for the 2017–18 UEFA Europa League group stage. In the group stage they recorded a famous home win (2–0) against AC Milan but once again failed to progress to the knockout stages.In February 2012, Gabriele Volpi – an Italian businessman and the founder of Orlean Invest, as well as the owner of football club Spezia and water polo club Pro Recco – injected much needed capital into the club. With the privatization process complete by September 2013, Volpi, through Dutch-based Stichting Social Sport Foundation, became the owner of 70% of the club, with the City of Rijeka in control of the remaining 30%. On 29 December 2017 it was announced that chairman Damir Mišković, through London-based Teanna Limited, acquired the majority stake in the club from Stichting Social Sport Foundation.In January 2015, Rijeka sold their star striker Andrej Kramarić to Leicester City for a club-record £9.7 million transfer fee.Until July 2015, Rijeka were based at Stadion Kantrida, their traditional home ground for over 60 years. With Kantrida awaiting demolition and reconstruction, since August 2015, Rijeka have been based at the newly built Stadion Rujevica, an all-seater with the capacity of 8,279. Stadion Rujevica is part of Rijeka's new training centre and serves as the club's temporary home ground. Following the demolition of old Kantrida, a new, state-of-the art, 14,600-capacity all-seater stadium will be built at the same location. In addition to the stadium, the investors are planning to build a commercial complex that will include a shopping mall and a hotel.Rijeka's ultras group are called "Armada Rijeka", or simply Armada. The group has been active since 1987.During most home matches, the majority of the seats are occupied by season ticket holders. For the 2017–18 season the club had 5,922 season ticket holders and 8,403 members.Rijeka's greatest rivalry is with Hajduk Split. Since 1946, the Adriatic derby is contested between the two most popular Croatian football clubs from the Adriatic coast, Rijeka and Hajduk. Other rivalries exist with Dinamo Zagreb and, at the regional level, with Istra Pula. The origins of the Rijeka–Pula rivalry date back to the clashes between Fiumana and Grion Pola since the late 1920s.According to a 2005–07 survey of former players (older than 40 years of age) and respected journalists, Marinko Lazzarich found that the best all-time team of Rijeka is as follows:1. Jantoljak, 2. Milevoj, 3. Hrstić, 4. Radaković, 5. Radin, 6. Juričić, 7. Lukarić, 8. Gračan, 9. Osojnak, 10. Naumović, 11. Desnica.Rijeka's daily, "Novi list", in 2011 declared the following 11 players as Rijeka's best all time team:1. Jantoljak, 2. Šarić, 3. Radin, 4. Juričić, 5. Hrstić, 6. Loik, 7. Radaković, 8. Mladenović, 9. Naumović, 10. Skoblar, 11. Desnica.In 2020, the club's fans voted to select the best squad over the past decade to fit in a 4–2–3–1 formation:Prskalo – Ristovski, Župarić, Mitrović, Zuta – Kreilach, Moisés – Vešović, Andrijašević, Sharbini – Kramarić. Manager: Kek.Rijeka has won one Croatian First Football League title, two Yugoslav Cups and six Croatian Cups. In European competitions, the club has reached the quarter-final of the Cup Winners' Cup in 1979–80, UEFA Cup Round of 32 in 1984–85, and group stages of the UEFA Europa League in 2013–14, 2014–15, 2017–18 and 2020–21. The club has also won the 1977–78 Balkans Cup.CroatiaYugoslavia"(As of 1 March 2021), Source:"Non-UEFA competitions are listed in "italics". | [
"Igor Bišćan",
"Simon Rožman",
"Fausto Budicin"
] |
|
Who was the head coach of the team HNK Rijeka in Jul, 2022? | July 07, 2022 | {
"text": [
"Fausto Budicin"
]
} | L2_Q318969_P286_3 | Goran Tomić is the head coach of HNK Rijeka from Mar, 2021 to May, 2022.
Fausto Budicin is the head coach of HNK Rijeka from Jul, 2022 to Dec, 2022.
Igor Bišćan is the head coach of HNK Rijeka from Oct, 2018 to Sep, 2019.
Simon Rožman is the head coach of HNK Rijeka from Sep, 2019 to Feb, 2021. | HNK RijekaHrvatski nogometni klub Rijeka (), commonly referred to as HNK Rijeka or simply Rijeka, is a Croatian professional football club from the city of Rijeka.HNK Rijeka compete in Croatia's top division, HT Prva liga, of which they have been members since its foundation in 1992. During the reconstruction of Stadion Kantrida, their traditional home ground has been Stadion Rujevica. Rijeka's traditional home colours are all white.The club was founded in 1946 as "Sportsko Društvo Kvarner" (Croatian) / "Società Sportiva Quarnero" (Italian). The club's official name was changed to "Nogometni klub Rijeka" on 2 July 1954. In the summer of 1995, the club management added the adjective "hrvatski" () to the official name. Rijeka are the third-most successful Croatian football club, having won one Croatian First League title, two Yugoslav Cups, six Croatian Cups, one Croatian Super Cup and the 1977–78 Balkans Cup.During the early period in Yugoslavia, Kvarner had moderate success in various Yugoslav and local club championships. They were relegated at the end of their inaugural season in the Yugoslav First League in 1946–47. Kvarner changed its name to NK Rijeka on 2 July 1954 and returned to the First League in 1958. Rijeka remained in the top tier for 11 consecutive seasons until 1969, when they were once again relegated to the Yugoslav Second League. Despite finishing on top in four (out of five) seasons in the second tier, due to three failed qualifying attempts, the club only gained promotion back to the top tier in 1974. With varying success, Rijeka remained in top tier until the breakup of Yugoslavia in 1991. The club's greatest success during this period involved back-to-back Yugoslav Cup titles in 1978 and 1979. Rijeka were also a Cup runner-up in 1987, when they lost the final after a penalty shoot-out. Rijeka never finished higher than the fourth place in the Yugoslav First League. In 1984, the club came closest to their first championship title, finishing only two points behind Red Star Belgrade. Rijeka were also the best placed Croatian club in the Yugoslav First League in 1965, 1984 and 1987.Following the breakup of Yugoslavia, in 1992 Rijeka joined the Croatian First Football League in its inaugural season. Rijeka remain one of only four founding member clubs to never have been relegated. In terms of greatest successes in this period, the club won its first-ever league title in 2017, ending Dinamo Zagreb's run of 11 successive titles. Rijeka has also won six Croatian Cups, including back-to-back titles in 2005 and 2006, in 2014, in 2017, which helped them secure the historic Double, and most recently in 2019 and 2020. In the final round of the 1998–99 season, a refereeing error denied Rijeka their first championship title. With one match to play, Rijeka were one point ahead of Croatia Zagreb, needing a home win against Osijek to secure the title. With the match tied at 1–1, in the 89th minute, Rijeka forward Admir Hasančić converted a cross by Barnabás Sztipánovics. However, moments later, assistant referee Krečak raised his flag and referee Šupraha disallowed Rijeka's winning goal for an alleged offside. Following an investigation, 3D analysis revealed Hasančić was not, in fact, in an offside position, and that Rijeka were wrongfully denied their first championship title. An investigation by "Nacional" revealed Franjo Tuđman, the president of the Republic of Croatia and an ardent Croatia Zagreb supporter, earlier in 1999 ordered the country's intelligence agencies to spy on football referees, officials and journalists, with the aim of ensuring the Zagreb club wins the league title.Rijeka participated in UEFA competitions on 20 occasions, including eight consecutive appearances since 2013–14. The greatest success was the quarter-final of the 1979–80 European Cup Winners' Cup, where they lost to Italian giants Juventus 2–0 on aggregate. The most memorable result in Europe was the home win (3–1) against eventual winners Real Madrid in the 1984–85 UEFA Cup. Controversially, in the return leg at Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, which Rijeka lost 3–0, three of their players were sent off. Madrid scored their first goal from a doubtful penalty in the 67th minute with Rijeka already down to ten men. Over the next ten minutes, two additional Rijeka players were sent off, most notably Damir Desnica. While Desnica received the first yellow card because he did not stop play after Schoeters blew his whistle, the second yellow was issued because he allegedly insulted the referee. However, unbeknownst to the referee, Desnica had been a deaf-mute since birth. With Rijeka reduced to eight players, Madrid scored two additional goals, progressed to the next round and eventually won the trophy.In 2013, after winning 4–3 on aggregate against VfB Stuttgart, Rijeka qualified for the 2013–14 UEFA Europa League group stage. Rijeka also participated in the 2014–15 UEFA Europa League group stage, where they defeated Feyenoord and Standard Liège and drew with title-holders and eventual winners Sevilla. In 2017, Rijeka reached the 2017–18 UEFA Champions League play-off, where they lost 3–1 on aggregate to Greek champions Olympiacos, and automatically qualified for the 2017–18 UEFA Europa League group stage. In the group stage they recorded a famous home win (2–0) against AC Milan but once again failed to progress to the knockout stages.In February 2012, Gabriele Volpi – an Italian businessman and the founder of Orlean Invest, as well as the owner of football club Spezia and water polo club Pro Recco – injected much needed capital into the club. With the privatization process complete by September 2013, Volpi, through Dutch-based Stichting Social Sport Foundation, became the owner of 70% of the club, with the City of Rijeka in control of the remaining 30%. On 29 December 2017 it was announced that chairman Damir Mišković, through London-based Teanna Limited, acquired the majority stake in the club from Stichting Social Sport Foundation.In January 2015, Rijeka sold their star striker Andrej Kramarić to Leicester City for a club-record £9.7 million transfer fee.Until July 2015, Rijeka were based at Stadion Kantrida, their traditional home ground for over 60 years. With Kantrida awaiting demolition and reconstruction, since August 2015, Rijeka have been based at the newly built Stadion Rujevica, an all-seater with the capacity of 8,279. Stadion Rujevica is part of Rijeka's new training centre and serves as the club's temporary home ground. Following the demolition of old Kantrida, a new, state-of-the art, 14,600-capacity all-seater stadium will be built at the same location. In addition to the stadium, the investors are planning to build a commercial complex that will include a shopping mall and a hotel.Rijeka's ultras group are called "Armada Rijeka", or simply Armada. The group has been active since 1987.During most home matches, the majority of the seats are occupied by season ticket holders. For the 2017–18 season the club had 5,922 season ticket holders and 8,403 members.Rijeka's greatest rivalry is with Hajduk Split. Since 1946, the Adriatic derby is contested between the two most popular Croatian football clubs from the Adriatic coast, Rijeka and Hajduk. Other rivalries exist with Dinamo Zagreb and, at the regional level, with Istra Pula. The origins of the Rijeka–Pula rivalry date back to the clashes between Fiumana and Grion Pola since the late 1920s.According to a 2005–07 survey of former players (older than 40 years of age) and respected journalists, Marinko Lazzarich found that the best all-time team of Rijeka is as follows:1. Jantoljak, 2. Milevoj, 3. Hrstić, 4. Radaković, 5. Radin, 6. Juričić, 7. Lukarić, 8. Gračan, 9. Osojnak, 10. Naumović, 11. Desnica.Rijeka's daily, "Novi list", in 2011 declared the following 11 players as Rijeka's best all time team:1. Jantoljak, 2. Šarić, 3. Radin, 4. Juričić, 5. Hrstić, 6. Loik, 7. Radaković, 8. Mladenović, 9. Naumović, 10. Skoblar, 11. Desnica.In 2020, the club's fans voted to select the best squad over the past decade to fit in a 4–2–3–1 formation:Prskalo – Ristovski, Župarić, Mitrović, Zuta – Kreilach, Moisés – Vešović, Andrijašević, Sharbini – Kramarić. Manager: Kek.Rijeka has won one Croatian First Football League title, two Yugoslav Cups and six Croatian Cups. In European competitions, the club has reached the quarter-final of the Cup Winners' Cup in 1979–80, UEFA Cup Round of 32 in 1984–85, and group stages of the UEFA Europa League in 2013–14, 2014–15, 2017–18 and 2020–21. The club has also won the 1977–78 Balkans Cup.CroatiaYugoslavia"(As of 1 March 2021), Source:"Non-UEFA competitions are listed in "italics". | [
"Simon Rožman",
"Goran Tomić",
"Igor Bišćan"
] |
|
Which employer did Dominique Kalifa work for in Jan, 1999? | January 03, 1999 | {
"text": [
"Paris Diderot University"
]
} | L2_Q3035247_P108_0 | Dominique Kalifa works for Paris Diderot University from Jan, 1995 to Jan, 2000.
Dominique Kalifa works for University of Rennes 2 – Upper Brittany from Jan, 2000 to Jan, 2002.
Dominique Kalifa works for Sciences Po from Jan, 2008 to Jan, 2015.
Dominique Kalifa works for University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne from Sep, 2002 to Sep, 2020. | Dominique KalifaDominique Kalifa (12 September 1957 – 12 September 2020) was a French historian.Kalifa was born in Vichy and attended the local École normale supérieure at Saint-Cloud. Under the supervision of Michelle Perrot he undertook postgraduate research and received his doctorate in 1994.Kalifa was professor at the University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne and director of the Centre of 19th Century History and member of the Institut universitaire de France. A student of Michelle Perrot, he specialised in the history of crime, transgression, social control, and mass culture in 19th and early 20th century France and Europe. He also taught at the Institut d'études politiques de Paris (Sciences Po) from 2008 to 2015, and was several times visiting scholar at New York University and the University of St Andrews. From 1990, he was also columnist (historical reviews) for the French newspaper "Libération". His study about the underworld and its role in the Western imagination is now translated into Portuguese (EDUSP), Spanish (Instituto Mora) and forthcoming in English (Columbia University Press). His " Véritable Histoire de la Belle Epoque", published in 2017, won the Eugène Colas Prize from the Académie française. He also worked on a project about love, Paris and the topographical imagination. He has been described as a specialist in the and social imagination.Kalifa died in Brugheas, his home town, at the age of 63; the following day, "Libération" reported the cause to be suicide.In English : “Crime Scenes: Criminal Topography and Social Imaginary in Nineteenth Century Paris”, "French Historical Studies", vol. 27, n° 1, 2004, p. 175-194 ; “Criminal Investigators at the Fin-de-siècle”, "Yale French Studies", n° 108, 2005, p. 36-47 ; “What is now cultural history about?”, in Robert Gildea and Anne Simonin (eds), "Writing Contemporary History", London, Hodder Education, 2008, p. 47-56; « The Press », in E. Berenson, V. Duclert & C. Prochasson (eds), "The French Republic. History, Values, Debates", Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 2011, p. 189-196; “Minotaur”, "Journal of Modern History", vol. 84, n° 4, 2012, p. 980-982; "Naming the Century: Chrononyms of the 19th Century", "Revue d'histoire du XIX siècle", n° 52, 2016; “An Informal History of Herbert Asbury's Underworld“, "Medias19", 2018; "Vice, Crime, and Poverty. How the Western Imagination Invented the Underworld", Columbia University Press, 2019. | [
"University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne",
"Sciences Po",
"University of Rennes 2 – Upper Brittany"
] |
|
Which employer did Dominique Kalifa work for in Apr, 2001? | April 05, 2001 | {
"text": [
"University of Rennes 2 – Upper Brittany"
]
} | L2_Q3035247_P108_1 | Dominique Kalifa works for University of Rennes 2 – Upper Brittany from Jan, 2000 to Jan, 2002.
Dominique Kalifa works for Sciences Po from Jan, 2008 to Jan, 2015.
Dominique Kalifa works for Paris Diderot University from Jan, 1995 to Jan, 2000.
Dominique Kalifa works for University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne from Sep, 2002 to Sep, 2020. | Dominique KalifaDominique Kalifa (12 September 1957 – 12 September 2020) was a French historian.Kalifa was born in Vichy and attended the local École normale supérieure at Saint-Cloud. Under the supervision of Michelle Perrot he undertook postgraduate research and received his doctorate in 1994.Kalifa was professor at the University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne and director of the Centre of 19th Century History and member of the Institut universitaire de France. A student of Michelle Perrot, he specialised in the history of crime, transgression, social control, and mass culture in 19th and early 20th century France and Europe. He also taught at the Institut d'études politiques de Paris (Sciences Po) from 2008 to 2015, and was several times visiting scholar at New York University and the University of St Andrews. From 1990, he was also columnist (historical reviews) for the French newspaper "Libération". His study about the underworld and its role in the Western imagination is now translated into Portuguese (EDUSP), Spanish (Instituto Mora) and forthcoming in English (Columbia University Press). His " Véritable Histoire de la Belle Epoque", published in 2017, won the Eugène Colas Prize from the Académie française. He also worked on a project about love, Paris and the topographical imagination. He has been described as a specialist in the and social imagination.Kalifa died in Brugheas, his home town, at the age of 63; the following day, "Libération" reported the cause to be suicide.In English : “Crime Scenes: Criminal Topography and Social Imaginary in Nineteenth Century Paris”, "French Historical Studies", vol. 27, n° 1, 2004, p. 175-194 ; “Criminal Investigators at the Fin-de-siècle”, "Yale French Studies", n° 108, 2005, p. 36-47 ; “What is now cultural history about?”, in Robert Gildea and Anne Simonin (eds), "Writing Contemporary History", London, Hodder Education, 2008, p. 47-56; « The Press », in E. Berenson, V. Duclert & C. Prochasson (eds), "The French Republic. History, Values, Debates", Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 2011, p. 189-196; “Minotaur”, "Journal of Modern History", vol. 84, n° 4, 2012, p. 980-982; "Naming the Century: Chrononyms of the 19th Century", "Revue d'histoire du XIX siècle", n° 52, 2016; “An Informal History of Herbert Asbury's Underworld“, "Medias19", 2018; "Vice, Crime, and Poverty. How the Western Imagination Invented the Underworld", Columbia University Press, 2019. | [
"Paris Diderot University",
"University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne",
"Sciences Po"
] |
|
Which employer did Dominique Kalifa work for in May, 2013? | May 06, 2013 | {
"text": [
"University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne",
"Sciences Po"
]
} | L2_Q3035247_P108_2 | Dominique Kalifa works for Paris Diderot University from Jan, 1995 to Jan, 2000.
Dominique Kalifa works for University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne from Sep, 2002 to Sep, 2020.
Dominique Kalifa works for University of Rennes 2 – Upper Brittany from Jan, 2000 to Jan, 2002.
Dominique Kalifa works for Sciences Po from Jan, 2008 to Jan, 2015. | Dominique KalifaDominique Kalifa (12 September 1957 – 12 September 2020) was a French historian.Kalifa was born in Vichy and attended the local École normale supérieure at Saint-Cloud. Under the supervision of Michelle Perrot he undertook postgraduate research and received his doctorate in 1994.Kalifa was professor at the University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne and director of the Centre of 19th Century History and member of the Institut universitaire de France. A student of Michelle Perrot, he specialised in the history of crime, transgression, social control, and mass culture in 19th and early 20th century France and Europe. He also taught at the Institut d'études politiques de Paris (Sciences Po) from 2008 to 2015, and was several times visiting scholar at New York University and the University of St Andrews. From 1990, he was also columnist (historical reviews) for the French newspaper "Libération". His study about the underworld and its role in the Western imagination is now translated into Portuguese (EDUSP), Spanish (Instituto Mora) and forthcoming in English (Columbia University Press). His " Véritable Histoire de la Belle Epoque", published in 2017, won the Eugène Colas Prize from the Académie française. He also worked on a project about love, Paris and the topographical imagination. He has been described as a specialist in the and social imagination.Kalifa died in Brugheas, his home town, at the age of 63; the following day, "Libération" reported the cause to be suicide.In English : “Crime Scenes: Criminal Topography and Social Imaginary in Nineteenth Century Paris”, "French Historical Studies", vol. 27, n° 1, 2004, p. 175-194 ; “Criminal Investigators at the Fin-de-siècle”, "Yale French Studies", n° 108, 2005, p. 36-47 ; “What is now cultural history about?”, in Robert Gildea and Anne Simonin (eds), "Writing Contemporary History", London, Hodder Education, 2008, p. 47-56; « The Press », in E. Berenson, V. Duclert & C. Prochasson (eds), "The French Republic. History, Values, Debates", Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 2011, p. 189-196; “Minotaur”, "Journal of Modern History", vol. 84, n° 4, 2012, p. 980-982; "Naming the Century: Chrononyms of the 19th Century", "Revue d'histoire du XIX siècle", n° 52, 2016; “An Informal History of Herbert Asbury's Underworld“, "Medias19", 2018; "Vice, Crime, and Poverty. How the Western Imagination Invented the Underworld", Columbia University Press, 2019. | [
"Paris Diderot University",
"University of Rennes 2 – Upper Brittany"
] |
|
Which employer did Dominique Kalifa work for in Dec, 2009? | December 28, 2009 | {
"text": [
"University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne",
"Sciences Po"
]
} | L2_Q3035247_P108_3 | Dominique Kalifa works for Sciences Po from Jan, 2008 to Jan, 2015.
Dominique Kalifa works for University of Rennes 2 – Upper Brittany from Jan, 2000 to Jan, 2002.
Dominique Kalifa works for University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne from Sep, 2002 to Sep, 2020.
Dominique Kalifa works for Paris Diderot University from Jan, 1995 to Jan, 2000. | Dominique KalifaDominique Kalifa (12 September 1957 – 12 September 2020) was a French historian.Kalifa was born in Vichy and attended the local École normale supérieure at Saint-Cloud. Under the supervision of Michelle Perrot he undertook postgraduate research and received his doctorate in 1994.Kalifa was professor at the University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne and director of the Centre of 19th Century History and member of the Institut universitaire de France. A student of Michelle Perrot, he specialised in the history of crime, transgression, social control, and mass culture in 19th and early 20th century France and Europe. He also taught at the Institut d'études politiques de Paris (Sciences Po) from 2008 to 2015, and was several times visiting scholar at New York University and the University of St Andrews. From 1990, he was also columnist (historical reviews) for the French newspaper "Libération". His study about the underworld and its role in the Western imagination is now translated into Portuguese (EDUSP), Spanish (Instituto Mora) and forthcoming in English (Columbia University Press). His " Véritable Histoire de la Belle Epoque", published in 2017, won the Eugène Colas Prize from the Académie française. He also worked on a project about love, Paris and the topographical imagination. He has been described as a specialist in the and social imagination.Kalifa died in Brugheas, his home town, at the age of 63; the following day, "Libération" reported the cause to be suicide.In English : “Crime Scenes: Criminal Topography and Social Imaginary in Nineteenth Century Paris”, "French Historical Studies", vol. 27, n° 1, 2004, p. 175-194 ; “Criminal Investigators at the Fin-de-siècle”, "Yale French Studies", n° 108, 2005, p. 36-47 ; “What is now cultural history about?”, in Robert Gildea and Anne Simonin (eds), "Writing Contemporary History", London, Hodder Education, 2008, p. 47-56; « The Press », in E. Berenson, V. Duclert & C. Prochasson (eds), "The French Republic. History, Values, Debates", Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 2011, p. 189-196; “Minotaur”, "Journal of Modern History", vol. 84, n° 4, 2012, p. 980-982; "Naming the Century: Chrononyms of the 19th Century", "Revue d'histoire du XIX siècle", n° 52, 2016; “An Informal History of Herbert Asbury's Underworld“, "Medias19", 2018; "Vice, Crime, and Poverty. How the Western Imagination Invented the Underworld", Columbia University Press, 2019. | [
"Paris Diderot University",
"University of Rennes 2 – Upper Brittany"
] |
|
Which employer did François Pachet work for in Apr, 1994? | April 11, 1994 | {
"text": [
"Pierre and Marie Curie University"
]
} | L2_Q18209599_P108_0 | François Pachet works for Sony Computer Science Laboratories Paris from Jan, 1997 to Jan, 2017.
François Pachet works for Spotify from Jan, 2017 to Dec, 2022.
François Pachet works for Pierre and Marie Curie University from Jan, 1993 to Jan, 1997. | François PachetFrançois Pachet (born 10 January 1964) is a French scientist, composer and director of the Spotify Creator Technology Research Lab. Before joining Spotify he led Sony Computer Science Laboratory in Paris. He is one of the pioneers of computer music closely linked to artificial intelligence, especially in the field of machine improvisation and style modelling. He has been elected ECCAI Fellow in 2014.Pachet graduated from École des ponts ParisTech in Civil Engineering, and Computer Science in 1987, majoring Applied Mathematics. He spent 18 months as lecturer at Kuala Lumpur at the University of Malaya in 1987–1988. He obtained a PhD from Pierre and Marie Curie University in Computer Science, (His thesis was "Knowledge representation with objects and rules: the NéOpus system", supervised by Jean-François Perrot). He spent 1 year as post-doc in Montréal at Université du Québec à Montréal, where he worked on the Cyc project Common sense representation, Douglas Lenat, MCC), with the help of Hafedh Mili professor at UQAM. In 1997, he got his habilitation diploma on the subject: "Object-oriented languages and knowledge representation" at University Pierre et Marie Curie. He was auditeur at the 58th national session of Institut des Hautes Etudes en Défense Nationale, in 2006, and was appointed Colonel in 2007 in the "réserve citoyenne" (French Air Force).In 1993, he was appointed Assistant Professor (in French, "Maitre de conférences"), at Pierre and Marie Curie University until 1997 in Computer Science, Research and Teaching.In 1997, Pachet moved to Sony-CSL (Computer Science Laboratory) Paris. He started a research activity on music and artificial intelligence. His team has authored and pioneered many technologies (about 35 patents) about electronic music distribution, audio feature extraction and music interaction. He was appointed director of Sony Computer Science Laboratories in 2014. The CSL (the branch of Sony-CSL Tokyo) is dedicated to basic research in computer science; it was created by Luc Steels and Mario Tokoro in 1996.Since 2017, he is director of Spotify's Creator Research Technology Lab in Paris, where he develops tools for assisting music creation.The Music team at Sony Computer Science Laboratory Paris was founded in 1997 by Pachet, where he developed the vision that metadata can greatly enhance the musical experience, from listening to performance.The Flow Composer is his second achievement, a system to compose lead sheets in the style of arbitrary composers. It was followed by LSDB, the first collecting lead sheets in electronic format with a large-scale effort (Over 11,000 lead sheets collected); and Virtuoso, a solo jazz detector. The "Popular Music Browser" project, which started in 1998, at Sony Computer Science Laboratories This research project covers all areas of the music‐to‐listener chain, from music description, descriptor extraction from the music signal, or data mining techniques, Similarity‐based access, and novel music retrieval methods such as automatic sequence generation, and to user interface issues.Moreover, he has designed the Continuator, a system allowing real-time musical improvisation with an algorithm. He is now the beneficiary of the ERC Grant Flow Machines for investigating how machines can boost creativity in humans and be able to continue a work in the same musical style. Pachet wants a future in which consumers could buy the unique style of an artist and apply it to their own material; he says, "I call it 'Stylistic Cryogenics' -- to freeze the style into an object that can be reused and made alive again".The MusicSpace is a spatialization control system created with O. Delerue in 2000.Another achievement is CUIDADO (Content-based Unified Interfaces and Descriptors for Audio/music Databases available Online), a two-year project ended in 2003, on developing content-based, audio modules and applications; the project includes the analysis, the navigation and creative process. This project is satisfying the needs of record labels and copyright societies for Information management methods, for marketing and for protecting their informations, using an Authoring system using content features for professional musicians and studios. Moreover, in 2014, Pachet presented two music tutorials on Brazilian guitar and Jazz. His most notable achievement is the Continuator, an interactive music improvisation system. Experimented with manyprofessional musicians, presented notably at the SIGGRAPH’03 conference andconsidered a reference in the domain of music interaction, an example of a Musical Turing test with the Continuator on VPRO Channel with Jazz Pianist jazz Albert van Veenendaal (Amsterdam).ARTE presents Pachet on Square Idée "Demain, devenir Wagner ou Daft Punk?", (Tomorrow, become Wagner or Daft Punk?) October 2015. Pachet writes about using CP techniques to model style in music and text for ACP (Association for Constraints Programming), in September 2015.In 2017 he produced and released a multi-artist album, Hello World, composed with Artificial Intelligence.Pachet has written several non-scientific books about music: | [
"Spotify",
"Sony Computer Science Laboratories Paris"
] |
|
Which employer did François Pachet work for in Aug, 2002? | August 17, 2002 | {
"text": [
"Sony Computer Science Laboratories Paris"
]
} | L2_Q18209599_P108_1 | François Pachet works for Spotify from Jan, 2017 to Dec, 2022.
François Pachet works for Sony Computer Science Laboratories Paris from Jan, 1997 to Jan, 2017.
François Pachet works for Pierre and Marie Curie University from Jan, 1993 to Jan, 1997. | François PachetFrançois Pachet (born 10 January 1964) is a French scientist, composer and director of the Spotify Creator Technology Research Lab. Before joining Spotify he led Sony Computer Science Laboratory in Paris. He is one of the pioneers of computer music closely linked to artificial intelligence, especially in the field of machine improvisation and style modelling. He has been elected ECCAI Fellow in 2014.Pachet graduated from École des ponts ParisTech in Civil Engineering, and Computer Science in 1987, majoring Applied Mathematics. He spent 18 months as lecturer at Kuala Lumpur at the University of Malaya in 1987–1988. He obtained a PhD from Pierre and Marie Curie University in Computer Science, (His thesis was "Knowledge representation with objects and rules: the NéOpus system", supervised by Jean-François Perrot). He spent 1 year as post-doc in Montréal at Université du Québec à Montréal, where he worked on the Cyc project Common sense representation, Douglas Lenat, MCC), with the help of Hafedh Mili professor at UQAM. In 1997, he got his habilitation diploma on the subject: "Object-oriented languages and knowledge representation" at University Pierre et Marie Curie. He was auditeur at the 58th national session of Institut des Hautes Etudes en Défense Nationale, in 2006, and was appointed Colonel in 2007 in the "réserve citoyenne" (French Air Force).In 1993, he was appointed Assistant Professor (in French, "Maitre de conférences"), at Pierre and Marie Curie University until 1997 in Computer Science, Research and Teaching.In 1997, Pachet moved to Sony-CSL (Computer Science Laboratory) Paris. He started a research activity on music and artificial intelligence. His team has authored and pioneered many technologies (about 35 patents) about electronic music distribution, audio feature extraction and music interaction. He was appointed director of Sony Computer Science Laboratories in 2014. The CSL (the branch of Sony-CSL Tokyo) is dedicated to basic research in computer science; it was created by Luc Steels and Mario Tokoro in 1996.Since 2017, he is director of Spotify's Creator Research Technology Lab in Paris, where he develops tools for assisting music creation.The Music team at Sony Computer Science Laboratory Paris was founded in 1997 by Pachet, where he developed the vision that metadata can greatly enhance the musical experience, from listening to performance.The Flow Composer is his second achievement, a system to compose lead sheets in the style of arbitrary composers. It was followed by LSDB, the first collecting lead sheets in electronic format with a large-scale effort (Over 11,000 lead sheets collected); and Virtuoso, a solo jazz detector. The "Popular Music Browser" project, which started in 1998, at Sony Computer Science Laboratories This research project covers all areas of the music‐to‐listener chain, from music description, descriptor extraction from the music signal, or data mining techniques, Similarity‐based access, and novel music retrieval methods such as automatic sequence generation, and to user interface issues.Moreover, he has designed the Continuator, a system allowing real-time musical improvisation with an algorithm. He is now the beneficiary of the ERC Grant Flow Machines for investigating how machines can boost creativity in humans and be able to continue a work in the same musical style. Pachet wants a future in which consumers could buy the unique style of an artist and apply it to their own material; he says, "I call it 'Stylistic Cryogenics' -- to freeze the style into an object that can be reused and made alive again".The MusicSpace is a spatialization control system created with O. Delerue in 2000.Another achievement is CUIDADO (Content-based Unified Interfaces and Descriptors for Audio/music Databases available Online), a two-year project ended in 2003, on developing content-based, audio modules and applications; the project includes the analysis, the navigation and creative process. This project is satisfying the needs of record labels and copyright societies for Information management methods, for marketing and for protecting their informations, using an Authoring system using content features for professional musicians and studios. Moreover, in 2014, Pachet presented two music tutorials on Brazilian guitar and Jazz. His most notable achievement is the Continuator, an interactive music improvisation system. Experimented with manyprofessional musicians, presented notably at the SIGGRAPH’03 conference andconsidered a reference in the domain of music interaction, an example of a Musical Turing test with the Continuator on VPRO Channel with Jazz Pianist jazz Albert van Veenendaal (Amsterdam).ARTE presents Pachet on Square Idée "Demain, devenir Wagner ou Daft Punk?", (Tomorrow, become Wagner or Daft Punk?) October 2015. Pachet writes about using CP techniques to model style in music and text for ACP (Association for Constraints Programming), in September 2015.In 2017 he produced and released a multi-artist album, Hello World, composed with Artificial Intelligence.Pachet has written several non-scientific books about music: | [
"Pierre and Marie Curie University",
"Spotify"
] |
|
Which employer did François Pachet work for in Sep, 2019? | September 25, 2019 | {
"text": [
"Spotify"
]
} | L2_Q18209599_P108_2 | François Pachet works for Pierre and Marie Curie University from Jan, 1993 to Jan, 1997.
François Pachet works for Sony Computer Science Laboratories Paris from Jan, 1997 to Jan, 2017.
François Pachet works for Spotify from Jan, 2017 to Dec, 2022. | François PachetFrançois Pachet (born 10 January 1964) is a French scientist, composer and director of the Spotify Creator Technology Research Lab. Before joining Spotify he led Sony Computer Science Laboratory in Paris. He is one of the pioneers of computer music closely linked to artificial intelligence, especially in the field of machine improvisation and style modelling. He has been elected ECCAI Fellow in 2014.Pachet graduated from École des ponts ParisTech in Civil Engineering, and Computer Science in 1987, majoring Applied Mathematics. He spent 18 months as lecturer at Kuala Lumpur at the University of Malaya in 1987–1988. He obtained a PhD from Pierre and Marie Curie University in Computer Science, (His thesis was "Knowledge representation with objects and rules: the NéOpus system", supervised by Jean-François Perrot). He spent 1 year as post-doc in Montréal at Université du Québec à Montréal, where he worked on the Cyc project Common sense representation, Douglas Lenat, MCC), with the help of Hafedh Mili professor at UQAM. In 1997, he got his habilitation diploma on the subject: "Object-oriented languages and knowledge representation" at University Pierre et Marie Curie. He was auditeur at the 58th national session of Institut des Hautes Etudes en Défense Nationale, in 2006, and was appointed Colonel in 2007 in the "réserve citoyenne" (French Air Force).In 1993, he was appointed Assistant Professor (in French, "Maitre de conférences"), at Pierre and Marie Curie University until 1997 in Computer Science, Research and Teaching.In 1997, Pachet moved to Sony-CSL (Computer Science Laboratory) Paris. He started a research activity on music and artificial intelligence. His team has authored and pioneered many technologies (about 35 patents) about electronic music distribution, audio feature extraction and music interaction. He was appointed director of Sony Computer Science Laboratories in 2014. The CSL (the branch of Sony-CSL Tokyo) is dedicated to basic research in computer science; it was created by Luc Steels and Mario Tokoro in 1996.Since 2017, he is director of Spotify's Creator Research Technology Lab in Paris, where he develops tools for assisting music creation.The Music team at Sony Computer Science Laboratory Paris was founded in 1997 by Pachet, where he developed the vision that metadata can greatly enhance the musical experience, from listening to performance.The Flow Composer is his second achievement, a system to compose lead sheets in the style of arbitrary composers. It was followed by LSDB, the first collecting lead sheets in electronic format with a large-scale effort (Over 11,000 lead sheets collected); and Virtuoso, a solo jazz detector. The "Popular Music Browser" project, which started in 1998, at Sony Computer Science Laboratories This research project covers all areas of the music‐to‐listener chain, from music description, descriptor extraction from the music signal, or data mining techniques, Similarity‐based access, and novel music retrieval methods such as automatic sequence generation, and to user interface issues.Moreover, he has designed the Continuator, a system allowing real-time musical improvisation with an algorithm. He is now the beneficiary of the ERC Grant Flow Machines for investigating how machines can boost creativity in humans and be able to continue a work in the same musical style. Pachet wants a future in which consumers could buy the unique style of an artist and apply it to their own material; he says, "I call it 'Stylistic Cryogenics' -- to freeze the style into an object that can be reused and made alive again".The MusicSpace is a spatialization control system created with O. Delerue in 2000.Another achievement is CUIDADO (Content-based Unified Interfaces and Descriptors for Audio/music Databases available Online), a two-year project ended in 2003, on developing content-based, audio modules and applications; the project includes the analysis, the navigation and creative process. This project is satisfying the needs of record labels and copyright societies for Information management methods, for marketing and for protecting their informations, using an Authoring system using content features for professional musicians and studios. Moreover, in 2014, Pachet presented two music tutorials on Brazilian guitar and Jazz. His most notable achievement is the Continuator, an interactive music improvisation system. Experimented with manyprofessional musicians, presented notably at the SIGGRAPH’03 conference andconsidered a reference in the domain of music interaction, an example of a Musical Turing test with the Continuator on VPRO Channel with Jazz Pianist jazz Albert van Veenendaal (Amsterdam).ARTE presents Pachet on Square Idée "Demain, devenir Wagner ou Daft Punk?", (Tomorrow, become Wagner or Daft Punk?) October 2015. Pachet writes about using CP techniques to model style in music and text for ACP (Association for Constraints Programming), in September 2015.In 2017 he produced and released a multi-artist album, Hello World, composed with Artificial Intelligence.Pachet has written several non-scientific books about music: | [
"Pierre and Marie Curie University",
"Sony Computer Science Laboratories Paris"
] |
|
Which employer did Alois Musil work for in Aug, 1904? | August 18, 1904 | {
"text": [
"Saints Cyril and Methodius Faculty of Theology of Palacký University, Olomouc"
]
} | L2_Q695730_P108_0 | Alois Musil works for Charles University from Jan, 1920 to Jan, 1938.
Alois Musil works for University of Vienna from Jan, 1909 to Jan, 1918.
Alois Musil works for Saints Cyril and Methodius Faculty of Theology of Palacký University, Olomouc from Jan, 1904 to Jan, 1908.
Alois Musil works for Oriental Institute, ASCR from Jan, 1927 to Jan, 1927. | Alois MusilAlois Musil (30 June 1868 – 12 April 1944) was a Moravian theologian, orientalist, explorer and bilingual Czech and German writer.Musil was the oldest son born in 1868 into an poor farming family in Moravia (then Cisleithanian part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, today Czech Republic). His birthplace of was in an area surrounded by German-speakers, allowing him and his brothers to learn to read and write both German and Czech. He was a second cousin of Robert Musil, an Austrian writer. In the years 1887–1891 he studied Roman Catholic theology at the University of Olomouc, was consecrated as a priest in 1891 and received a doctorate in theology in 1895. In the years 1895–1898 he studied at the Dominican Biblical School in Jerusalem, in 1897-1898 at the Jesuit University of St. Joseph in Beirut, 1899 in London, Cambridge and Berlin.He travelled extensively throughout the Arab world and kept coming back to it until 1917, collecting a huge body of scientific material. Among his discoveries was the 8th-century desert castle of Qusayr 'Amra, now famous for its figurative Islamic paintings. In the process of trying to steal the now-famed Umayyad fresco "Painting of the Six Kings" from Qusayr 'Amra, he permanently damaged the painting. He later developed a serious lung disease.Between his trips Musil continued working on his publications and lecturing. In 1902 he became professor of theology at the University of Olomouc, and in 1909, professor of Biblical studies and Arabic at Vienna University. In addition to modern and classical languages, he mastered 35 dialects of Arabic. He was so well acquainted with the Rwala Bedouins, that he was accepted into the tribe as "Sheikh Musa".During World War I he was sent to the Middle East to eliminate British attempts to instigate a revolution against the Ottoman Empire, thus being an opponent of T. E. Lawrence. In 1917 he journeyed through the Middle East with Archduke Hubert Salvator of Austria; there are suggestions that the mission had a political motive involving Arab Revolt against the Ottoman government.After the war he became a professor at Charles University in Prague (1920), despite opposing voices resenting his close ties with the House of Habsburg. He helped to establish the Oriental Institute of the Academy of Sciences in Prague.In cooperation with the American industrialist Charles Richard Crane he published his works in English (1922–23). In addition to scientific work and popular travel books he published 21 novels for young readers.Musil worked for Charles University until 1938, but was active until the very end of his life. He died in Otryby due to kidney dysfunction complicated by lung disease.Although Musil is best known for his discovery of Qusayr 'Amra, his output was prolific. He wrote more than 50 books (including six illustrated works published by the American Geographical Society and 20 children's books); some 1200 scholarly articles; transcriptions and translations of Bedouin tribal poems and songs; produced thousands of photographs of archaeological sites and Bedouin people and prepared topographic maps and surveys of territories. | [
"University of Vienna",
"Charles University",
"Oriental Institute, ASCR"
] |
|
Which employer did Alois Musil work for in Sep, 1914? | September 25, 1914 | {
"text": [
"University of Vienna"
]
} | L2_Q695730_P108_1 | Alois Musil works for Oriental Institute, ASCR from Jan, 1927 to Jan, 1927.
Alois Musil works for University of Vienna from Jan, 1909 to Jan, 1918.
Alois Musil works for Charles University from Jan, 1920 to Jan, 1938.
Alois Musil works for Saints Cyril and Methodius Faculty of Theology of Palacký University, Olomouc from Jan, 1904 to Jan, 1908. | Alois MusilAlois Musil (30 June 1868 – 12 April 1944) was a Moravian theologian, orientalist, explorer and bilingual Czech and German writer.Musil was the oldest son born in 1868 into an poor farming family in Moravia (then Cisleithanian part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, today Czech Republic). His birthplace of was in an area surrounded by German-speakers, allowing him and his brothers to learn to read and write both German and Czech. He was a second cousin of Robert Musil, an Austrian writer. In the years 1887–1891 he studied Roman Catholic theology at the University of Olomouc, was consecrated as a priest in 1891 and received a doctorate in theology in 1895. In the years 1895–1898 he studied at the Dominican Biblical School in Jerusalem, in 1897-1898 at the Jesuit University of St. Joseph in Beirut, 1899 in London, Cambridge and Berlin.He travelled extensively throughout the Arab world and kept coming back to it until 1917, collecting a huge body of scientific material. Among his discoveries was the 8th-century desert castle of Qusayr 'Amra, now famous for its figurative Islamic paintings. In the process of trying to steal the now-famed Umayyad fresco "Painting of the Six Kings" from Qusayr 'Amra, he permanently damaged the painting. He later developed a serious lung disease.Between his trips Musil continued working on his publications and lecturing. In 1902 he became professor of theology at the University of Olomouc, and in 1909, professor of Biblical studies and Arabic at Vienna University. In addition to modern and classical languages, he mastered 35 dialects of Arabic. He was so well acquainted with the Rwala Bedouins, that he was accepted into the tribe as "Sheikh Musa".During World War I he was sent to the Middle East to eliminate British attempts to instigate a revolution against the Ottoman Empire, thus being an opponent of T. E. Lawrence. In 1917 he journeyed through the Middle East with Archduke Hubert Salvator of Austria; there are suggestions that the mission had a political motive involving Arab Revolt against the Ottoman government.After the war he became a professor at Charles University in Prague (1920), despite opposing voices resenting his close ties with the House of Habsburg. He helped to establish the Oriental Institute of the Academy of Sciences in Prague.In cooperation with the American industrialist Charles Richard Crane he published his works in English (1922–23). In addition to scientific work and popular travel books he published 21 novels for young readers.Musil worked for Charles University until 1938, but was active until the very end of his life. He died in Otryby due to kidney dysfunction complicated by lung disease.Although Musil is best known for his discovery of Qusayr 'Amra, his output was prolific. He wrote more than 50 books (including six illustrated works published by the American Geographical Society and 20 children's books); some 1200 scholarly articles; transcriptions and translations of Bedouin tribal poems and songs; produced thousands of photographs of archaeological sites and Bedouin people and prepared topographic maps and surveys of territories. | [
"Charles University",
"Oriental Institute, ASCR",
"Saints Cyril and Methodius Faculty of Theology of Palacký University, Olomouc"
] |
|
Which employer did Alois Musil work for in Oct, 1922? | October 10, 1922 | {
"text": [
"Charles University"
]
} | L2_Q695730_P108_2 | Alois Musil works for University of Vienna from Jan, 1909 to Jan, 1918.
Alois Musil works for Charles University from Jan, 1920 to Jan, 1938.
Alois Musil works for Saints Cyril and Methodius Faculty of Theology of Palacký University, Olomouc from Jan, 1904 to Jan, 1908.
Alois Musil works for Oriental Institute, ASCR from Jan, 1927 to Jan, 1927. | Alois MusilAlois Musil (30 June 1868 – 12 April 1944) was a Moravian theologian, orientalist, explorer and bilingual Czech and German writer.Musil was the oldest son born in 1868 into an poor farming family in Moravia (then Cisleithanian part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, today Czech Republic). His birthplace of was in an area surrounded by German-speakers, allowing him and his brothers to learn to read and write both German and Czech. He was a second cousin of Robert Musil, an Austrian writer. In the years 1887–1891 he studied Roman Catholic theology at the University of Olomouc, was consecrated as a priest in 1891 and received a doctorate in theology in 1895. In the years 1895–1898 he studied at the Dominican Biblical School in Jerusalem, in 1897-1898 at the Jesuit University of St. Joseph in Beirut, 1899 in London, Cambridge and Berlin.He travelled extensively throughout the Arab world and kept coming back to it until 1917, collecting a huge body of scientific material. Among his discoveries was the 8th-century desert castle of Qusayr 'Amra, now famous for its figurative Islamic paintings. In the process of trying to steal the now-famed Umayyad fresco "Painting of the Six Kings" from Qusayr 'Amra, he permanently damaged the painting. He later developed a serious lung disease.Between his trips Musil continued working on his publications and lecturing. In 1902 he became professor of theology at the University of Olomouc, and in 1909, professor of Biblical studies and Arabic at Vienna University. In addition to modern and classical languages, he mastered 35 dialects of Arabic. He was so well acquainted with the Rwala Bedouins, that he was accepted into the tribe as "Sheikh Musa".During World War I he was sent to the Middle East to eliminate British attempts to instigate a revolution against the Ottoman Empire, thus being an opponent of T. E. Lawrence. In 1917 he journeyed through the Middle East with Archduke Hubert Salvator of Austria; there are suggestions that the mission had a political motive involving Arab Revolt against the Ottoman government.After the war he became a professor at Charles University in Prague (1920), despite opposing voices resenting his close ties with the House of Habsburg. He helped to establish the Oriental Institute of the Academy of Sciences in Prague.In cooperation with the American industrialist Charles Richard Crane he published his works in English (1922–23). In addition to scientific work and popular travel books he published 21 novels for young readers.Musil worked for Charles University until 1938, but was active until the very end of his life. He died in Otryby due to kidney dysfunction complicated by lung disease.Although Musil is best known for his discovery of Qusayr 'Amra, his output was prolific. He wrote more than 50 books (including six illustrated works published by the American Geographical Society and 20 children's books); some 1200 scholarly articles; transcriptions and translations of Bedouin tribal poems and songs; produced thousands of photographs of archaeological sites and Bedouin people and prepared topographic maps and surveys of territories. | [
"University of Vienna",
"Oriental Institute, ASCR",
"Saints Cyril and Methodius Faculty of Theology of Palacký University, Olomouc"
] |
|
Which employer did Alois Musil work for in Jan, 1927? | January 01, 1927 | {
"text": [
"Charles University",
"Oriental Institute, ASCR"
]
} | L2_Q695730_P108_3 | Alois Musil works for Saints Cyril and Methodius Faculty of Theology of Palacký University, Olomouc from Jan, 1904 to Jan, 1908.
Alois Musil works for Oriental Institute, ASCR from Jan, 1927 to Jan, 1927.
Alois Musil works for University of Vienna from Jan, 1909 to Jan, 1918.
Alois Musil works for Charles University from Jan, 1920 to Jan, 1938. | Alois MusilAlois Musil (30 June 1868 – 12 April 1944) was a Moravian theologian, orientalist, explorer and bilingual Czech and German writer.Musil was the oldest son born in 1868 into an poor farming family in Moravia (then Cisleithanian part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, today Czech Republic). His birthplace of was in an area surrounded by German-speakers, allowing him and his brothers to learn to read and write both German and Czech. He was a second cousin of Robert Musil, an Austrian writer. In the years 1887–1891 he studied Roman Catholic theology at the University of Olomouc, was consecrated as a priest in 1891 and received a doctorate in theology in 1895. In the years 1895–1898 he studied at the Dominican Biblical School in Jerusalem, in 1897-1898 at the Jesuit University of St. Joseph in Beirut, 1899 in London, Cambridge and Berlin.He travelled extensively throughout the Arab world and kept coming back to it until 1917, collecting a huge body of scientific material. Among his discoveries was the 8th-century desert castle of Qusayr 'Amra, now famous for its figurative Islamic paintings. In the process of trying to steal the now-famed Umayyad fresco "Painting of the Six Kings" from Qusayr 'Amra, he permanently damaged the painting. He later developed a serious lung disease.Between his trips Musil continued working on his publications and lecturing. In 1902 he became professor of theology at the University of Olomouc, and in 1909, professor of Biblical studies and Arabic at Vienna University. In addition to modern and classical languages, he mastered 35 dialects of Arabic. He was so well acquainted with the Rwala Bedouins, that he was accepted into the tribe as "Sheikh Musa".During World War I he was sent to the Middle East to eliminate British attempts to instigate a revolution against the Ottoman Empire, thus being an opponent of T. E. Lawrence. In 1917 he journeyed through the Middle East with Archduke Hubert Salvator of Austria; there are suggestions that the mission had a political motive involving Arab Revolt against the Ottoman government.After the war he became a professor at Charles University in Prague (1920), despite opposing voices resenting his close ties with the House of Habsburg. He helped to establish the Oriental Institute of the Academy of Sciences in Prague.In cooperation with the American industrialist Charles Richard Crane he published his works in English (1922–23). In addition to scientific work and popular travel books he published 21 novels for young readers.Musil worked for Charles University until 1938, but was active until the very end of his life. He died in Otryby due to kidney dysfunction complicated by lung disease.Although Musil is best known for his discovery of Qusayr 'Amra, his output was prolific. He wrote more than 50 books (including six illustrated works published by the American Geographical Society and 20 children's books); some 1200 scholarly articles; transcriptions and translations of Bedouin tribal poems and songs; produced thousands of photographs of archaeological sites and Bedouin people and prepared topographic maps and surveys of territories. | [
"University of Vienna",
"Saints Cyril and Methodius Faculty of Theology of Palacký University, Olomouc"
] |
|
Which employer did Eliakim Hastings Moore work for in Jul, 1887? | July 13, 1887 | {
"text": [
"Yale University"
]
} | L2_Q736064_P108_0 | Eliakim Hastings Moore works for Northwestern University from Jan, 1889 to Jan, 1892.
Eliakim Hastings Moore works for University of Chicago from Jan, 1892 to Jan, 1931.
Eliakim Hastings Moore works for Yale University from Jan, 1887 to Jan, 1889. | E. H. MooreEliakim Hastings Moore (; January 26, 1862 – December 30, 1932), usually cited as E. H. Moore or E. Hastings Moore, was an American mathematician.Moore, the son of a Methodist minister and grandson of US Congressman Eliakim H. Moore, discovered mathematics through a summer job at the Cincinnati Observatory while in high school. He subsequently studied mathematics at Yale University, where he was a member of Skull and Bones and obtained a B.A. in 1883 and the Ph.D. in 1885 with a thesis supervised by Hubert Anson Newton, on some work of William Kingdon Clifford and Arthur Cayley. Newton encouraged Moore to study in Germany, and thus he spent an academic year at the University of Berlin, attending lectures by Leopold Kronecker and Karl Weierstrass.On his return to the United States, Moore taught at Yale and at Northwestern University. When the University of Chicago opened its doors in 1892, Moore was the first head of its mathematics department, a position he retained until his death in 1932. His first two colleagues were Oskar Bolza and Heinrich Maschke. The resulting department was the second research-oriented mathematics department in American history, after Johns Hopkins University. Moore first worked in abstract algebra, proving in 1893 the classification of the structure of finite fields (also called Galois fields). Around 1900, he began working on the foundations of geometry. He reformulated Hilbert's axioms for geometry so that points were the only primitive notion, thus turning David Hilbert's primitive lines and planes into defined notions. In 1902, he further showed that one of Hilbert's axioms for geometry was redundant. His work on axiom systems is considered one of the starting points for metamathematics and model theory. After 1906, he turned to the foundations of analysis. The concept of a closure operator first appeared in his 1910 "Introduction to a form of general analysis". He also wrote on algebraic geometry, number theory, and integral equations.At Chicago, Moore supervised 31 doctoral dissertations, including those of George Birkhoff, Leonard Dickson, Robert Lee Moore (no relation), and Oswald Veblen. Birkhoff and Veblen went on to lead departments at Harvard and Princeton, respectively. Dickson became the first great American algebraist and number theorist. Robert Moore founded American topology. According to the Mathematics Genealogy Project, as of December 2012, E. H. Moore had over 18,900 known "descendants."Moore convinced the New York Mathematical Society to change its name to the American Mathematical Society, whose Chicago branch he led. He presided over the AMS, 1901–02, and edited the "Transactions of the American Mathematical Society", 1899–1907. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the American Philosophical Society. He was an Invited Speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1908 in Rome and in 1912 in Cambridge, England.The American Mathematical Society established a prize in his honor in 2002. | [
"University of Chicago",
"Northwestern University"
] |
|
Which employer did Eliakim Hastings Moore work for in Jul, 1891? | July 08, 1891 | {
"text": [
"Northwestern University"
]
} | L2_Q736064_P108_1 | Eliakim Hastings Moore works for Northwestern University from Jan, 1889 to Jan, 1892.
Eliakim Hastings Moore works for University of Chicago from Jan, 1892 to Jan, 1931.
Eliakim Hastings Moore works for Yale University from Jan, 1887 to Jan, 1889. | E. H. MooreEliakim Hastings Moore (; January 26, 1862 – December 30, 1932), usually cited as E. H. Moore or E. Hastings Moore, was an American mathematician.Moore, the son of a Methodist minister and grandson of US Congressman Eliakim H. Moore, discovered mathematics through a summer job at the Cincinnati Observatory while in high school. He subsequently studied mathematics at Yale University, where he was a member of Skull and Bones and obtained a B.A. in 1883 and the Ph.D. in 1885 with a thesis supervised by Hubert Anson Newton, on some work of William Kingdon Clifford and Arthur Cayley. Newton encouraged Moore to study in Germany, and thus he spent an academic year at the University of Berlin, attending lectures by Leopold Kronecker and Karl Weierstrass.On his return to the United States, Moore taught at Yale and at Northwestern University. When the University of Chicago opened its doors in 1892, Moore was the first head of its mathematics department, a position he retained until his death in 1932. His first two colleagues were Oskar Bolza and Heinrich Maschke. The resulting department was the second research-oriented mathematics department in American history, after Johns Hopkins University. Moore first worked in abstract algebra, proving in 1893 the classification of the structure of finite fields (also called Galois fields). Around 1900, he began working on the foundations of geometry. He reformulated Hilbert's axioms for geometry so that points were the only primitive notion, thus turning David Hilbert's primitive lines and planes into defined notions. In 1902, he further showed that one of Hilbert's axioms for geometry was redundant. His work on axiom systems is considered one of the starting points for metamathematics and model theory. After 1906, he turned to the foundations of analysis. The concept of a closure operator first appeared in his 1910 "Introduction to a form of general analysis". He also wrote on algebraic geometry, number theory, and integral equations.At Chicago, Moore supervised 31 doctoral dissertations, including those of George Birkhoff, Leonard Dickson, Robert Lee Moore (no relation), and Oswald Veblen. Birkhoff and Veblen went on to lead departments at Harvard and Princeton, respectively. Dickson became the first great American algebraist and number theorist. Robert Moore founded American topology. According to the Mathematics Genealogy Project, as of December 2012, E. H. Moore had over 18,900 known "descendants."Moore convinced the New York Mathematical Society to change its name to the American Mathematical Society, whose Chicago branch he led. He presided over the AMS, 1901–02, and edited the "Transactions of the American Mathematical Society", 1899–1907. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the American Philosophical Society. He was an Invited Speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1908 in Rome and in 1912 in Cambridge, England.The American Mathematical Society established a prize in his honor in 2002. | [
"University of Chicago",
"Yale University"
] |
|
Which employer did Eliakim Hastings Moore work for in Jan, 1914? | January 01, 1914 | {
"text": [
"University of Chicago"
]
} | L2_Q736064_P108_2 | Eliakim Hastings Moore works for Northwestern University from Jan, 1889 to Jan, 1892.
Eliakim Hastings Moore works for Yale University from Jan, 1887 to Jan, 1889.
Eliakim Hastings Moore works for University of Chicago from Jan, 1892 to Jan, 1931. | E. H. MooreEliakim Hastings Moore (; January 26, 1862 – December 30, 1932), usually cited as E. H. Moore or E. Hastings Moore, was an American mathematician.Moore, the son of a Methodist minister and grandson of US Congressman Eliakim H. Moore, discovered mathematics through a summer job at the Cincinnati Observatory while in high school. He subsequently studied mathematics at Yale University, where he was a member of Skull and Bones and obtained a B.A. in 1883 and the Ph.D. in 1885 with a thesis supervised by Hubert Anson Newton, on some work of William Kingdon Clifford and Arthur Cayley. Newton encouraged Moore to study in Germany, and thus he spent an academic year at the University of Berlin, attending lectures by Leopold Kronecker and Karl Weierstrass.On his return to the United States, Moore taught at Yale and at Northwestern University. When the University of Chicago opened its doors in 1892, Moore was the first head of its mathematics department, a position he retained until his death in 1932. His first two colleagues were Oskar Bolza and Heinrich Maschke. The resulting department was the second research-oriented mathematics department in American history, after Johns Hopkins University. Moore first worked in abstract algebra, proving in 1893 the classification of the structure of finite fields (also called Galois fields). Around 1900, he began working on the foundations of geometry. He reformulated Hilbert's axioms for geometry so that points were the only primitive notion, thus turning David Hilbert's primitive lines and planes into defined notions. In 1902, he further showed that one of Hilbert's axioms for geometry was redundant. His work on axiom systems is considered one of the starting points for metamathematics and model theory. After 1906, he turned to the foundations of analysis. The concept of a closure operator first appeared in his 1910 "Introduction to a form of general analysis". He also wrote on algebraic geometry, number theory, and integral equations.At Chicago, Moore supervised 31 doctoral dissertations, including those of George Birkhoff, Leonard Dickson, Robert Lee Moore (no relation), and Oswald Veblen. Birkhoff and Veblen went on to lead departments at Harvard and Princeton, respectively. Dickson became the first great American algebraist and number theorist. Robert Moore founded American topology. According to the Mathematics Genealogy Project, as of December 2012, E. H. Moore had over 18,900 known "descendants."Moore convinced the New York Mathematical Society to change its name to the American Mathematical Society, whose Chicago branch he led. He presided over the AMS, 1901–02, and edited the "Transactions of the American Mathematical Society", 1899–1907. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the American Philosophical Society. He was an Invited Speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1908 in Rome and in 1912 in Cambridge, England.The American Mathematical Society established a prize in his honor in 2002. | [
"Yale University",
"Northwestern University"
] |
|
Which position did Clement Kinloch-Cooke hold in Sep, 1910? | September 02, 1910 | {
"text": [
"Member of the 29th Parliament of the United Kingdom"
]
} | L2_Q5131354_P39_0 | Clement Kinloch-Cooke holds the position of Member of the 30th Parliament of the United Kingdom from Dec, 1910 to Nov, 1918.
Clement Kinloch-Cooke holds the position of Member of the 32nd Parliament of the United Kingdom from Nov, 1922 to Nov, 1923.
Clement Kinloch-Cooke holds the position of Member of the 34th Parliament of the United Kingdom from Oct, 1924 to May, 1929.
Clement Kinloch-Cooke holds the position of Member of the 31st Parliament of the United Kingdom from Dec, 1918 to Oct, 1922.
Clement Kinloch-Cooke holds the position of Member of the 29th Parliament of the United Kingdom from Jan, 1910 to Nov, 1910. | Clement Kinloch-CookeSir Clement Kinloch-Cooke, 1st Baronet (28 October 1854 – 4 September 1944) was a British journalist and politician.Born Clement Cooke in Holborn, the only son of Robert Whall Cooke of Brighton, Sussex, he was educated at Brighton College, and at St. John's College, Cambridge, where he read mathematics and law. He was called to the bar in 1883 by the Inner Temple, whereupon he joined the Oxford Circuit, and became Treasury prosecuting counsel for Berkshire. Later he was legal advisor to the House of Lords Sweating Commission and private secretary to Windham Wyndham-Quin, 4th Earl of Dunraven and Mount-Earl, Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies (1885–87). He was also examiner under the Civil Service Commission for factory inspectorships.Cooke followed with an active career in journalism, writing and editing for "English Illustrated Magazine", the "Observer", the "Pall Mall Gazette", and the "New Review". He wrote on imperial and colonial subjects. During this time he also wrote an authorised memoir of Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge, Duchess of Teck, and a biography of Mary of Teck. He founded the "Empire Review" in 1901 and that connexion remained for the remainder of his life.Cooke assumed the additional surname of Kinloch in 1905, which was also the year that he was initially created a knight bachelor. From that time a career in politics followed.Kinloch-Cooke became a member of the London County Council in 1907. He was elected at the January 1910 general election as a Unionist Member of Parliament (MP) for Devonport, and he held that seat until his defeat at the 1923 general election by the Liberal Party candidate Leslie Hore-Belisha. He was returned to the House of Commons the following year as MP for Cardiff East, and held that seat until he was defeated at the 1929 general election. He served as chairman of Naval and Dockyards Committee for 14 years, and the Expiring Laws and Continuance Act Committee.He was created a Knight Commander in the Order of the British Empire in 1919, and a baronet of Brighthelmstone, Sussex in 1926. | [
"Member of the 32nd Parliament of the United Kingdom",
"Member of the 31st Parliament of the United Kingdom",
"Member of the 34th Parliament of the United Kingdom",
"Member of the 30th Parliament of the United Kingdom"
] |
|
Which position did Clement Kinloch-Cooke hold in Mar, 1912? | March 05, 1912 | {
"text": [
"Member of the 30th Parliament of the United Kingdom"
]
} | L2_Q5131354_P39_1 | Clement Kinloch-Cooke holds the position of Member of the 32nd Parliament of the United Kingdom from Nov, 1922 to Nov, 1923.
Clement Kinloch-Cooke holds the position of Member of the 30th Parliament of the United Kingdom from Dec, 1910 to Nov, 1918.
Clement Kinloch-Cooke holds the position of Member of the 29th Parliament of the United Kingdom from Jan, 1910 to Nov, 1910.
Clement Kinloch-Cooke holds the position of Member of the 34th Parliament of the United Kingdom from Oct, 1924 to May, 1929.
Clement Kinloch-Cooke holds the position of Member of the 31st Parliament of the United Kingdom from Dec, 1918 to Oct, 1922. | Clement Kinloch-CookeSir Clement Kinloch-Cooke, 1st Baronet (28 October 1854 – 4 September 1944) was a British journalist and politician.Born Clement Cooke in Holborn, the only son of Robert Whall Cooke of Brighton, Sussex, he was educated at Brighton College, and at St. John's College, Cambridge, where he read mathematics and law. He was called to the bar in 1883 by the Inner Temple, whereupon he joined the Oxford Circuit, and became Treasury prosecuting counsel for Berkshire. Later he was legal advisor to the House of Lords Sweating Commission and private secretary to Windham Wyndham-Quin, 4th Earl of Dunraven and Mount-Earl, Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies (1885–87). He was also examiner under the Civil Service Commission for factory inspectorships.Cooke followed with an active career in journalism, writing and editing for "English Illustrated Magazine", the "Observer", the "Pall Mall Gazette", and the "New Review". He wrote on imperial and colonial subjects. During this time he also wrote an authorised memoir of Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge, Duchess of Teck, and a biography of Mary of Teck. He founded the "Empire Review" in 1901 and that connexion remained for the remainder of his life.Cooke assumed the additional surname of Kinloch in 1905, which was also the year that he was initially created a knight bachelor. From that time a career in politics followed.Kinloch-Cooke became a member of the London County Council in 1907. He was elected at the January 1910 general election as a Unionist Member of Parliament (MP) for Devonport, and he held that seat until his defeat at the 1923 general election by the Liberal Party candidate Leslie Hore-Belisha. He was returned to the House of Commons the following year as MP for Cardiff East, and held that seat until he was defeated at the 1929 general election. He served as chairman of Naval and Dockyards Committee for 14 years, and the Expiring Laws and Continuance Act Committee.He was created a Knight Commander in the Order of the British Empire in 1919, and a baronet of Brighthelmstone, Sussex in 1926. | [
"Member of the 32nd Parliament of the United Kingdom",
"Member of the 31st Parliament of the United Kingdom",
"Member of the 34th Parliament of the United Kingdom",
"Member of the 29th Parliament of the United Kingdom"
] |
|
Which position did Clement Kinloch-Cooke hold in Jan, 1922? | January 16, 1922 | {
"text": [
"Member of the 31st Parliament of the United Kingdom"
]
} | L2_Q5131354_P39_2 | Clement Kinloch-Cooke holds the position of Member of the 31st Parliament of the United Kingdom from Dec, 1918 to Oct, 1922.
Clement Kinloch-Cooke holds the position of Member of the 32nd Parliament of the United Kingdom from Nov, 1922 to Nov, 1923.
Clement Kinloch-Cooke holds the position of Member of the 29th Parliament of the United Kingdom from Jan, 1910 to Nov, 1910.
Clement Kinloch-Cooke holds the position of Member of the 34th Parliament of the United Kingdom from Oct, 1924 to May, 1929.
Clement Kinloch-Cooke holds the position of Member of the 30th Parliament of the United Kingdom from Dec, 1910 to Nov, 1918. | Clement Kinloch-CookeSir Clement Kinloch-Cooke, 1st Baronet (28 October 1854 – 4 September 1944) was a British journalist and politician.Born Clement Cooke in Holborn, the only son of Robert Whall Cooke of Brighton, Sussex, he was educated at Brighton College, and at St. John's College, Cambridge, where he read mathematics and law. He was called to the bar in 1883 by the Inner Temple, whereupon he joined the Oxford Circuit, and became Treasury prosecuting counsel for Berkshire. Later he was legal advisor to the House of Lords Sweating Commission and private secretary to Windham Wyndham-Quin, 4th Earl of Dunraven and Mount-Earl, Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies (1885–87). He was also examiner under the Civil Service Commission for factory inspectorships.Cooke followed with an active career in journalism, writing and editing for "English Illustrated Magazine", the "Observer", the "Pall Mall Gazette", and the "New Review". He wrote on imperial and colonial subjects. During this time he also wrote an authorised memoir of Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge, Duchess of Teck, and a biography of Mary of Teck. He founded the "Empire Review" in 1901 and that connexion remained for the remainder of his life.Cooke assumed the additional surname of Kinloch in 1905, which was also the year that he was initially created a knight bachelor. From that time a career in politics followed.Kinloch-Cooke became a member of the London County Council in 1907. He was elected at the January 1910 general election as a Unionist Member of Parliament (MP) for Devonport, and he held that seat until his defeat at the 1923 general election by the Liberal Party candidate Leslie Hore-Belisha. He was returned to the House of Commons the following year as MP for Cardiff East, and held that seat until he was defeated at the 1929 general election. He served as chairman of Naval and Dockyards Committee for 14 years, and the Expiring Laws and Continuance Act Committee.He was created a Knight Commander in the Order of the British Empire in 1919, and a baronet of Brighthelmstone, Sussex in 1926. | [
"Member of the 32nd Parliament of the United Kingdom",
"Member of the 34th Parliament of the United Kingdom",
"Member of the 30th Parliament of the United Kingdom",
"Member of the 29th Parliament of the United Kingdom"
] |
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